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founders
Fundraising
A Marketplace Founder’s Guide to Fundraising in 2023 + The VCs Investing
Raise capital, update investors, and engage your team from a single platform. Try Visible free for 14 days. The digital age has ushered in the rise of marketplace startups, changing the way we buy, sell, and interact. A marketplace now can take many forms but always connects buyers and sellers, facilitating transactions. These platforms can be vertical (specific to one industry), horizontal (across multiple industries), global, or localized. From Airbnb and Uber to niche platforms that cater to specific audiences, marketplaces have transformed industries. However, beyond creating a functioning platform, it’s essential for founders to build startups that resonate with investors. The Current Marketplace Investment Landscape According to the a16z Marketplace 100: 2023 report, the marketplace economy is growing rapidly, with the top 100 marketplaces generating over $2 trillion in GMV in 2022. Key Takeaways for Marketplace Founders Focus on solving a real problem. The best marketplaces address a real need that people have. They don’t just create a new way to do something that already exists. Build a strong network. The success of a marketplace depends on having a large and active network of buyers and sellers. Make sure you have a plan to attract and retain users. Be data-driven. Use data to make decisions about your business, such as which features to develop, how to price your products or services, and how to target your marketing campaigns. Trends Marketplace Founders Should Be Aware Of The growth of embedded finance, where financial services are embedded into non-financial products and services. This trend is creating new opportunities for marketplaces to offer lending, payments, and other financial services to their users. The increasing importance of data and analytics for marketplace businesses. Marketplaces generate a lot of data, which can be used to improve the user experience, optimize operations, and make better decisions. The rise of sustainability-focused marketplaces. Consumers are increasingly looking for sustainable options, and this trend is creating new opportunities for marketplaces to offer products and services that are better for the environment. The continued growth of cross-border marketplaces. The global marketplace is growing rapidly, and this trend is creating new opportunities for marketplaces to connect buyers and sellers from different countries. What Do Marketplace VCs Look for in Their Investments Traction & Momentum While this involves numbers, VCs also look at the qualitative aspects, like the pace of growth or the startup’s momentum in acquiring users or partnerships. Cultural and Social Impact Especially relevant for modern VCs, does the marketplace have a positive impact on society or the environment? Is there an alignment with broader societal values, like sustainability or inclusivity? Exit Potential VCs want to know the potential exit strategies, whether it’s an acquisition, merger, or going public. Strategic Partnerships & Alliances Does the startup have key partnerships that can accelerate growth or provide a competitive advantage? Feedback from Users Testimonials, case studies, or direct feedback that showcase the value and satisfaction of users. Market Trends & External Factors VCs assess external trends, economic factors, or global events that might impact the marketplace. Additional Resources: Kickstarting a Marketplace with Trey Closson, CEO of Amplio 25 Marketplace Metrics to Track By tracking these metrics, founders can gain insights into their marketplace’s health, growth potential, and areas of improvement. It’s crucial not just to monitor these numbers but also to understand their implications and how they interrelate. Adjustments and strategic decisions can then be based on data-driven insights. Positive unit economics are attractive to investors so make sure to highlight this in your updates. For instance, founders should understand the relationship between Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) and the Lifetime Value (LTV) of customers. Related CAC Resources: Customer Acquisition Cost: A Critical Metrics for Founders Video: Formula Builder (Customer Acquisition Cost) Here are 25 metrics marketplace founders should be tracking: Gross Merchandise Value (GMV): Represents the total value of transactions on the platform. It gives a broad view of the marketplace’s activity. Net Revenue: This is the revenue the marketplace retains after direct costs (like refunds). For most marketplaces, this would be the fees they charge for facilitating a transaction. Monthly Active Users (MAU): Measures the number of unique users who have interacted with the marketplace within a given month. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC): The average expense of acquiring a new customer, including marketing and sales expenses. Lifetime Value (LTV): An estimate of the total revenue a business can reasonably expect from a single customer account. LTV: CAC Ratio: A metric that compares the value of a customer over their lifetime to the cost of acquiring them. A ratio above 1 indicates a profitable customer acquisition. Take Rate: The percentage of GMV that the marketplace retains as revenue. Liquidity: A measure of how easy it is for users to make transactions on the platform. User Growth Rate: The speed at which new users are joining the platform. Churn Rate: The percentage of users (buyers or sellers) who stop using the platform over a specific period. Repeat Transaction Rate: The percentage of users who make more than one purchase or sale on the platform. Average Transaction Value (ATV): The average value of a transaction on your marketplace. Buyer-to-Seller Ratio: Represents the balance between the supply (sellers) and demand (buyers) sides of the marketplace. Time to First Transaction: The average time it takes for a new user to complete their first transaction after signing up. Conversion Rate: The percentage of users who take a desired action, like signing up after visiting the platform or making a purchase after browsing listings. Customer Satisfaction (CSAT): A measure of how satisfied users are with the marketplace. Net Promoter Score (NPS): Gauges user loyalty by asking how likely they are to recommend the marketplace to others. Average Resolution Time: Measures the time taken to resolve disputes or complaints on the platform. Supply/Demand Fill Rate: The percentage of demand/supply that gets successfully matched on the marketplace. Inventory Turnover Rate: Especially for product-based marketplaces, this metric measures how often inventory is sold and replaced over a specific period. Operational Efficiency Metrics: These can include the average time to onboard a new seller, average response time for customer queries, and so on. Engagement Metrics: Metrics like session duration, page views per visit, and actions per visit can provide insights into how users are interacting with the platform. Retention Rate: The percentage of users who continue to use the marketplace over time. Referral Rate: Measures how many new users are acquired through existing user referrals. Cost of Goods Sold (COGS): For product-based marketplaces, COGS represents the direct costs involved in producing the goods that were sold. How Founders Can Model Their Marketplace Startup for Success Modeling a marketplace startup for success involves a strategic approach to planning, execution, and scaling. Here are steps and considerations founders can undertake to increase the likelihood of their marketplace’s success: Clear Value Proposition Understand the core problem your marketplace solves. Ensure that your solution offers clear value to both sides (buyers and sellers) of the marketplace. Product-Market Fit: Conduct thorough market research to ensure there’s demand for your platform. Launch a minimum viable product (MVP) to gather feedback and iterate. Focus on Building Trust: Create a secure and transparent environment for transactions. Implement a robust review and rating system. Consider offering guarantees or refund policies for additional assurance. Achieve Liquidity: Ensure there’s a balance between supply (sellers) and demand (buyers). Consider strategies to stimulate one side if it’s lagging. Leverage Network Effects: Design the platform so that the more people use it, the more valuable and attractive it becomes to new users. Invest in Technology: Ensure your platform is scalable, secure, and user-friendly. Leverage AI and data analytics for personalized user experiences and to derive actionable insights. Adopt a Data-Driven Approach: Continuously monitor key metrics to understand user behavior, traction, and areas of improvement. Test and iterate features based on feedback and data. Effective Monetization Strategy: Determine the best revenue model: commission, subscription, freemium, advertising, or a combination. Ensure pricing is competitive and offers value to users. Community Building: Foster a sense of community among users through forums, events, or social media. Engage with your user base and encourage them to be brand advocates. Strong Marketing and Branding: Invest in building a recognizable and trustworthy brand. Employ a mix of content marketing, social media, partnerships, and paid advertising. Resources Finding the Balance While Building a Marketplace with the Founders of ChefPrep 13 Metrics for Marketplace Companies a16’s Required Reading for Marketplace Entrepreneurs All of a16’s Featured Marketplace Content VCs Investing in Marketplace Startups 1. VentureFriends About: VC fund based in Athens but investing across Europe, LatAm & the Middle East. We focus on FinTech, PropTech, B2C, Marketplaces & B2B SaaS. We are entrepreneurial investors, with strong experience, network and track record. We have been entrepreneurs, founders, worked at startups or angel investors in early stages and have a founder first & value driven approach. Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed, Series A Check size: $ 500K – $ 2.50M Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 2. Starting Line About: Starting Line invests in founders who are willing to take on substantial personal risks, out of fear of living a life of regret. That fear of wondering what life might have looked like if you’d just gone for it. Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed Check size: Around $ 1M Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 3. Version One Ventures About: Version One Ventures is an early-stage fund investing in outstanding consumer internet, SaaS, and mobile entrepreneurs. Thesis: Backing the next generation of mission-driven technology founders. Stage: Seed, Series A, Series B Check size: $ 500K – $ 750K Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 4. Benchmark VC About: Benchmark Capital is focused on one, and only one, mission: to help talented entrepreneurs build great technology companies. That’s what drives them and everything they do – from how they organize their firm to their investment strategy. Their investments range in size from as little as $100,000 to as much as $10 or $15 million. Typically, they invest $3 to $5 million initially and expect to invest $5 to $15 million over the life of a company. Stage: Seed, Series A, Series B, Growth Check size: $ 5M – $ 25M Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 5. Frog Capital About: Frog is a specialist European software scale-up investor. Our strategy is based on selecting the best scale-up phase investments and empowering technology CEOs to grow fast, by deploying our capital, our network and our support. At Frog we focus on ensuring long term commercial success for each and every business we invest in. A frog investment: – Headquartered in Europe – High-growth software businesses – Making a positive social impact – Generating over €3m ARR – Transactions of up to €20m Stage: Growth Check size: $ 5M – $ 30M Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 6. Global Founder Capital About: Global Founders Capital is a globally oriented, stage-agnostic venture capital firm that empowers gifted entrepreneurs worldwide. 01 // Global. We support founders in all geographies. 02 // Stage agnostic. We back companies across all stages and throughout the lifecycle. 03 // Operational. Our platform offers founders all the support they need to scale. Stage: Agnostic Check size: $ 50K – $ 10M Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 7. Market One Capital About: Market One Capital invests with a long term view in European startups across pre-seed and seed stages. European heart. Global mind. Thesis: Seed fund empowering network effects platforms across Europe Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed Check size: $ 2M Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 8. Peak Capital About: SaaS / Platforms / Marketplaces opportunities with multiple co-founders Thesis: Peak Capital is an Amsterdam-based venture capital firm. Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed Recent fund size: $ 71.70M Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 9. Piton Capital About: Founded in 2010, Piton Capital is a venture capital and growth equity firm headquartered in London and investing in businesses with network effects. We make investments ranging from €200k to €20m and since inception have invested in over 50 businesses, primarily in Europe. Piton focuses exclusively on network effects businesses as this provide one of the few moats or forms of defensibility to achieve dominance. Thesis: Investing in companies with network effects. Stage: Series A, Series B, Early Stage Recent fund size: $ 71.70M Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 10. White Star Capital About: White Star Capital is a global multi-stage investment platform built by a team of founders, investors and operators with a track record of entering new markets, expanding teams and exiting companies. Our approach to venture is characterized by a unique combination of international presence, perspective and people. With feet on the ground in New York, London, Montreal, Paris, Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Singapore, we partner closely with our portfolio to help them scale internationally from Series A onwards. Stage: Series A, Series B Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 11. Spark Capital About: Recognized as a 2022 Emerging 50 VC, Spark Growth Ventures is a community oriented, early & mid stage, vertical-agnostic, technology venture capital firm. Our mission is to support gritty and exceptional founders in their missions by bringing forth the combined value of our strong community. We are fortunate to have a global network of entrepreneurs, C-level relationships, subject matter experts, world-class talent, institutional investors, high net worth individuals and family offices, many of who are investors in our platform. Thesis: Spark Capital is an early and growth stage venture capital firm that partners with exceptional founders and the products they design. Stage: Seed, Series A, Series B Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 12. NextGen Venture Partners About: NextGen Venture Partners invests $1-2M in seed stage companies with the participation of 1,000+ Venture Partners. Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed, Series A Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 13. Right Click Capital About: Right Click Capital is a venture capital firm backing ambitious tech startups in Australia, New Zealand, and South East Asia. Thesis: We invest in and champion bold tech. Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed, Series A, Series B Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 14. LDR Ventures About: LDR is a VC firm based in Los Angeles investing In Female & Minority Founders, Consumer Product, Food, E-Comm, Marketplaces & Legal Tech Thesis: Female led and Los Angeles based, we consult to and invest primarily in female entrepreneurs at the Seed & Series A Stages. Stage: Seed, Series A Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 15. Strive VC About: STRIVE invests in early stage (Seed to Series A) internet and mobile companies in Asia. Thesis: We help fulfill each entrepreneur’s amibitions through continuous and proactive hands-on support understanding their true needs. Stage: Seed, Series A Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 16. Upfront Ventures About: We invest primary in the US but have a 20-year history of funding companies in Europe. Our managing partners (Yves Sisteron & Mark Suster) are both dual citizens of France & UK respectively. Kevin Zhang funds games companies and looks in Sweden, Finland, UK and beyond. And locally Julien Etaix is based in Paris and open to talking with anybody on the continent. Thesis: Early investors. Long-term partners. Stage: Seed, Series A, Series B, Growth Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 17. No Brand About: No Brand is a private investment company focussed on opportunities empowered by technology. Our focus is on backing mission driven leaders, who are building for a long term horizon and benefit from online platforms, community or network effects. Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed, Series A, Series B Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 18. Everywhere Ventures About: Global pre-seed fund backed by 500 founders and operators. Thesis: We invest $50-250k into pre-seed companies looking to raise between $500-$2M. We are happy to lead or partner with other investors. We are generalists at heart, but lean into three core areas: money, health, and work. We embrace first-time founders, and founders who may lack traction but have a distinct vision for a world that may not exist…yet. Stage: Pre-Seed Check out their Connect Investor profile here. 19. LAUNCHub Ventures About: LAUNCHub Ventures is a leading early-stage venture capital fund, investing in technology startups in the Seed and Series A funding stages. We invest in Central and Southeastern Europe (SEE & CEE), and in companies built by ambitious founders from that region who are based in the leading startup hubs such as London, San Francisco, and beyond. Our initial investment is between €500K and €2M, with capacity to continue supporting the funding needs of our portfolio companies in future rounds. We are looking for scalable businesses with initial traction and passionate founders, originating from South-Eastern Europe and the broader CEE region. Thesis: When evaluating potential deals, we place a strong emphasis on the team, market, and vision. Specifically, we look for: * an ambitious and talented team proven to execute, founder competitive advantage and path to a clear moat, a big market or one with the potential to grow or emerge. Stage: Series A, Seed, Pre-Seed Check out their Connect Investor profile here. Partner With VCs Investing In The Future of Marketplaces with Visible Venture capital has emerged as a powerful catalyst for progress in the Marketplace space. By bridging the funding gap, providing expertise, and fostering innovation, VCs enable Marketplace startups to thrive and create transformative solutions. Check out Visible’s investor database, Connect, to find VCs investing specifically within the Marketplace space. Also here two more of our list articles, 10+ VCs Investing in E-commerce and Consumer Products 15 Direct to Consumer (D2C) VC Investors You Need to Know Companies should leverage VCs expertise and resources to accelerate their growth, navigate regulatory challenges, and scale their impact. Also get access to Visible for free for 14 days: https://app.visible.vc/create-account
founders
Fundraising
Standing Out to Investors in 2024
This year’s fundraising environment has been undoubtedly challenging for startups of all stages. Understanding today’s complex fundraising dynamics is critical to distinguish yourself from the competition. Join Visible and two fundraising experts from Antler for a recorded discussion on how to stand out to investors for the rest of this year and beyond. Webinar Overview You can check out a few of the topics we hit on below: Breakdown of current fundraising dynamics Standing out to early-stage investors Standing out with storytelling Standing out with investor communications Antler’s recommended Investor Update Template Watch the Recording Give the recorded webinar a watch below:
investors
Reporting
Product Updates
Q3 Product Webinar – Streamlining end of year reporting with Visible
Check out Visible’s recorded product webinar to learn about the most recent updates to Visible’s portfolio monitoring and reporting platform. The Visible team demonstrates how to leverage recent product changes to improve your portfolio reporting in Q4 and beyond. Product webinar topics: Common use cases for one-time Requests and how to set them up Saving time by syncing company qualitative responses to Dashboards and One-Pagers Exporting data to Google Sheets for external analysis and reporting Embedding a dashboard in Notion to share with your team Q&A
founders
Operations
V2MOM: Salesforce’s Secret & Why it Works
In 19 years, Salesforce has transformed from a “startup” to a publicly-traded company with over 30,000 employees. They’ve managed to sustain incredible growth while maintaining strong organizational alignment and communication. As Marc Benioff puts it, “While a company is growing fast, there is nothing more important than constant communication and complete alignment. We’ve been able to achieve both with the help of a secret management process that I developed a number of years ago”. So what’s their “secret management process?” V2MOM. What is V2MOM? V2MOM is a management and communication process used by the team at Salesforce. It is an acronym that stands for vision, values, mission, objectives, and measures. It was implemented in the first few weeks of operation at Salesforce and has continued to ring true today. Benioff defines the different sections of the V2MOM below: What Does the V2MOM Process Look Like? The V2MOM process can be broken down by the individual inputs (or letters in the acronym). Learn more about each section below: Vision Claire Lew, Founder of KnowYourTeam, puts it, “A vision is a picture of a better place. You see this picture in your head: It’s what you want the world to look like because your product or team exists. In many ways, your team’s vision is your opinion on how you think the world ought to be. A vision answers the question, “What world do you want to create?” Or put even shorter by Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce, “The vision helped us define what we wanted to do.” The idea of a company vision can sound like a vague, ideal outlook to the world but it can help founders hire top talent, build a strong culture, and keep everyone aligned. Values Marc Benioff goes to describe values as, “The values established what was most important about that vision; it set the principles and beliefs that guided it (in priority)” The team at Lessonly takes a deeper dive and explains company values as, “Company values play a critical role in helping businesses to achieve their goals and objectives. These values shape the identity and principles of the organization, act as a guiding light for employees, and affect the way organizations conduct their business.” Methods Next comes methods. Benioff explains methods as, “The methods illustrated how we would get the job done by outlining the actions and the steps that everyone needed to take.” Methods can be used as a step by step roadmap of what needs to happen for you and your team to accomplish your organization’s larger vision. As an example, the Salesforce original V2MOM methods looked something like this: Hire the team Finalize product specification and technical architecture Rapidly develop the product specification to beta and production stages Build partnerships with big e-commerce, content, and hosting companies Build a launch plan Develop exit strategy: IPO/acquisition Obstacles If methods are the steps you need to take to accomplish the vision, obstacles are the things that might stand in the way of accomplishing your vision. As Benioff explains, “The obstacles identified the challenges, problems, and issues we would have to overcome to achieve our vision.” From the Salesforce example they lay out the following obstacles: Developers Product manager/business development person Measures Measures are the quantifiable results you’d like to achieve to achieve your vision. Generally speaking, this should be a number. As Benioff explains it, “Finally, the measures specified the actual result we aimed to achieve; often this was defined as a numerical outcome.” Continuing with the Salesforce example. They laid out the following metrics to measure and track: Prototype is state-of-the-art High-quality functional system Partnerships are online and integrated Salesforce.com is regarded as a leader and visionary We are all rich In order to help you track your vision, values, methods, obstacles, (and especially) measures, we created a V2MOM Update Template that can be used directly in Visible. Check it out here. The Benefits of Using V2MOM It is clear that V2MOM works well for Salesforce but the question is, "does it make sense to implement at my company?" Check out a few of the benefits V2MOM below to help understand if V2MOM is right for your business. Enhanced Clarity of Purpose V2MOM is a great way to continue to focus on your clarity of purpose. By laying out the vision for a particular project or goal, you are forced to understand how individual work ties into the overall purpose of the business. Seamless Alignment Across the Organization V2MOM creates alignment across individuals and the entire organization. By laying out the vision and values, you are forced to see how your individual and team's work fits into the organization as a whole. A written document also offers other team members insight into other individuals' work to see how they can encourage and support one another. Related Resource: How to Build Organizational Alignment Easily Sharper Focus on Strategic Initiatives Leveraging V2MOM is a great way to stay on top of strategic initiatives. It helps teams tie in their overarching strategic initiatives into documents that can be shared across the organization. Why V2MOM worked for Salesforce Many of the organizational decisions and directions at Salesforce are guided by their V2MOM. Since the inception of V2MOM, Salesforce has continued to use the management process for individuals and teams. As Salesforce continues to knock out their vision they go back to the drawing board and create a new vision the team can rally behind on an annual basis. You can check out the original V2MOM from April 12, 1999 below: However, V2MOM can be expanded beyond company wide alignment and can be used for team alignment and individual objectives. After Marc and the entire company define a new V2MOM it is then passed down to teams and individuals. From here, each employee is responsible for creating their own V2MOM. While having the corporate V2MOM to guide their own it’s easy for everyone across the organization to see how their role, goals, and projects can fit into the overall company vision (read: alignment). What types of businesses can use V2MOM Any business can use a V2MOM. However, there are certain use cases and types of businesses that generally will benefit most from a V2MOM. Early Stage Startups Early stage startups, especially those with lofty growth goals, can greatly benefit from setting up a V2MOM. In the early days of a startup, staying aligned and focused while you search for product market fit, your first hires, and your first customers can be a major challenge. V2MOMs can especially help early stage startups with the following: Hiring A V2MOM can help build the base of a strong startup culture. With the company vision being a picture of what you want the world to look like, it can be a strong tool when hiring and recruiting top talent. If a potential candidate feels strongly about your vision, chances are they will fit into the culture and will have a desire to work with you to accomplish your vision. Current employees will also be able to see the direct impact their work is making to the different components of a V2MOM. This will help give them the pride and ownership they want out of their work. Alignment Staying aligned while rapidly scaling headcount is a challenge. By having everyone hyper-focused on the vision, values, obstacles, methods, and measures, you’ll be able to keep everyone moving in the same direction. Fundraising V2MOM is a forcing function for leaders to lay out their vision and a rough road map of how they will get there. Even if you’re not pitching an exact V2MOM to a potential investor, it is a great backbone for different aspects of your pitch. For example, the vision and values will help paint the picture of what the company will look like and where you are headed. The methods and obstacles will help demonstrate the roadmap to achieve your vision and a clear demonstration of your understanding of the market (and competitors). And measures are the metrics and projects you’ll track to move forward. Related Resource: What do Investors Care About When it Comes to Culture? Internal Teams Salesforce expanded their V2MOM beyond as it is used for individuals and teams. Teams can lay out the vision they want to accomplish by using the company-wide V2MOM to guide them. From here, you can take it a step further and let individuals use the company-wise and team V2MOM to create their own individual plan to advance themselves forward. When V2MOM May Not Work Although we mentioned V2MOMs can work for all businesses — there are particular miscues, use cases, and businesses where it may not work as well. Lack of Communication Setting your V2MOM is only half the battle. To gauge your progress towards the company vision, you need to communicate and distribute your progress towards the vision (particularly the measures section). Companies that fail to communicate their V2MOM status properly, likely aren’t benefiting from the alignment that V2MOMs can offer. Incorrect Data When measuring any metric or goal, you must be measuring the correct thing. This stands true when tracking your measurables. For example, if you want to bring X # of people to your website but find out halfway through your Google Analytics data is wrong that can hurt your efforts over the previous months. Established Businesses V2MOMs can 100% work for established businesses, but it may not be the best use of time. If a shop or business knows exactly what they’re doing and have been operating in a certain manner for decades, there may not be a need for a V2MOM. If employees are happy and business is stable, there may be a better use of time for everyone involved then crafting an aspirational vision and roadmap. V2MOM’s should be shared, changed, and discussed regularly. The introduction of V2MOMs for individuals should lead to conversations with their managers around priorities and decision-making processes. Ready to step up your company alignment as you continue to grow? We put together an V2MOM Update Template you can check out here. How Do You Write a V2MOM? Tips to Follow If V2MOM sounds like a could be a good fit for your business. Check out tips to get started with V2MOM below: 1. Respect the Structured Order of the Elements First things first, you need to stick to the structured order of the elements. This means staying true to vision, values, methods, obstacles, and measures. 2. Use the SMART Framework The SMART framework is used when setting goals. This will help when it comes to setting the measurables for a V2MOM. As the team at TechTarget puts it, "SMART is a best practice framework for setting goals. A SMART goal should be specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time-bound. By setting a goal, an individual is making a roadmap for a specific target." 3. Keep it Concise Keep your V2MOM short and sweet. Make it easy to understand for everyone in the organization. By adding too much information, it will likely add confusion and further questions. 4. Prioritize and Be Specific Prioritizing the methods you will use will help lead to the desired outcomes. By listing too many methods you are likely diluting the focus and hurting your chances of a desired outcome. 5. Regularly Review and Update A V2MOM is a living document. It should be regularly reviewed by managers and peers so you can regularly update what is working and adapt to the changing environments. Use Visible's V2MOM Template as a Roadmap to Success Having a way to share and iterate on your V2MOM is crucial to success. Check out the template from our team that can be easily shared via email, Slack, and link. Try the template and get started on your V2MOM document here.
investors
Reporting
Operations
An Essential Guide on VC Fund Administration
What is fund administration? Fund administration is a third-party service that handles the accounting, cash-flow movement, and LP reporting for Venture Capital funds. Hustle Fund argues that fund admins are the most important part of a VC’s back-office operations. Key fundamentals of funds administration in Venture Capital Fund Admins play an essential role in ensuring critical fund operations run smoothly and also can help VC firms maintain credibility with Limited Partners (LPs). Below we outline the key fundamentals of Fund Administration. Cash flow management and capital allocation Fund administrators are responsible for wiring money directly to founders. The main reason fund administrators handle this process and not the GP is to protect against fraud and ensure accuracy. Fund administrators also handle the capital transactions between LPs and the fund. This includes managing the call-down process, determining how much to request from each LP, and sending letters to each LP with wire instructions. After an exit event, the fund administrators are also responsible for figuring out how much to distribute back to each LP. That’s a lot of separate transactions to manage which is why this can be an extremely time-consuming process. It’s also a high-stakes process with no room for mistakes. An error in the numbers can even result in a lawsuit based on gross incompetence. Limited Partner management Since Fund Administrators are responsible for sending communications related to capital transactions and reporting to Limited Partners, it’s critical that fund administrators keep an up-to-date list of Limited Partner contact information. The fund should share updated contact information with fund administrators as changes occur. Reporting Fund administration also handles the formal LP reporting process as outlined in a fund’s Limited Partnership Agreement. This typically includes putting together quarterly reports of each company’s latest valuation on a quarterly basis but the reporting requirements can vary from fund to fund based on LP requirements. To put together this reporting, fund administrators will source the latest investment information from the VC fund which is why it’s important for firms to keep investment data and fair market value changes up to date and accessible. Preparing these quarterly reports helps streamline the annual audit at the end of the year. Visible provides investors with an easy way to maintain accurate investment records that can easily be shared with fund administrators and auditors. Compliance assistance An important role of a fund administrator is making sure funds are maintaining compliance with the terms outlined in their Limited Partnership Agreement (LPA). This can include terms related to the timing of distributions, what can be considered a fund expense, and the deadlines for reporting. Audit and tax A fund administrator will work closely with other fund service providers such as auditors and tax-related providers to ensure the fund is performing in accordance with regulations. Related resource –> Venture Capital Audit Process: What it is and how Visible can help Modern technology and software solutions There are a variety of fund administrators dedicated to serving the VC industry. As discussed, VC fund administrators play a key role in VC firm operations so it’s worth taking the time to select the provider that is going to be the best fit for your firm. A great way to start is by asking your community for referrals. From there, it’s wise to interview the administrators and actually speak with the representative who will be assigned to work with your fund. Fund administrators differentiate themselves by variables such as the level of sophistication of their tech stack, whether they offer an LP portal, and also by the quality of the service they provide. It’s important to note that the quality of service can be dependent on the representative you work with at the organization. This is why it’s a great idea to meet with the rep in advance of signing a contract. The benefits of working with fund administrators Working with the right fund administrator can mean fewer headaches and more time to spend finding and supporting the best investment opportunities. Below we outline the top benefits of working with fund administrators regardless of your fund structure. Saves your firm time and resources Working with a fund administrator instead of trying to manage accounting in-house can save a firm time and money. This is because fund administrators are laser-focused on all the back-office functions and can be less costly than adding a full-time finance expert to your team. Provides expertise and experience A great fund administrator can provide funds with expertise based on working with dozens or even hundreds of VC firms. This can save less experienced GPs from costly accounting, legal, or capital transaction mistakes. Assists with investor relations management A fund administrator should provide timely and accurate communication to LPs. When fund administrators are executing well it should make the lives of the LPs easier which reflects positively on the fund. Provides compliance and regulatory support Since fund administrators have worked with hundreds and potentially even thousands of VC funds of varying stages, they’ve been exposed to many of the edge cases that could cause an inexperienced fund to make costly mistakes that could hurt their reputation. Fund administrators are well-versed in Venture Capital regulation and compliance which means GPs can leverage their fund administrators’ expertise when questions arise. When is the optimal time to start working with a fund administrator While not always required, it’s a good idea to start working with a fund administrator before even closing your first fund. This ensures your back office operations are set up for success right from the beginning. Many fund administrators have special pricing for emerging fund managers that makes it more affordable to get started. Looking to improve your portfolio monitoring processes at your fund? Visible streamlines the way you keep your companies’ financial KPI’s and investment data up to date and organized so sharing key information with service providers like your fund admin becomes even easier.
founders
Fundraising
15 Gaming and Esports Investors You Should Know
The esports realm is more than just a digital battleground; it’s a convergence of passion, innovation, and immense business potential. Esports has seen a huge rise in popularity over the past decade and is continuing its upward trend. The global audience, both in terms of participants and viewers, has grown exponentially, making it one of the fastest-growing sectors in the entertainment industry. According to DemandSage, there are currently 532.1 million e-sports audiences worldwide, and the e-sports market is valued at $1.44 billion as of 2023. This number is set to reach $5.48 billion by the year 2029. The Esports Investment Landscape The investment landscape in esports is dynamic, reflecting the industry’s rapid evolution. Current trends indicate a growing interest from traditional venture capitalists, corporate investors, and even celebrities. As the industry matures, we’re seeing a shift from early-stage investments to more growth-stage funding, indicating confidence in the long-term viability of esports ventures. Valuation Valuing an esports company can be complex. Traditional metrics might not always apply, given the unique nature of the industry. Factors like team performance, audience engagement, and brand partnerships play a significant role. It’s crucial to understand how similar companies in the space are valued and to be prepared to justify your valuation with concrete data and projections. Remember, while you want a valuation that reflects your company’s worth, it’s equally important to negotiate terms that are both favorable and fair to ensure a harmonious investor-founder relationship. What Esports VCs Look for in Esports Investments The weightage of these factors can vary. An investor more interested in the technology side of esports might prioritize infrastructure and assets, while another focused on branding might emphasize partnerships and audience engagement. Team Performance and Potential: Success in tournaments, player talent, and robust coaching infrastructure. Audience Engagement: The size and engagement level of the fan base, including metrics like social media engagement and merchandise sales. Monetization Strategies: Diverse revenue streams, their sustainability, and potential for new opportunities. Brand Partnerships and Sponsorships: Existing relationships with renowned brands and the potential for future collaborations. Market Potential: Industry growth trends, expansion opportunities, and competitive positioning. Management and Leadership: The track record of the management team, their vision, and organizational efficacy. Infrastructure and Assets: Both physical assets, like training facilities, and digital ones, such as streaming rights. Regulatory Environment: Understanding and navigating the regulatory landscape of esports. Scalability: The potential to scale and the infrastructure to support that growth. Unique Value Proposition: What makes your organization stand out? It could be unique content, community strategies, or other differentiators. Exit Strategy: Potential avenues for investors to see a return, be it through acquisition or public listing. Why Esports is Good Business Many VCs recognize that esports is not just a trend but a sustainable industry. With its integration into educational institutions and the establishment of professional leagues, there’s a belief in its long-term viability. Strategic Partnerships: The potential for partnerships between esports entities and established brands, media companies, and even traditional sports franchises offers lucrative opportunities. Diverse Revenue Streams & High Return Potential for VCs: Esports offers multiple avenues for monetization, including advertising, sponsorships, ticket sales, merchandise, media rights, and online streaming platforms. Global Reach: Unlike traditional sports that might be popular in specific regions, esports has a global appeal. Games like “League of Legends” or “Counter-Strike: Global Offensive” have massive followings across continents. Mainstream Acceptance: With esports events being broadcast on major networks and even discussions of esports becoming an Olympic event, there’s a belief that esports is moving from niche to mainstream. Young Demographic: The primary audience for esports comprises millennials and Gen Z, a demographic that’s attractive for advertisers and brands looking to establish long-term loyalty. Technological Integration: The ability to integrate emerging technologies like AR, VR, and AI into the esports ecosystem presents opportunities for innovative startups. Community Engagement: Esports fans are highly engaged, often participating in online forums, fan events, and even contributing to crowdfunded prize pools. Potential for Innovation: From virtual reality to AI-driven analytics, the esports industry is ripe for technological innovations that can enhance player performance and viewer experience. Related Read: The Startup Metrics Potential Investors Want to See Related Resources: All-Encompassing Startup Fundraising Guide 15 Venture Capital Firms Investing in VR FinTech Venture Capital Investors to Know BITKRAFT Ventures Stage: Seed, Series A/B Investment Location: Global Key person: Jens Hilgers, Malte Barth, Scott Rupp, and Moritz Baier-Lentz Gaming investments: Epic Games, Manticore Games, Frost Giant, Anzu, Bit Fry, Carbonated, Koji, Voicemod, etc. Thesis: Built by founders for founders, BITKRAFT is a global early- and mid-stage investment platform for gaming, esports, and interactive media. We focus on Seed, Series A, and Series B investments in game studios, interactive platforms, and immersive technology. Velo Partners Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed, Series A Investment Location: Global Key persons: Connor Williams Gaming investments: Ninjas in Pyjamas, Tripledot, and Moon Active. About: Velo Partner invests in Gaming and Gambling globally across mobile, online, land-based, online, social, B2B and B2C assets. Thesis: Velo typically invests in Series A or early growth stage rounds. Our ideal investment candidates demonstrate strong early traction and a clear understanding of their unit economics and growth trajectory. We also work in association with a gaming accelerator called RNG FOUNDRY for earlier-stage investment opportunities. Once invested, we typically follow our rights for later investment rounds and work with management to define good corporate governance and reporting. We will opportunistically evaluate later-stage investments on an ad-hoc basis. Play Ventures Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed, Series A Investment Location: Global Key persons: Anton Backman, Harris Manninen, Henric Suuronen Gaming investments: Thirdwave, Azra Games, Fractal Thesis: We are a global early-stage gaming fund, founded by two gaming entrepreneurs. We invest globally and early into ambitious mobile & PC free-to-play game studios and games services startups that are looking for more than just money. Makers Fund Stage: Seed, Series A, Series B Investment Location: North America Key persons: Jay Chi, Jiang Li, Lia Zhang, Matthew Ball, Michael Cheung Gaming investments: Theorycraft Games, Smitten, Xterio Thesis: We support innovative, ambitious founders. Our fund helps visionary entrepreneurs create their initial foundation and support them as they navigate the waters of early-stage business. 1Up Ventures Stage: Seed, Series A Investment Location: Pacific Northwest Key persons: Chris Wheaton, Ed Fries Gaming investments: Lost Lake Games, Drop Fake, Lightforge Games Thesis: At 1Up Ventures we are building a diverse and inclusive community of the most talented, experienced, and creative independent game developers in the world. We believe that by working together we can help each other be more successful. Black Sheep Ventures Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed, Series A Investment Location: Global Key person: Nolan Bushnell, Ron Bauer Gaming investments: X2 Games Thesis: Black Sheep Ventures seeks visionary entrepreneurs who are unflinching in creating new realities for entertainment experiences and human interactions, including in eSports, Gaming, Blockchain Technology and Immersive Experiences, and other sectors, where disruptive technology such as Blockchain and visionary creativity can permanently shift the established order. CAA Ventures Stage: Seed, Series A/B Investment Location: United States, Canada Key person: Michael Blank Gaming investments: Streamlabs, Mobcrush, Dapper, & more. Thesis: CAA Ventures provides value beyond capital to company founders. These companies are largely in the consumer Internet sector with an emphasis on mobile platforms, social media, crowdfunding, online video, publishing, games, and eCommerce. Dune Ventures Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed, Series A/B Investment Location: Global with a focus on NYC Key person: David Brillembourg Gaming investments: First Light Games, Oooh TV, Kanga Thesis: Dune Ventures: a new early-stage venture firm investing in gaming, esports, and interactive technology. We invest globally and back founders building content studios, social platforms and infrastructure that will define the next generation of entertainment. GameFounders Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed Investment Location: Global Key person: Kadri Ugand, Paul Bragiel Gaming investments: First Light Games, Oooh TV, Kanga Thesis: GameFounders accelerate teams or companies with two or more persons with launched games/demos/slices from any country in the world. Gamerforce Ventures Stage: Seed, Series A Investment Location: Global Key person: Lance Quek Gaming investments: Resurgence Thesis: Gamerforce Ventures is one of the first venture capital firms that is set up specifically to create high-value companies in the Esports and Gaming scene. Our partners are successful entrepreneurs and high flying executives coming from diverse backgrounds to help our portfolio companies succeed. We typically invest between seed and Series A, but may come in at later stages should the opportunity arises. Konvoy Ventures Stage: Seed, Series A Investment Location: Global Key person: Jason Chapman, Jackson Vaughan, Josh Chapman Gaming investments: Bunch, GameFam, Hiberworld, Lootcakes, & more. Thesis: We invest in the infrastructure technology, tools, and platforms of tomorrow’s video gaming industry. London Venture Partners Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed Investment Location: Europe, North America Key person: David Gardner, David Lau-Kee, Are Mack Growen Gaming investments: Treehouse Games, Knock Knock, Singularity 6, Coda, & more. Thesis: LVP is a venture capital seed fund with a difference – we’re operating experts in the games sector, and we only ever invest in the games ecosystem. That means we bring real experience and deep understanding. We speak the same language, share the same references, understand the same challenges – and we believe in the same vision. Remagine Ventures Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed Investment Location: Europe, Israel Key person: Eze Vidra, Kevin Baxpehler Gaming investments: Hour One, Syte, Minute Media, & more. Thesis: We meet and invest in startups early, help them refine product-market fit and introduce them to our strategic partners in order to kick-off collaborations and accelerate time-to-market. Related Resource: 9 Active Venture Capital Firms in Israel SeventySix Capital Stage: Pre-Seed, Seed, Series A Investment Location: United States Key person: Jon Powell, Wayne Kimmel, Chad Stender Gaming investments: Nerd Street Gamers Thesis: SeventySix Capital invests in passionate, smart and nice entrepreneurs who are launching game-changing startups in sports tech, esports, and sports betting. Griffin Gaming Partners Stage: All stages Investment Location: Global Key persons: Phil Sanderson, Peter Levin, Nick Tuosto Gaming investments: Forte, Discord, Overwolf Thesis: Investing at the intersection of content, software, infrastructure, and gaming-related web3 companies. Connect with esports investors with Visible Finding the right investors for your business is only half the battle. Having a system to track and manage your fundraise to help you get back to what matters most — building your business. Use Visible Connect to browse our investor database of hand-curated investors. Find investors and add them directly to your Fundraising Pipeline in Visible. Give it a try here.
founders
Operations
What Is Form 3921, and How Does It Affect Your Employees?
Equity compensation, such as Incentive Stock Options (ISOs), has become a cornerstone of the compensation strategy for many startups. While these options offer a range of benefits for both employers and employees, they also come with specific tax obligations and reporting requirements. Enter IRS Form 3921—a critical form that serves as the linchpin for reporting ISO exercises to the Internal Revenue Service. This form not only aids the IRS in ensuring tax compliance but also helps employees keep track of essential information required for their own tax returns. What Is the Purpose of IRS Form 3921? The purpose of IRS Form 3921 is to inform the IRS of the exercise of an incentive stock option (ISO). ISOs are a type of equity compensation that allows employees to purchase company stock at a predetermined price, typically below the fair market value of the stock. When an employee exercises an ISO, they are essentially buying stock from their employer. Form 3921 provides the IRS with information about the ISO exercise, such as the date the option was exercised, the exercise price, and the fair market value of the stock. This information helps the IRS track the number of ISOs that are exercised and the amount of compensation that is received by employees. The IRS uses this information to ensure that employees pay the correct amount of taxes on the appreciation in the value of the stock. If an employee sells the stock within one year of the exercise date, they will owe ordinary income taxes on the entire amount of the appreciation. However, if they hold the stock for at least one year from the date the option was granted and two years from the date the option was exercised, they will only owe capital gains taxes on the appreciation. In addition to informing the IRS of the exercise of an ISO, Form 3921 also serves as a record for the employee. The employee should keep a copy of Form 3921 for their own records so that they can properly report the income on their tax return. Related resource: IRS- About Form 3921, Exercise of an Incentive Stock Option Under Section 422(b) The Difference Between Form 1099B and Form 3921 The main difference between the two forms is that Form 1099-B reports on the sale of stock, while Form 3921 reports on the exercise of an ISO. Form 1099-B is typically filed by the brokerage firm that sold the stock, while Form 3921 is typically filed by the startup that issued the ISO. Form 1099-B is an information return that must be filed by brokers and other financial institutions to report the proceeds of sales and other taxable transactions in securities, such as stocks, bonds, and mutual funds. The form provides the IRS with information about the sale, such as the date of the sale, the sale price, and the cost basis. Form 3921 is an information return that must be filed by startups with the IRS when an employee exercises an incentive stock option (ISO). The form provides the IRS with information about the ISO exercise, such as the date the option was exercised, the exercise price, and the fair market value of the stock. “If you sold stock, bonds or other securities through a broker or had a barter exchange transaction (exchanged property or services rather than paying cash), you will likely receive a Form 1099-B. Regardless of whether you had a gain, loss, or broke even, you must report these transactions on your tax return.” HRBlock Related resource: What is a Schedule K-1: A Comprehensive Guide How Does Form 3921 Impact Employees Who Exercise an Incentive Stock Option (ISO)? It provides the IRS with information about the ISO exercise, which the IRS uses to ensure that employees pay the correct amount of taxes on the appreciation in the value of the stock. It serves as a record for the employee, which they can use to properly report the income on their tax return. If an employee sells the stock within one year of the exercise date, they will owe ordinary income taxes on the entire amount of the appreciation. However, if they hold the stock for at least one year from the date the option was granted and two years from the date the option was exercised, they will only owe capital gains taxes on the appreciation. The employee should keep a copy of Form 3921 for their own records so that they can properly report the income on their tax return. When Should a Startup Owner Receive a Form 3921? For startup owners, Form 3921 is their responsibility. Whenever an employee exercises ISOs granted by the startup, the owner must provide them with Form 3921. To ensure timely filing of Form 3921, keep in mind these three crucial deadlines: January 31: The final date to distribute copy B to all employees who exercised their ISOs during the preceding year. February 28: The cut-off for submitting copy A to the IRS via paper forms. March 31: The last date to send copy A to the IRS through electronic submission. What Information Do You Need to Complete the Form? Filling out Form 3921 requires particular attention to details and collecting specific data. It’s crucial to identify the necessary information for startup owners and employees. You can find more information about Form 3921 on the IRS website. For Startup Owners Startup owners provide Form 3921’s data set so they must provide: The name, address, and taxpayer identification number (TIN) of the employee who exercised the ISO. The date the ISO was granted. The exercise price of the ISO. The fair market value of the stock on the date the ISO was exercised. The number of shares of stock that were acquired through the exercise of the ISO. The name and TIN of the company that issued the ISO. The transmitter control code (TCC), if filing electronically. The employee’s email address, if filing electronically. The fair market value of the stock on the date of exercise, if the employee did not hold the stock for at least one year from the date the option was granted and two years from the date the option was exercised. The company’s EIN (Employer Identification Number) The company can obtain the employee’s TIN from the employee’s W-4 form. The company can obtain the fair market value of the stock from the stockbroker or transfer agent. The company can obtain the transmitter control code from the IRS website. The company must file Form 3921 by March 31 of the year following the year in which the ISO was exercised. The company can file Form 3921 electronically or by mail. For Startup Employees Employees do not need to complete Form 3921. This form is filed by the company that issued the incentive stock option (ISO). However, the employee may need to provide some information to the company, such as their taxpayer identification number (TIN). The employee’s TIN can be found on their W-4 form. The company can use this information to complete Form 3921. The employee should also keep a copy of Form 3921 for their own records. This could be helpful if they ever need to file an amended tax return or if the IRS audits them. Do Startups or Employees Owe Taxes on Form 3921? The employee will owe taxes on the difference between the fair market value of the stock on the date the option was exercised and the exercise price when they sell the stock, unless they hold the stock for at least one year from the date the option was granted and two years from the date the option was exercised. In that case, the employee will not owe any taxes on the appreciation in the value of the stock. The startup does not owe any taxes on the exercise of an ISO. However, if the startup later sells the stock that was acquired through the exercise of the ISO, it may owe capital gains taxes on the appreciation in the value of the stock. How to File IRS Form 3921 as a Startup Owner Yearly tax reporting is a ritual, and for those with ISO dealings, Form 3921 is a significant part of this process. Here’s a breakdown: 1. File Copy A Through the IRS Form 3921 can be submitted to the IRS electronically or via traditional mail. Online methods are often more efficient and can offer faster confirmations of receipt. Regardless of your choice, ensure you’re ahead of the filing deadline, which typically aligns with other wage and tax statements. 2. Give Copy B to the Employee This isn’t just a courtesy; it’s a requirement. Distributing Copy B of Form 3921 ensures that employees have the essential data they need to file their taxes correctly. The timeline is tight, with the document typically due to the employee by January 31st of the year following the ISO exercise. 3. Keep Copy C for Startup Records In the world of business, documentation is king. Keeping Copy C of Form 3921 is not just good practice but vital for tax compliance. If the IRS ever comes knocking with an audit in tow, you’ll be grateful you retained these records. What Happens if You Miss the Filing Deadline? Oversights happen, but missing the Form 3921 deadline can be costly. Penalties can accrue, and these, over time, can become substantial financial burdens. If you realize you’ve missed the deadline, it’s crucial to act promptly: submit the form as soon as possible and consult a tax professional regarding any penalties and potential relief. The amount of the penalty will depend on how late you file the form and whether you have a history of filing late. The IRS may impose a penalty of up to $25 per day for each day that Form 3921 is late, up to a maximum of $15,000. The penalty will be reduced if you can show that the late filing was due to reasonable cause. In addition to the penalty, the IRS may also assess interest on any taxes that are due as a result of the late filing of Form 3921. The interest rate is currently 6% per year. To avoid the penalties for late filing of Form 3921, it is important to file the form on time. If you are unable to file the form on time, you should contact the IRS as soon as possible to request an extension. Resources Understand the difference between ISOs and NSOs here. IRS- About Form 3921, Exercise of an Incentive Stock Option Under Section 422(b) Copy of Form 3921 Instructions for Forms 3921 and 3922 Learn everything you need to know about accounting for your startup here. Dive into valuable business startup resources here. Visible Can Help Your Startup Stay In-the-Know Understanding and managing the intricacies of Form 3921 can be overwhelming, but Visible is happy to help navigate this and more! Leveraging tools and platforms, like Visible, can streamline processes, and let startups focus on what they do best: innovating and growing. See all the ways we help founders with free access to Visible for 14 days: https://app.visible.vc/create-account
investors
Operations
Customer Stories
[Webinar Recording] Best Practices for Onboarding Portfolio Companies to Your VC Firm with M13 and Forum Ventures
We can all agree that first impressions matter. Onboarding a new investment into your VC firm’s community is a key step in setting up the investor <> company relationship for success. Join us Tuesday, August 29th for a discussion with two leaders in VC Operations, Steph Jones from Forum Ventures and Amelia Zack from M13, on how to set up effective portfolio company onboarding processes at your VC firm. This webinar is designed for people working in VC operations who want to improve the way they engage with their portfolio companies post-investment. Discussion topics: Defining the company onboarding process for your firm and why it matters Welcoming companies into your community Connecting companies to resources Setting expectations about portfolio data collection Q&A
investors
Reporting
Operations
A Simple Breakdown of the VC Audit Process
VC Audit Definition Before we address best practices it's important to define what the VC audit entails. A VC audit is when a Venture Capital firm enlists a third-party auditor to evaluate its financial compliance. The auditor will review key fund documentation alongside recent portfolio performance to ensure the firm's valuations are accurate. Which VC Firms Require an Audit On August 23, 2023 the SEC approved new rules for private fund advisers. The changes will require all SEC-registered private fund advisers to have an annual audit regardless of size. Prior to this change, some funds were considered exempt but it was still common for VCs to conduct an audit to help better position the firm for future fundraising from potential LPs who want to see audited financials. Purpose of an Audit The purpose of a VC audit can be summarized in three parts: Ensure the fund’s General Partner(s) are operating in accordance with the fund’s LPA and that the financials reflect compliance Confirm the fund’s valuations of portfolio companies and the fund’s ownership position in them Give LPs confidence that a neutral third party validates the fund’s financial statements and assessment of its own success General VC Audit Timeline Audits are typically conducted on an annual basis using end-of-year figures. The audit process typically starts in the final month of the calendar year and wraps up during the first quarter of the calendar year. Although audits only happen once per year, it’s important to maintain clean records of things like company valuations, company financial metrics, fund expenses, capital calls, and other transactions throughout the year. Continual hygiene of fund records translates into a smoother audit process at the end of the year. Here's a general timeline for the VC audit process: Q1 - Q4 - Collect portfolio company KPI's and monitor valuation changes Q4 - Establish audit timeline with fund admin and auditor. Additionally, the pre-audit process should kick off so auditors have a chance to understand a firm's operations. Q1 - In January, firms should be doing year-end valuations and closing their books. During this month fund managers should also be reviewing the books before sending the final figures to an auditor. During January or February, the audit process officially begins. Q2 - April 30 is the official audit deadline but extensions to the deadline can be requested. For more audit best practices check this webinar co-hosted with Visible and Weaver -- How to Prepare for Your Fund Audit. How to Prepare for a VC Audit Choosing an Audit Firm This is an important step in setting yourself up for audit success. When choosing an auditor it's important to choose a service provider who specializes and understands the nuances of Venture Capital. Otherwise, you risk spending time during the audit process having to teach your auditor about your industry. You can do this by checking out their website and if they have published resources on Venture Capital then this is a great indication that they have knowledge of your industry. You should also ask the team you'll be directly working with whether they have experience in the VC industry. If you're an emerging manager and expect to need hand-holding during the audit process, make sure you choose an auditor who is open for ad-hoc questions. During the diligence process, you should ask the auditor about their policy for asking questions and if there is an additional charge. Related Resource: Five Simple Steps Key Venture Capital Staff Can Take to Support a Successful Audit Establishing a Valuation Policy It's a great idea to establish a valuation policy before your first audit. This policy outlines how your firm will justify its portfolio company valuations under different circumstances. Related resource: Establishing a Valuation Policy Preparing the Required Documents and Information While not a comprehensive list, here are some of the items that funds will likely be asked to provide to auditors: Limited Partnership Agreement Financial statements Fully signed deal documentation Invoices to prove the firm is charging LPs for permitted expenses Transaction records (capital calls, distributions, bank balances) Updated ownership positions in each company (cap tables) Proof of valuation calculations/policies Portfolio company contacts (name and email address) Portfolio company financials (year-end) Portfolio company financing documents from most recent rounds Portfolio company balance sheets Portfolio company revenue reports An established valuation policy Pro Tip: Ensure you are sending your auditor the fully executed (signed) version of the documents. Doing this will help cut down time during the audit process and help firms save money. Hustle Fund reminds investors in this article Fund Audit 101 – Everything You Need To Know that it’s the job of the VC to provide this information to auditors and that the required documentation can change from year to year. It can be helpful to ask your auditor to provide quarterly updates about what they will be asking for during the annual audit. Related Resource: 8 Questions to Ask Before Auditing Your First Venture Capital Fund Monitoring Portfolio Companies Using Visible One of the most time-consuming parts of the audit process is the back and forth that can occur when auditors need more evidence on how the VC firm arrived at company valuation figures. To justify valuations, it's important to have key information from your portfolio companies at the ready. Check out the list below to see what you need to have on file. Portfolio monitoring audit checklist: Revenue budget vs actual Cash on hand Burn rate Company performance vs business plan Details about the last round of financing Visible equips investors with a founder-friendly way to ask for key audit information from portfolio companies. Visible's Request feature allows for any custom metric, qualitative question, files, properties, and more. This streamlined approach to data collection helps VC firms keep up-to-date and accurate records about their portfolio companies throughout the year — leading to a smoother audit process. Check out an Example Request in Visible. More than 400+ VCs use Visible to streamline their portfolio monitoring and reporting.
investors
Metrics and data
TVPI for VCs — Definition and Why It Matters
What is TVPI In simple terms, ‘Total Value to Paid In’, also known as TVPI, communicates how much a VC fund is worth on paper compared to how much money Limited Partners (LPs) have put into the fund. To calculate TVPI you take the total distributions paid back to the LPs (realized gains) and add it to the residual value of the investments in the fund (unrealized gains) and then divide the value by how much Limited Partners have contributed to a fund. It’s important to remember that LPs do not contribute all their committed capital to a fund all at once but rather over time it is ‘called’ by the General Partner for specific reasons such as a new investment. Related Resource: Fund Performance Metrics 101 (and why they matter to LPs) Why does TVPI matter in VC TVPI is one of the earliest indicators current and prospective LP’s will use to measure the performance of a VC fund. It’s essentially communicating whether the fund’s performance is heading in the right direction. In other words, it demonstrates whether the value of investments have increased or decreased. Any TVPI value greater than 1x means that the fund’s value has grown over time. LPs use TVPI to compare the performance of funds against each other. The greater the TVPI, the greater the increase in the value of the fund. To better understand TVPI benchmarks check out Pitchbook’s Benchmark Report as of Q4 2022. Visible empowers investors to visualize, share, and communicate their most important fund metrics in flexible dashboards. TVPI within the current market context According to Hustle Fund, TVPI is the metric that investors are currently feeling squeamish about reporting to potential Limited Partners in today’s tough market conditions. The reason TVPI is low for many funds right now is because their portfolio companies are having a hard time fundraising. If portfolio companies are raising priced rounds at all, the increase in company valuations are marginal or even lower than before (when this occurs it’s called a Down Round). This means investors are not likely to be marking up any of their investments, causing TVPI to remain the same or even decrease with down rounds. Whether your TVPI has gone up or down in the last quarter, it’s important to maintain transparent communication with LPs in both good times and the bad. Check out Visible’s LP Update Template Library to inspire better communication with your LPs this quarter. Using Visible to track and visualize fund metrics With Visible investors can keep track of over 30+ fund metrics including: TVPI RVPI DPI IRR Multiple And more Fund metrics can be visualized in Visible's flexible dashboards alongside text, properties, variance charts, and portfolio metric data. Over 400+ VCs use Visible to streamline their portfolio monitoring and reporting.
investors
Metrics and data
Reporting
Streamlining Portfolio Data Collection and Analysis Across the VC Firm
Many Venture Capital firms struggle to efficiently collect updates from their portfolio companies and turn the data into meaningful insights for their firm and Limited Partners. It’s usually a painful process consisting of messy Google Sheets or Excel file templates being sent to companies. Then, someone at the VC firm is responsible for the painful task of tracking down companies and convincing them to send the metric template back to the investor. The end result is typically an unreliable master sheet that isn’t accessible or easy to digest for the rest of the firm. Visible has helped over 350+ VC firms streamline the way they collect, analyze, and report on their portfolio and fund performance. Keep reading to learn how. Streamlining Portfolio Data Collection To set up a more efficient portfolio data collection process at your firm make sure you: Don't require companies to manage another login Visible’s data Requests are delivered directly to your companies’ email inboxes and the secure-linked base form ensures there is no friction in the data-sharing process. Maintain founder privacy Visible supports over 3.5k founders on our platform and the consistent feedback we hear is founders do not want their investors to have direct access to their data sources. Founders prefer to have control over what and when their data is shared with investors. Customize which information you request from companies Visible allows investors to create any custom metric, qualitative question, yes/no response, multiple choice, and more. This provides investors with the flexibility to use Visible for more than just financial reporting but also impact or diversity reporting and end-of-year audit preparation. Related resource: Portfolio Monitoring Tips for Venture Capital Investors Related resource: Which Metrics Should I Collect from My Portfolio Companies Easy Ways to Analyze VC Portfolio Data While having up-to-date, accurate investment data is important, being able to extract and communicate insights about your portfolio data is when it really becomes valuable. Visible supports three different types of dashboards to help you analyze your portfolio data more easily. Flexible portfolio company dashboards — Visualize KPI’s by choosing from 9 different chart types and combine with rich text and company properties. These dashboards are a great fit to help facilitate more robust internal portfolio review meetings. Portfolio metric dashboards — This dashboard allows you to compare performance across your entire portfolio and easily identify your top performers and the companies who may need additional support. Fund analytics dashboards — This flexible dashboard lets investors control how they want to visualize and analyze their fund performance metrics. Choose from over 30+ fund metrics and auto calculated insights and easily add them to your shareable dashboard. View an example of all three types of dashboards by downloading the resource below. Sharing Portfolio Updates with Limited Partners It’s important to remember that while Limited Partners are primarily focused on financial returns they also care about insights. VC firms who empower their Limited Partners with updates about sector trends and high-level insight into portfolio company performance are setting themselves up to be both trusted and valuable long-term partners to their investors. LP Update Template Library — Visible makes it easy for firms to make engaging communication with Limited Partners a habit by providing free and open-source Update templates. Want to feature your LP Update template in out library? Get in touch! Tear Sheets — Tear Sheets or One Pagers can be a great way to provide high-level updates about portfolio companies to your LPs. Visible’s tear sheet template solution helps VC firms create reporting with ease by merging information and data into beautiful charts that are automatically kept up to date. View Tear Sheet examples to inspire your next reporting. Related resource: Tear Sheets 101 (and how to build one in Visible) Visible supports 400+ funds around the world streamline the portfolio data collection, analysis, and reporting process.
founders
Hiring & Talent
Operations
Advisory Shares Explained: Empowering Entrepreneurs and Investors
Managing company equity is a crucial part of a founder’s job duty. In the early days of building a business, chances are there will be countless advisors, investors, peers, etc. that help a business. However, most early stage businesses do not have the cashflow to compensate every advisor along the way. Founders need to get crafty with how they compensate their earliest advisors and experts — enter: advisory shares. We always recommend consulting a lawyer before taking further action on advisory shares. Learn more about advisory shares and how you can leverage them for your business below: What Are Advisory Shares? As put by the team at Investopedia, “One common class of stock is advisory shares. Also known as advisor shares, this type of stock is given to business advisors in exchange for their insight and expertise. Often, the advisors who receive this type of stock options reward are company founders or high-level executives. Advisor shares typically vest monthly over a 1-2 year period on a schedule with no cliff and 100% single-trigger acceleration.” Advisor Shares vs. Regular Shares (or Equity) Advisor shares come in different shapes and sizes. There is not a technical definition of advisor shares but is rather any form of equity in a business. Learn more about the characteristics of advisory shares below: Characteristics of Advisory Shares As mentioned above, advisor shares typically vest monthly over a 1-2 year period with no cliff. Advisory shares are typically granted as stock options but not every company grants their shares in the same way. This generally comes in the form of Non-Qualified Stock Options (NSOs). Related Read: The Main Difference Between ISOs and NSOs How Do Advisory Shares Work? While advisory shares can take on different forms, they typically can be boiled down to a few similarities. Of course, these can change depending on your business. Exchanged for advice or expertise Typically offered as NSO stock options Follow a shorter vesting schedule Learn more about how advisory shares typically work below: Implement a Startup Advisor Agreement As put by the team at HubSpot, “A startup advisor agreement is a contract between a startup and its advisor. This agreement outlines the terms of the relationship, including the responsibilities of each party and the compensation the advisor will receive.” There are countless advisor agreement templates online to get you started. The Founder Institute offers a free template called the FAST Agreement. Determine the Vesting Schedule As advisor shares are for advisors that offered their expertise, they are typically granted on a shorter vesting schedule because their value is given over a shorter amount of time. This is typically a 1 or 2 year vesting schedule (as opposed to the 4 year vesting schedule traditionally used for startup employees). Benefits of Advisory Shares Advisory shares come with their own set of pros and cons. Properly maintaining and distributing equity is a critical role of a startup founder so understand the benefits, and drawbacks, of offering advisory shares is a must. Related Resource: 7 Essential Business Startup Resources Learn more about the benefits of offering startup advisory shares below: Access to Real Experts When setting out to build a business, chances are most founders lack expertise in certain areas when it comes to building a business or in their market. However, most early-stage companies are typically strapped for cash and are unable to afford the defacto experts in the space. With advisor shares, startup founders can attract real experts to get guidance and strategic support in the early days in return for shares in the business. Related Resource: Seed Funding for Startups 101: A Complete Guide Better Network Credibility If hiring the right advisor, chances are they will be able to help beyond strategic advice or their expertise. They will be able to expose your business to their network and will be able to make introductions to new business opportunities, partnerships, investors, and potential hires. Cost-Effective Compensation As we previously mentioned, most businesses that benefit most from advisors are unable to offer them a salary or cash compensation. With advisor shares, startup founders are able to offer shares as compensation and conserve thei cash to help with scaling their business and headcount. Drawbacks of Advisory Shares Of course, offering advisor shares is not for everyone. While there are benefits to offering advisor shares, there are certainly drawbacks as well. Weighing the pros and cons and determining what is right for your business is ultimately up to you. We always recommend consulting with a lawyer or counsel when determining how to compensate advisors. Diluted Ownership The biggest drawback for most founders will be the diluted ownership. By offering shares to advisors, you will be diluting the ownership of yourself and existing shareholders. As advisors are fully vested in 1-2 years, they will potentially not be invested in future success as other stakeholders and could be costly when taking into account the diluted ownership. Potential Conflicts of Interest Advisors might not have the same motivators and incentives as your employees and other shareholders. As their ownership is generally a smaller % and their shares vest early, they are potentially not as incentivized for the growth of your company as employees and larger % owners will be. Getting in front of these conversations and making sure you have a good read on any potential advisors before bringing them onboard is a good first step to mitigate potential conflicts. Extra Stakeholder to Manage Chances are most advisors are helping other companies as well. This means that their attention is divided and you will need to ensure you are getting enough value to warrant dilution. This also means that you are responsible for managing a relationship and communication with another stakeholder in your business — what can be burdensome on some founders. The 2 Variations of Advisory Shares Advisory shares are generally offered in 2 variations — restricted stock awards and stock options. Learn more about each option and what they mean below: Restricted Stock Awards As put by the team at Investopedia, “A restricted stock award is similar to an RSU in a number of ways, except for the fact that the award also comes with voting rights. This is because the employee owns the stock immediately once it is awarded. Generally, an RSU represents stock, but in some cases, an employee can elect to receive the cash value of the RSU in lieu of a stock award. This is not the case for restricted stock awards, which cannot be redeemed for cash.” Stock Options As we mentioned, NSOs (Non-Qualified Stock Options) are commonly used for advisor shares. As put by the team at Investopedia, “A non-qualified stock option (NSO) is a type of employee stock option wherein you pay ordinary income tax on the difference between the grant price and the price at which you exercise the option… Non-qualified stock options require payment of income tax of the grant price minus the price of the exercised option.” Who Gets to Issue Advisory Shares? Issuing advisory shares is typically reserved for the founder or CEO of a company. Having a decision-making process and gameplan when issuing advisory shares is important. This might mean offering no shares at all, having an allocated amount of advisor shares from the get go, or something inbetween. Making sure your board of directors and other key stakeholders are on board is crucial to make sure that interest and strategy stays aligned for all stakeholders. How Many Shares Should You Give a Startup Advisor? Managing the balance between sufficient incentives and managing equity dilution is crucial for any business. Determining the number of shares to offer an advisor is subjective to the founder and advisor. When determining the number, a couple of things to keep in mind include: Advisor’s experience Time commitment Expected contribution As put by the team at Silicon Valley Bank, “An advisor may receive between 0.25% and 1% of shares, depending on the stage of the startup and the nature of the advice provided. There are ways to structure such compensation that ensures founders get value for those shares and still retain the flexibility to replace advisors, all without losing equity.” Let Visible Help You Streamline the Investment Management Process Use Visible to manage every part of your fundraising funnel with investor updates, fundraising pipelines, pitch deck sharing, and data rooms. Raise capital, update investors, and engage your team from a single platform. Try Visible free for 14 days. Related resource: Navigating the World of QSBS: Tax Benefits and Eligibility Criteria Explained
investors
Product Updates
What’s New in Visible for Investors — H1’ 2023
In the first half of 2023, Visible remained dedicated to helping our community of 350+ investors streamline the way they collect, analyze, and report on their portfolio data. We saw the slowdown in Venture Capital activity during the first part of the year translate into an increased need for accurate and up-to-date portfolio insights that can easily be shared internally and with stakeholders. Both Venture Capital investors and their Limited Partners are relying on data-informed insights more than ever before to guide their next steps. To best support our investors, we focused on making updates to three core functions of our portfolio monitoring and reporting platform during the first half of 2023: Keep reading to learn about some of the specific updates made to our platform during the last six months. Changes to Getting Data into Visible These product updates allow investors to more easily collect budget vs actuals KPI’s and send reminder emails to all their companies at once. Send bulk one-off reminders to all companies (learn more) Ask for up to six future and historical custom KPI’s (learn more) View and edit company metrics in dynamic time periods Changes to Visualizing, Analyzing, and Sharing Portfolio Insights With these changes, users can more easily identify quick insights about their portfolio performance and share it with their team and LPs. Extract quick insights about your portfolio with Portfolio Metric Dashboards (learn more) Applying a custom dashboard template to all companies (learn more) Build a flexible One Pager template for LP reporting (learn more) Uplevel your data visualizations by adding color gradients to your charts (learn more) Share your portfolio company dashboards via a link and choose to password-protect them (learn more) Learn more about analyzing portfolio data with custom dashboards in Visible. Changes to Investment Data Tracking The following updates allow investors to track all their key investment data and fund metrics within Visible. This gives investors real-time control over updating, visualizing, and sharing their fund performance. Convert Convertible Notes to equity with ease (learn more) Track follow-on rounds you don’t participate in (learn more) Choose a custom exchange rate for investment round details (learn more) Capture all your core fund metrics in Visible (learn more) Track and visualize IRR at the fund and company level (learn more) Visualize auto-calculating fund metrics (learn more) Ready to improve your firm’s portfolio monitoring and reporting processes?
investors
Customer Stories
Reporting
[Webinar Recording] Leveraging portfolio analysis to improve your fund’s IRR
A recent poll of VCs shows that some of the primary reasons investors collect financial data from portfolio companies is to improve their post-investment support (66%) and inform future investment decisions (44%). To do this well, investors need to be able to analyze their portfolio company data through an advanced financial lens so they can extract actionable insights that lead to improved fund performance. We recently sat down for a conversation on Leveraging Portfolio Analysis to Improve your Fund’s IRR with Kristian Marquez, CFA. Kristian is the CEO of FinStrat Management and a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) charterholder since 2004. The webinar was designed for people working in Venture Capital who want to level up the way they understand and analyze their portfolio companies’ financial performance data. Topics Discussed: The WHY behind surfacing portfolio insights Where to find benchmark data and how to use it Top 4 performance indicators, what they mean, and how to calculate them Using dashboards in Visible to evaluate portfolio company performance Tips for moving from analysis to action
investors
Operations
Metrics and data
Portfolio Management: What it is and How to Scale it at Your VC Firm
What is VC Portfolio Management? Portfolio Management in Venture Capital is a process used by VC investors with the ultimate goal of protecting and increasing the value of their investments. Proper portfolio management is a cumulation of intelligent decision-making, information analysis, and resource commitment all aimed at achieving the value increase and stability in a range of investments. Portfolio Management within the VC context generally consists of the following: Market Research and Oversight Venture capitalists need to be extremely savvy and up-to-date with the most relevant and real-time information about the industries they investment in. Typically, VC firms specialize in a particular type of investment (pre-seed, seed, later stage, etc) and sometimes they are industry specific (B2B Saas, B2C, EnviroTech, FemTech). Therefore, the portfolio that a VC is managing may encompass many different industries. Investors should aim to understand the most up-to-date research on how each industry and market is growing and changing. This helps investors make smart initial investment decisions, inform follow-up funding decisions, and appropriately advise on timely exit strategies. Risk Profiling VC investing is a risky business. However, a clear understanding of how long it will take to gain a return on an investment is critical for investors and goes hand in hand with market research when setting up a portfolio management strategy. VCs need to profile the level of risk of each investment with an informed understanding how long it will likely take to get their initial investment back (typically 3-7 years) and how likely they are to 10x their investment. The balance of quick return with high potential is critical to consider when managing new investments in a VC portfolio. Exit Strategies As a VC is first making an investment, they typically write into their investment strategy how they hope to exit the business. This plan includes identifying exit targets and appropriate negotiation engagements in best and worst-case scenarios for the business. Strategies might be mergers, acquisitions, buyouts, or public offerings. An ideal exit strategy is important to outline as a part of a portfolio management strategy. This helps investors better mitigate risk and understand the potential outcomes and value of a portfolio. Related resource: What is Acquihiring? A Comprehensive Guide for Founders How Exactly Does Portfolio Management Work? More experienced venture capitalists will use their past experiences to determine patterns in investment strategies and the most effective way to interpret different potential investment outcome scenarios. Ultimately, portfolio management in Venture Capital comes down to understanding the delicate balance of qualitative and quantitative information about the investments in a portfolio. Portfolio management internally within a VC fund consists of market research and oversight, risk profiling, and formulating numerous potential exit strategies. In order to work through these steps, a VC will need updated information from their portfolio companies on a regular basis. VCs are looking for a mix of metrics and qualitative data from their portfolio. If you’re a VC looking to streamline the way you collect data from your portfolio companies, check out What Metrics Should I Be Collecting from my Portfolio Companies. Collecting Portfolio Data in Visible 70% of the 350+ funds using Visible are requesting data from companies on a quarterly basis. Learn more about portfolio monitoring in Visible. Check out an Example Request in Visible. Portfolio Management Metrics Of course, there are metrics that are commonly tracked amongst VC portfolio companies to help VCs stay on top of their portfolio performance. A couple of the key metrics and areas we generally see VCs focused on: Financials and cash position A VC wants the honest truth about how their companies are positioned financially. They will want to know metrics such as Cash Balance, Burn Rate, Runway, and Gross Profit. Investors may also ask for the forecast for these metrics. This information helps a VC determine whether they’re likely to reserve cash for a follow-up investment in a company and what a potential exit strategy might be. Related Resources: Which Metrics Should I Collect from My Portfolio Companies? True North KPIs Depending on the type of business a company is operating, their ‘True North’ KPIs will differ. A company’s true north KPIs should be the key performance indicators that are guiding the business every single day. Beyond revenue goals, examples of other KPIs could be active users, a customer net promoter score, active customers, or average contract value. These KPIs will help a VC determine how the company is performing versus sector benchmarks. Related Resources: Startup Metrics You Need to Monitor Ownership and Cap Table Data If a VC is looking to make a new investment, an important component they will consider for their portfolio management is how much ownership they will have in the company. A founder seeking investment should be transparent about what percent of the company is available in exchange for investment (if any) and how much is already taken. In addition to a clear ownership breakdown, a company should share information about its securities (stock options etc..). This information will be extremely relevant as the VC determines how to structure a potential investment deal. Portfolio Management Qualitative Information Collecting the metrics and quantitative data is only part of the portfolio management process. We also see investors collect a number of different qualitative fields to help them better understand how a company is performing. A couple of examples below: Wins from the Previous Period Founders shouldn’t be shy. Companies should be sure to highlight their most recent, and impressive wins as a company. This will energize and excite a VC who is determining which of their current companies they may want to make a follow-on investment into. Investors will also likely use this information when deciding whether to introduce a company to a potential follow-on investor. When investors make intros to other investors, they’re putting their social capital on the line. Companies who have instilled confidence in their current investors are more likely to get intros to follow on funders. The VC Advantage Venture capitalists take portfolio management so seriously because they of course want to see their portfolio investments succeed and make money. Therefore, outside of putting down the initial investment, venture capitalists usually incorporate many other touchpoints and opportunities to help their investments succeed. Outside of the fiscal advantage VC investments provide, a close relationship with investors and VCs can be a competitive advantage that makes or breaks a company. Ultimately, VCs want to help their portfolio companies because it helps them. In addition to actively monitoring the metric performance of their portfolio, VCs want to offer assistance in any way that they can to give their investments a competitive advantage. These competitive advantage points are also a part of a successful portfolio management strategy. VCs help their portfolio companies in a variety of ways: Taking action on metrics – As mentioned above, VCs are continuously monitoring their portfolio investments. VCs analyze their companies’ profits, customer churn, average deal size, and more. An informed VC can provide insights and advice to companies to help them improve their performance metrics. Drawing form experience managing other investments, they will have insight into what works and what to avoid or change in order to succeed.  Hiring decisions – VC partners are often ex-founders who have successfully built and exited one ore more companies. They are experienced in hiring founding teams and can help advise what roles are the most critical to higher first. Additionally, VCs networks are deep and wide. A founder may have the chance to hire a seasoned CFO or CMO through an intro from a VC. Hiring the right people is critical to the success of early stage companies and leaning on a VC partner to do so may allow a founder to access talent that wouldn’t have otherwise been interested in their company. (Relevant resource: 5 Ways to Help Your Portfolio Companies Find Talent) Fundraising assistance – Fundraising is exhausting but necessary as companies aim to quickly scale their business. After partnering with a VC for an early round, investors want to ensure the right investment partners come onboard for later rounds. If a company is on track to succeed, leaning on existing VC relationships to find additional investors is a smart idea. An existing VC will want to work with other firms or angels they get along with or align with ideologically and will often go above and beyond to help you make new connections and raise a new round of funding. (Relevant resource: How to share your fundraising pipeline with your current investors) Strategic product decisions – With a close eye on the market, a VC can be a good sounding board for what pivots or iterations to make to a company’s product. It’s easy for founders to get stuck in a silo, only focusing on the details of their product. A VC can provide helpful advice on what decisions to make that better keep in mind the market and competitors, even providing tough love on what product decisions might not be right.  Related Resources: How to Lead a Portfolio Review Meeting for VC’s How Visible Can Help Investors of all stages are using Visible to streamline their portfolio monitoring and reporting processes. Visible helps investors streamline the way they collect data from their founders on a regular basis and provides data visualization and reporting tools.  Over 400+ Venture Capital investors are using Visible to streamline their portfolio monitoring and reporting. Learn more.
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