There are many instances when a company is rejected for funding and investments while most of the rejected lot couldn’t even know the exact reason behind the same.
Investors are essential for a company’s growth so when they reject your profile, there’s ought to be something really bad going around your firm.
Here are the top 7 reasons due to which a company can get rejected by investors:
Are you wondering why you can’t get meetings with investors? This could be the answer because not all investors are interested in the same things. The point is to do your research before trying to set up meetings. Only try and meet with investors that are interested in what you are doing. Oh, and also pay attention to…
Investors specialize. There are angels, early-stage VCs, and late-stage VCs. Again, do your research because it’s really difficult to get a mid or late stage VC to invest in your early-stage startup. One more thing to look at regarding potential investors is.
Let’s say you’re building a company that has the potential to be worth $100M. That sounds pretty good, but you need to look at things from the investors perspective. The $100M your company might be worth will not impact the return for a $1B fund. You’re better off trying to find smaller funds where your success can make a huge dent in the success of the fund.
Location risk- where is the startup located? Can it hire the right talent in that location? And will I as the VC need to drive more than 20 minutes in my Mercedes SLR McLaren to get there? So, yeah, location is really important, especially if you are early stage. Investors want to be close to their investments when a company is just starting out.
You’ve bootstrapped revenue up to the magic number of $1M/year. That’s a tremendous achievement. However, your plan is to grow revenue to $1.5M next year, then $2.2M, and then to $3M the year after that. That’s just not fast enough to get investors excited about your company.
You could have a company that is growing from $1M to $10M to $30M in revenue, but maybe you don’t get to cash flow positive until you get to $200M in revenue. That’s going to take a lot of money for investors to carry you. Plus investors are going to have to have faith that there will be another investor willing to continue investing because there’s no hope your company will be able to stand on its own. (Read: Why You Should Ignore The Rise Of The Unicorns – Brett J. Fox).
You could have a great growing business that’s on the verge of profitability. And you could be in a segment that’s interesting, but you have no way to keep competition out of your segment. That’s going to be a tough sell to potential investors.
You get the picture. I can keep going on and on about the reasons why you’re not getting funded. You can have a great business, but it might just not be suitable for venture funding. There’s nothing wrong with that at all. Most businesses are not going to be interesting to VCs. Do what most entrepreneurs do in that case- depend on your own financing, friends and family, or the bank.
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