Four venture capital personas (and how to land them) | TechCrunch (2024)

Blair SilverbergContributor

Blair Silverberg is co-founder and CEO of Hum Capital, a financial services company using technology to accelerate the fundraising process.

There’s tons of advice out there about how to approach venture capitalists for startup fundraising, but in my experience as both a former VC and current founder, I’ve found there is no one-size-fits-all method.

Venture capital investors get into the industry for many different reasons and come from a wide variety of backgrounds that shape their perspectives on the companies they consider for investments.

Founders must understand which kind of VC investor they’re dealing with to have the best shot at closing a funding round. Here are the four personas of venture capital investors, and what founders can do to partner with them:

#1: The follower

It’s incredibly difficult to predict which companies will be big winners in the long run, and for early-career investors, getting your first 3-5 investment bets wrong can limit your future career prospects. That’s why investors in the follower category care that other credible brands are investing alongside them: latching onto big name interest can help de-risk high-pressure investment decisions. This is the VC version of, “you don’t get fired for buying IBM.”

These investors will never go out on a limb to fund something solely based on its thesis or early business metrics. When you dig into their portfolios, you’ll see followers rarely lead funding rounds and are investing alongside brand name investors 95% of the time. If they do lead an investment, the company is usually led by a well-known repeat founder or a close friend, or the company has already raised 2-3 financing rounds from blue chip investors, which makes leading a Series C+ feel safe.

Founders must understand which kind of VC investor they’re dealing with to have the best shot at closing a funding round.

This is the most common type of VC persona, and the trend-following approach can be quite successful. In fact, there is a whole discipline of public market quant investing called “trend following” that has made this strategy systematic. Despite its strong academic validation as an investment strategy, nobody likes to be called a “follower” and because of this, followers will almost never admit to being followers.

For founders approaching this type of investor, it’s critical to get one of the other three types of VCs on board before reaching out. With that investor’s term sheet in hand, you can then syndicate your round to one or more followers.

#2: The academic

Investors in the academic category have clear theses and do not stray from them. They deeply understand your company’s space and have the knowledge and network needed to conduct due diligence on the business. Academic investors can become extraordinarily valuable thought partners and almost feel like co-founders in how they help you build on your thesis.

Academics are leaders. At the early stage, they are often the first investors or lead rounds largely by themselves. At later stages, they are not afraid to invest at inflection points and often catalyze turnarounds. This information is more difficult to see publicly but easy to detect in conversations. If you suspect an investor may be an academic, ask them what investment theses they’re working on. If the answer sounds vague, they are a follower or a feeler. If it sounds highly specific, they’re an academic.

For example, if you hear, “we’re really interested in how AI may be applied to vertical software,” they are a follower or feeler. If, instead, you hear something that sounds highly specific and even a bit confusing like, “I’ve met every neural chip company to launch over the past seven years and am convinced that analog chips are the only way to apply AI inference at the edge,” they are an academic.

To land an academic, make a list of investors whose theses match yours. These investors generally write about their investment theses in order to attract deal flow. Make sure you have read their work and understand their perspective before you ask for an introduction or reach out cold. Before meeting the investor, clearly articulate the essence of your thesis and pair it with any evidence you have that it will work (e.g., customer interviews) or is already working (e.g., retentive cohort analysis and rapid revenue growth).

If you meet a thesis-driven investor and approach them with thoughtfulness and evidence, you will secure financing over the course of a few meetings. You can also ask academics who their favorite thought partners are to broaden your search among similar investors interested in your thesis/company.

#3: The feeler

These investors look to their gut to tell them whether to make an investment. They fall in love with an idea or a team, and when they do, they write checks quickly. They are astute judges of people and can seem like magicians to the outside world, backing hit after hit with seemingly no patterns linking them together. Feelers can be incredible supporters who back you even in the dark days of your journey, though I recommend keeping them to 5%-10% of your target investor mix and avoiding drawing any big conclusions from their feedback because there is nothing you can control that will cause them to choose you.

Feelers often have public personas and participate in conversations that span a wide range of topics. Their portfolios often look like those of followers because they have many disparate investments, often with top tier co-investors. Where they differ, however, is they do lead deals solo. In some ways, they combine the public qualities of a follower and an academic.

To suss out a feeler, ask them to tell you about how they decide to invest. Feelers will often say things like, “I always trust my gut,” or “intuition is core to my investment process.” They will describe their conviction in people in deep, visceral ways. If you do not hear this, you are not talking to a feeler.

The challenge with courting a feeler is that they can seem indecipherable to founders. Taking a meeting and trying your luck is the only way to know whether there’s a match. Seek out their public perspectives but don’t overprepare for a meeting. In contrast to a thesis-driven investor who will appreciate your preparation and thought partnership, this work will have zero impact on a feeler. They either feel the potential of working together or they don’t, and there is nothing you can do about it!

#4: The analyst

Not to be confused with investment analysts employed by firms, the analyst persona is the most consistent and predictable type of investor. If a business is fundamentally valuable and the price and structure are right, there is always a deal to be had. These people will never be the highest bidder but they’ll always be straightforward partners. Your job is to get them the data they need to transparently analyze your business. You can iterate on a model together and raise your valuation or improve your terms by convincing them to change the discount rate around your assumptions. But you are literally collaborating with a logical machine and there is no gaming that system.

Publicly, analysts’ and academics’ portfolios look similar, but analysts care more about quantitative proof and metrics. If you ask what makes a great growth investment, analysts will say things like “I look at LTV/CAC cohorts.” If you hear the phrases “three-statement model,” “discounted cash flow (DCF),” “comparable company analysis (Comps),” or “magic number,” you are talking to an analyst. If you hear a deep and thoughtful thesis on a market but few references to numbers, you are talking to an academic.

Since analysts and academics will look similar publicly, go into meetings expecting to meet either type. This means being prepared with a solid set of 5-10 metrics that you can recite on a monthly basis. Ensure these metrics are demonstrating business growth. If they aren’t, you’re wasting time meeting with an analyst earlier than your business is ready to impress them.

Remember that while an analyst may push for a rapid deep dive into metrics, it’s OK to say you’re happy to dig in during a follow-up conversation, but that you want to ensure there is alignment on your thesis before diving in further. If you tease 5-10 metrics and then push back with quiet confidence, this often whets the analyst’s appetite to follow up and learn more. After the meeting, send an investment memo to the analyst. They will tear it apart and appreciate poking holes in your thoughtfulness. When you have iterated together on the logic behind your business and they feel like their objections have been quantified and discounted appropriately in your valuation, you will get a deal done.

Approach strategically to close successfully

Every VC is unique, but developing a fundraising strategy that accounts for these four most common types of investors can help founders find the right fit for their startup’s needs.

Instead of wasting time pitching the wrong type at the wrong time, you can devote more energy into getting in front of the investors you’re most likely to win over. In an unpredictable fundraising landscape, every pitch meeting counts, so know your audience and give them what they need to get to “yes” on your business.

Four venture capital personas (and how to land them) | TechCrunch (2024)

FAQs

What are the 4 Ts of venture capital? ›

The 4 Ts Venture Playbook is a made by UBC for UBC founders, that focuses on building and developing the critical elements of a successful startup: Team, Technology, Traction and Treasury.

Which of the following four factors do venture capitalists look for in investment ventures? ›

With so many investment opportunities and start-up pitches, VCs often have a set of criteria that they look for and evaluate before making an investment. The management team, business concept and plan, market opportunity, and risk judgement all play a role in making this decision for a VC.

What is venture capital answer in one sentence? ›

Venture capital is money that is invested in projects that have a high risk of failure, but that will bring large profits if they are successful.

What are the 4 C's of venture capital? ›

Let's not invite that risk, and instead undertake conviction, compliance, confidence and consequences as an industry. It can not only help us preserve the best parts of the current industry, but also lead to better investments and a healthier innovation sector.

What is the 2 20 rule in venture capital? ›

VCs often use the shorthand phrase “two and twenty” to refer to the 2% of annual management fees a venture fund might take and the 20% carried interest (or “performance fee”) it would charge.

What is the 100 10 1 rule for venture capital? ›

100/10/1 Rule - Investor screens 100 projects, finance 10 of them, and be lucky & able to enough to find the 1 successful one. Sudden Death Risk - Where the founder stops/loses capability to work on the idea. Investors usually choose the incubator strategy to avoid this risk.

How to answer why venture capital? ›

Q: Why venture capital? A: Because you are passionate about working with startups, helping them grow, and finding promising new companies – and you prefer that to starting your own company or executing deals.

What is the best way to get into venture capital? ›

Entry points: There are three main entry points for a career in venture capital: pre-MBA, post-MBA, and as a senior executive or partner. For the first option, one can either join a VC firm after graduating or gain experience in investment banking, business development, or sales.

What are the 4 factors to consider when investing? ›

Focus on the things you can control
  • Goals. Create clear, appropriate investment goals. An investment goal is essentially any plan investors have for their money. ...
  • Balance. Keep a balanced and diversified mix of investments. ...
  • Cost. Minimize costs. ...
  • Discipline. Maintain perspective and long-term discipline.

What do VC investors look for? ›

VCs will want to know what milestones — particularly those related to growth and revenue — you will hit and when. If your startup has no immediate plan for revenue, say, because product development will take time, you should be ready to list other benchmarks you will achieve in lieu of revenue.

What are most venture capitalists looking for? ›

The VC fund will buy a stake in these firms, nurture their growth, and look to cash out with a substantial return on investment (ROI). Venture capitalists typically look for companies with a strong management team, a large potential market, and a unique product or service with a strong competitive advantage.

What is a real life example of venture capital? ›

Examples of Venture Capital

Series A, B, C, etc.: These are multiple rounds of funding that a company goes through, generally getting more substantial as the business grows. For instance, Facebook's Series A was $12.7 million from Accel Partners, while its Series B ballooned to $27.5 million from various investors.

Where do venture capitalists get their money? ›

Venture capitalists make money in two ways. The first is a management fee for managing the firm's capital. The second is carried interest on the fund's return on investment, generally referred to as the “carry.” Management fees.

What is venture capital short answer? ›

Venture capital definition

Venture capital (VC) is generally used to support startups and other businesses with the potential for substantial and rapid growth. VC firms raise money from limited partners (LPs) to invest in promising startups or even larger venture funds.

What are the TS in venture capital? ›

Venture capital fundraising is a key step for many founders when scaling their startups. When asked “how do you decide to fund one company and not another?,” our team points to the Six Ts: theme, team, terrain, technology, traction, and terms.

What are the 4ts of startup? ›

4T - Team, Timing, Tech & Product, Traction.

What are the four main stages of a ventures life cycle? ›

There are four stages of a company's life: startup, growth, maturity, and decline. Each stage has different challenges and opportunities. In the startup stage, a company must create a new product or service and get it to market.

What are the basics of venture capital? ›

Venture capital (VC) is generally used to support startups and other businesses with the potential for substantial and rapid growth. VC firms raise money from limited partners (LPs) to invest in promising startups or even larger venture funds.

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