What If You’re Too Early for Investors?
Evan H Fisher
$5B+ raised Series A→IPO | I help tech founders raise their next big round | a16z, Sequoia, SoftBank, Insight, Khosla...
Keep me posted on how it goes!
When investors say this, it’s such a cop-out.
Because they’re actually saying:
You’re too early - I’m not gonna invest in this round.
Unfortunately, founders get turned down like this all too frequently.
It’s OK if you’re not a fit for them to invest right now - but it’s only a total miss if you let it be.
founders everywhere miss tons of opportunities because investors tell them “not yet.”
This really means they:
But just because an investor isn’t a fit today, doesn’t mean you should never talk to them again.
You might still be able to use this to your massive advantage.
Here's how:
Step 1: Check it’s actually a fit
Critical: You must establish they’re a Perfect-Fit investor first.
Because if you’re a tech business, and they invest 99% of their money in real estate in Myanmar, you don’t wanna be barking up the wrong tree…
…You also don’t want to be dogmatically following advice from someone who “has money but will NEVER invest in your business.”
Do they invest…
(more detail on defining your perfect-fit investor here)
If so, then you should listen carefully to their feedback - especially if they tell you you’re too early.
Odds are, there’s a disconnect between your business’s current stage vs. their preferred investment stage.
And that’s OK.
Because you’ve been given a golden opportunity to build credibility & trust before your next round.
So here’s what you do…
Step 2: Pre-pitch & ask the Critical Path questions
Caveat with “hey we’re probably too early, but we’re gonna be having this chat in 9-12 months, so let’s build a relationship. In the meantime, mind if I ask a few questions…?”
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Have your questions ready.
Here’s what I’d ask:
…because I get three major things out of that. I now know:
Step 3: Say you’re gonna do it, then go do it.
The simplest trust-building trick in business:
But choose your promises carefully - I recommend:
Founders go wrong here mostly by setting expectations re: milestones outside their control, like “we’ll do a partnership with Microsoft”
Sure - you might believe you can do it today, but what if tomorrow Microsoft torpedoes the partnership deal? You’d be sunk ????
When in doubt, pick something that you can say…
If we throw enough money at it, it’ll happen.
Then go execute.
But that’s not all.
Remember - some VCs & fund managers are handcuffed to their fund’s investment criteria.
So even though they might want to invest through the fund, they couldn’t.
BUT I’ve seen VC investors get pitched on a deal and say:
I love it. It won’t fit in the fund yet, but I want to invest personally (i.e. $200K in their OWN name, not $1M in the fund’s name).
It’s rare, but it does happen.
In the meantime,
While you’re in the room, never forget to ask for the referral:
We’re not a fit today, but is there anybody you think we should be talking to right now that would be a fit?
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Get your warm intros, and I’ll see you in the next one.
Founder | CEO at TINY e TOILET PAPER
3 周Hello, Great read! I was about to lay into a supposed 'possible investor' after being told it was too early for his investment (which never made sense to me) but I looked around the web regarding this confounding response and was lead to your post. THANK YOU!! You helped me to stop, and re-think, and probably saved me from a little embarrassment. I asked for a follow up to get his reasoning and he said he would be very open to sharing his thoughts, thoughts I can use, a cop-out response I can't. So now, I'm going to approach this follow up call a LOT differently. Thanks again! When I start believing I know everything I need to know, that's when I know my startup won't start.
Brilliant read.