One scenario arising from this innate difference that we periodically encounter in Germany, where smaller early-stage tickets for strong ideas are readily available but larger growth tickets are tougher to attract, is the temptation for founders to play ›not to lose‹ as opposed to ›playing to win‹. Playing not to lose can take many forms but it is essentially focusing on staying alive as opposed to focusing on creating large success. This approach is often characterized by prolonging the cash runway by saving costs and waiting before pushing the company through to the next stage of its development until investors have committed to a large investment.
Although we understand this mentality behind a more cautious approach to growth and corporate development, we believe that in many cases, especially with high-tech, highly-scalable ventures, caution is ultimately the much higher-risk strategy, as valuable windows of opportunity can be missed. In fact, boldness in growing a company and demonstrating strong business momentum at an early stage is probably the single most important factor for creating interest with venture investors.
The optimal way for founders to break through this dynamic, and to develop the trust that when they build a thriving company that investors will come with capital, is to engage with many investors from an early stage and to maintain an open dialogue with interested investors about the company´s progress. Founders and investors should openly discuss what milestones the company needs to achieve for the investor to invest in the company. In this way, founders can build an understanding of the variety of investors from whom they could attract capital and better estimate which elements of the company are important to those investors.
Professional venture investors have a strong appreciation that building a company is an extremely challenging endeavor and that it is impossible to determine the ideal path ahead of time. Thus, most institutional venture investors prefer to invest with founders who are willing to test the footprint of their company by experimenting with various growth and development initiatives, fully understanding that some efforts will not work. In early stage ventures there should be no fear of failed attempts rather a deep commitment to finding what works most effectively and with open communications throughout the process.
One key development which should make it easier for founders to adopt an experimentation and growth mindset is the massive increase in the amount of venture capital looking for companies that are creating strong business momentum, even at very early stages. This explosive growth in venture capital and the number of venture capital investors may make it somewhat more complicated to know where to start with fund raising, but it should greatly increase founders’ belief that good performance will be recognized and will attract investment. Build it and they will come!
bm|t’s Thüringen Startup Fund (TSF) is specifically designed to act at an early stage and to enable founders to develop the business momentum that will lead to further, larger-scale investment. So far 33 of the 35 Investee-Partners in which we have invested with the TSF fund have received additional investment, and the majority have raised larger subsequent rounds with additional institutional investors. We are proud that several of these companies and larger investment rounds are highlighted in our Q3 Follow-on Investments.
Your bm|t Team