SkillHub

afrexai-startup-fundraising

v1.0.0

Complete startup fundraising system — from pre-seed to Series B. Investor targeting, pitch deck construction, term sheet negotiation, due diligence preparation, and cap table management.

Sourced from ClawHub, Authored by 1kalin

Installation

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Startup Fundraising Engine ⚡

Complete fundraising operating system for founders raising pre-seed through Series B. Covers investor targeting, pitch construction, outreach, term sheet negotiation, due diligence preparation, and cap table management.

Zero dependencies. Pure methodology.


Phase 1: Fundraising Readiness Assessment

8-Signal Quick Health Check

Score each 0-2 (0 = not ready, 1 = partially, 2 = ready):

Signal Question Score
Traction Do you have measurable growth metrics? /2
Market Can you articulate a $1B+ market bottoms-up? /2
Team Do you have a founding team that can execute? /2
Product Is there a working product or clear prototype? /2
Story Can you explain the opportunity in 60 seconds? /2
Unit Economics Do you know CAC, LTV, margins (or reasonable projections)? /2
Use of Funds Do you have a clear 18-month plan for the capital? /2
Timing Is now the right time to raise (runway, market, traction)? /2

Score interpretation: - 14-16: Ready to raise. Start immediately. - 10-13: Almost ready. Fix gaps in 2-4 weeks, then launch. - 6-9: Not ready. Build more traction first. Raising now will damage your reputation. - 0-5: Too early. Focus on product and initial customers.

Fundraising Strategy Brief

fundraising_brief:
  company_name: ""
  stage: "" # pre-seed | seed | series-a | series-b
  current_arr_or_mrr: ""
  growth_rate_mom: "" # month-over-month
  team_size: 0
  months_of_runway: 0
  target_raise: "" # dollar amount
  target_valuation: "" # pre-money
  use_of_funds:
    engineering: "" # percentage + headcount
    sales_marketing: ""
    operations: ""
    runway_extension: ""
  timeline:
    start_date: ""
    target_close: "" # aim for 8-12 weeks
  key_metrics:
    customers: 0
    revenue: ""
    growth_rate: ""
    retention: ""
    burn_rate: ""

Stage-Appropriate Raise Guide

Stage Typical Raise Pre-Money Valuation What You Need Investor Type
Pre-seed $250K-$1M $2M-$6M Idea + team + early signal Angels, pre-seed funds
Seed $1M-$4M $6M-$15M MVP + early traction + some revenue Seed funds, angels
Series A $5M-$20M $20M-$60M PMF + $1M+ ARR + clear GTM Series A VCs
Series B $15M-$50M $60M-$200M Scaling + $5M+ ARR + unit economics Growth VCs

Raise-or-Don't Decision Framework

Raise NOW if: - You have <6 months runway AND strong metrics - A clear use of funds would unlock 3-5x growth - Market timing is favorable (hot sector, strong VC appetite) - You have warm investor interest

DON'T raise if: - You can bootstrap to profitability in 6-12 months - Metrics aren't strong enough (raising on weak numbers = bad terms) - You're raising because "everyone else is" (worst reason) - You haven't talked to 10+ potential investors informally first


Phase 2: Investor Targeting & Pipeline

Investor Selection Criteria

Score each potential investor 1-5:

Dimension Weight What to Look For
Stage fit 25% Do they invest at your stage? Check recent deals, not website claims
Sector fit 25% Have they invested in your space? Adjacent counts
Check size 15% Does your raise match their typical check?
Value-add 15% What beyond money? Intros, expertise, brand?
Portfolio conflict 10% Any competitive portfolio companies?
Reputation 10% Founder references? How do they behave in downturns?

Target List Architecture

investor_target:
  name: ""
  firm: ""
  title: ""
  email: ""
  linkedin: ""
  twitter: ""

  fit_score: 0 # 1-30 (sum of weighted dimensions)

  stage_focus: "" # pre-seed | seed | series-a | series-b | multi-stage
  sector_focus: [] # fintech, saas, health, etc.
  typical_check: "" # $500K-$2M
  recent_deals: [] # last 3-5 investments

  warm_path: "" # who can intro you?
  connection_strength: "" # strong | medium | weak | cold

  status: "" # researching | outreach | meeting | dd | term-sheet | pass | closed
  last_contact: ""
  next_action: ""
  notes: ""

Pipeline Sizing Rules

Round Size Target Investors Expected Meetings Expected Term Sheets
Pre-seed ($500K) 30-50 15-25 1-3
Seed ($2M) 50-80 25-40 2-4
Series A ($10M) 40-60 20-30 1-3
Series B ($25M) 20-40 10-20 1-2

Conversion benchmarks: - Cold outreach → meeting: 5-10% - Warm intro → meeting: 30-50% - Meeting → second meeting: 30-40% - Second meeting → term sheet: 10-20% - Term sheet → close: 70-90%

Tiering Strategy

Tier 1 (Dream investors, 5-8): Your ideal lead investors. Don't pitch them first — practice on Tier 3.

Tier 2 (Strong fit, 15-20): Good stage/sector fit. Many will become your actual lead.

Tier 3 (Practice + optionality, 20-30): Reasonable fit. Use for pitch practice and creating momentum.

Tier 4 (Followers, 10-20): Angels, smaller funds. Good for filling out the round after lead is set.

CRITICAL RULE: Pitch Tier 3 first (weeks 1-2), then Tier 2 (weeks 2-3), then Tier 1 (weeks 3-4). By the time you hit your dream investors, your pitch is sharp and you may already have term sheets.


Phase 3: Pitch Deck Construction

The 12-Slide Framework

Every great pitch deck follows this structure. Each slide has ONE job.

Slide 1: Title

  • Company name + one-line description
  • Your name, title, contact
  • "We help [customer] do [outcome] by [how]"

Slide 2: Problem

  • Paint the pain. Make the investor FEEL it.
  • Use a specific story or example, not abstract stats
  • "Today, [persona] struggles with [specific pain]"
  • Show the cost of the problem (time, money, opportunity)

Slide 3: Solution

  • Your product in 2-3 sentences
  • Screenshot or demo GIF (visual > words)
  • Focus on the "magic moment" — the thing that makes people say "wow"
  • DO NOT list features. Show the transformation.

Slide 4: Why Now

  • What changed that makes this possible/necessary TODAY?
  • Technology shift? Regulatory change? Behavior change? Market timing?
  • This is the most underrated slide. Nail it.

Slide 5: Market Size

  • TAM → SAM → SOM (bottoms-up, NOT top-down)
  • Show your math: [# of target customers] × [annual contract value] = SAM
  • SAM should be $1B+ for VC-scale
  • Show the growth trajectory of the market

Slide 6: Product / How It Works

  • 3-step process or simple diagram
  • Make it feel inevitable and obvious
  • If you need more than 3 steps, simplify

Slide 7: Traction

  • THE most important slide after Seed stage
  • Revenue graph (up and to the right)
  • Key metrics: ARR, MRR growth, customers, retention, NPS
  • Logos of notable customers
  • If pre-revenue: waitlist, LOIs, pilot results, engagement metrics

Slide 8: Business Model

  • How you make money (clearly)
  • Pricing model + unit economics
  • ACV, gross margin, LTV/CAC, payback period
  • Expansion revenue potential

Slide 9: Competition

  • 2x2 matrix (NOT a feature comparison table)
  • Your axes should be the dimensions where you win
  • Show why you're in the top-right quadrant
  • Mention "why not just use X?" for the obvious alternatives

Slide 10: Team

  • Founder photos + relevant experience
  • Why THIS team for THIS problem?
  • Highlight: domain expertise, previous exits, technical depth
  • Key hires made + key hires planned

Slide 11: The Ask

  • How much you're raising
  • Use of funds (3-4 categories max)
  • What milestones this gets you to
  • "This round gets us to [milestone] which positions us for [next round]"

Slide 12: Appendix (optional)

  • Detailed financials
  • Product roadmap
  • Additional metrics
  • Customer testimonials

Pitch Deck Quality Checklist

  • [ ] Total slides: 10-15 (12 ideal)
  • [ ] Each slide has ONE key message
  • [ ] Can be understood in 3 minutes without narration
  • [ ] Fonts are readable at projection size (24pt minimum)
  • [ ] Consistent design (colors, fonts, layout)
  • [ ] No walls of text (max 30 words per slide)
  • [ ] Traction slide has real numbers, not vanity metrics
  • [ ] Market size is bottoms-up with shown math
  • [ ] Ask is specific (amount + use of funds + milestones)
  • [ ] Team slide shows founder-market fit

The 60-Second Elevator Pitch

[Company] helps [specific customer] solve [specific problem].

Today, [customer] has to [painful current state], which costs them [quantified pain].

We built [solution] — a [category] that [key differentiator]. 

In [timeframe], we've [best traction metric]. We're growing [growth rate].

We're raising [amount] to [key milestone]. [Firm name] would be a great fit because [specific reason].

Phase 4: Outreach & Meeting Strategy

Warm Introduction Template

To the connector:

Hi [Name],

I'm raising a [seed/Series A] round for [Company] — we're [one-line description].

We've [best traction metric] and growing [rate]. I noticed [Investor Name] at [Firm] recently invested in [similar company] and thought there could be a strong fit.

Would you be comfortable making an intro? I've drafted a forwardable blurb below.

[Forwardable blurb — 3-4 sentences about the company, traction, what you're raising]

Really appreciate it either way.

Cold Outreach Template (last resort)

Subject: [Company] — [one compelling metric]

Hi [Investor first name],

[One sentence about why you're reaching out to THEM specifically — recent investment, blog post, tweet].

I'm building [Company] — [one-line description]. We're at [best metric] and growing [rate] MoM.

Would love 20 minutes to share what we're seeing in [market]. Happy to work around your schedule.

[Your name]
[Company] | [website]

Cold outreach rules: - NEVER send identical emails to multiple investors - Reference something specific about THEM (shows research) - Lead with your BEST metric - Keep under 100 words - Send Tuesday-Thursday, 8-10 AM their timezone

First Meeting (30 min) Playbook

Structure: - 0-2 min: Rapport + agenda setting - 2-15 min: Walk through pitch (abbreviated — they've seen the deck) - 15-25 min: Q&A (this is where the real evaluation happens) - 25-28 min: Your questions for them - 28-30 min: Next steps

Your questions for them (ask 2-3): 1. "What would you need to see to get conviction on this?" 2. "What's your typical decision timeline?" 3. "How do you typically work with portfolio companies post-investment?" 4. "What's your current fund deployment status?" 5. "Who else on your team would be involved in the decision?"

After the meeting (within 2 hours): - Send thank you + any materials they requested - Note their concerns — address in follow-up - Update your CRM with status + next action

Investor Objection Response Framework

Objection What They Mean How to Respond
"Too early for us" Traction insufficient "What metrics would signal the right time?" (plants seed for future)
"Not in our thesis" Sector/model mismatch Accept gracefully. Ask for referrals to better-fit investors
"Valuation is too high" They see risk you don't "What comparable deals have you seen? Let's discuss what drives our thinking"
"We need to see more traction" Interested but not convinced "Happy to share monthly updates. What metric matters most to you?"
"Let me discuss with partners" Could be real or polite pass "Great. When's your next partner meeting? I'll send a follow-up brief"
"We just invested in a competitor" True conflict Move on. Ask if they know investors who'd be interested
"The market is too small" Your TAM story isn't convincing Reframe with bottoms-up math. Show expansion potential
"What's your moat?" Worried about defensibility Network effects, data advantages, switching costs, brand. Be specific

Phase 5: Financial Model & Projections

3-Statement Model Essentials

Investors expect a 3-5 year financial model. Keep it simple but defensible.

financial_model:
  revenue_assumptions:
    current_arr: ""
    growth_rate_year1: "" # conservative
    growth_rate_year2: ""
    growth_rate_year3: ""
    acv: ""
    new_customers_per_month: ""
    churn_rate_annual: ""
    expansion_rate: ""

  cost_assumptions:
    cogs_percentage: "" # target <30% for SaaS
    engineering_headcount: [] # by quarter
    sales_headcount: []
    g_and_a_headcount: []
    avg_salary_eng: ""
    avg_salary_sales: ""
    marketing_spend_percentage: "" # of revenue

  key_outputs:
    gross_margin: "" # target >70% SaaS
    burn_rate_monthly: ""
    runway_months: ""
    breakeven_date: ""
    arr_at_next_raise: ""

Revenue Projection Rules

  1. Bottom-up only. [# sales reps] × [deals/rep/month] × [ACV] = revenue. NOT "if we get 1% of the market."
  2. Show your assumptions. Every number should trace back to a testable assumption.
  3. Three scenarios. Conservative (60% probability), Base (30%), Optimistic (10%). Present Base, have Conservative ready.
  4. Growth rate benchmarks:
ARR Good Growth Great Growth Exceptional
$0-$1M 15% MoM 20% MoM 30%+ MoM
$1M-$5M 2.5x YoY 3x YoY 4x+ YoY
$5M-$20M 2x YoY 2.5x YoY 3x+ YoY
$20M+ 60% YoY 80% YoY 100%+ YoY

Unit Economics Deep Dive

unit_economics:
  ltv:
    arpu_monthly: 0
    gross_margin: 0.0  # percentage
    churn_monthly: 0.0  # percentage
    formula: "ARPU × Gross Margin / Monthly Churn"
    result: 0

  cac:
    total_sales_marketing_spend: 0  # last quarter
    new_customers_acquired: 0  # last quarter
    formula: "S&M Spend / New Customers"
    result: 0

  ltv_to_cac_ratio: 0  # target >3x
  cac_payback_months: 0  # target <18 months

  health_check:
    ltv_cac_above_3x: false
    payback_under_18_months: false
    gross_margin_above_70: false
    net_dollar_retention_above_100: false

Health benchmarks (SaaS): | Metric | Poor | OK | Good | Great | |--------|------|-----|------|-------| | LTV:CAC | <2x | 2-3x | 3-5x | >5x | | CAC Payback | >24mo | 18-24mo | 12-18mo | <12mo | | Gross Margin | <60% | 60-70% | 70-80% | >80% | | Net Revenue Retention | <90% | 90-100% | 100-120% | >120% | | Logo Churn (annual) | >15% | 10-15% | 5-10% | <5% |


Phase 6: Term Sheet Negotiation

Key Term Sheet Components

term_sheet:
  economics:
    pre_money_valuation: ""
    investment_amount: ""
    post_money_valuation: ""  # pre + investment
    price_per_share: ""
    shares_issued: ""

  control:
    board_seats:
      founders: 0
      investors: 0
      independent: 0
    protective_provisions: [] # list of investor veto rights

  liquidation:
    preference: "" # 1x non-participating (standard) | 1x participating | 2x
    participation_cap: "" # if participating

  anti_dilution: "" # broad-based weighted average (standard) | full ratchet (bad)

  pro_rata_rights: true  # investors right to maintain ownership %

  vesting:
    founder_vesting: "" # 4 years, 1 year cliff (standard)
    acceleration: "" # single trigger | double trigger | none

  other:
    option_pool: "" # 10-15% post-money (negotiate pre vs post)
    drag_along: true
    right_of_first_refusal: true
    information_rights: true
    no_shop_period: "" # 30-60 days typical

Term Sheet Red Flags 🚩

Term Standard Acceptable Red Flag
Liquidation preference 1x non-participating 1x participating with 3x cap >1x or uncapped participating
Anti-dilution Broad-based weighted average Narrow-based weighted average Full ratchet
Board composition Founder majority early stage Equal (2-2-1 with independent) Investor majority at seed
Option pool 10% post-money 10-15% pre-money >20% pre-money
Vesting acceleration Double-trigger Single-trigger for CEO only No acceleration
No-shop period 30 days 45 days >60 days
Protective provisions Standard (sale, new round, debt) Expanded but reasonable Veto on hiring, spending >$X
Pay-to-play None at seed Reasonable at Series A+ Punitive conversion terms

Negotiation Playbook

Rule 1: Optimize for valuation LAST. The order of importance: 1. Amount raised (enough runway for 18-24 months) 2. Board composition (maintain founder control early) 3. Liquidation preferences (1x non-participating) 4. Anti-dilution protection (broad-based weighted average) 5. Valuation (important but not #1)

Rule 2: Get multiple term sheets. BATNA is everything. Even one competing offer changes the dynamic completely.

Rule 3: Negotiate the option pool. If they want 15% post-money, that dilutes YOU more than them. Push for smaller pool or post-money sizing.

Rule 4: Understand the math.

Founder ownership = 1 - (investor_shares + option_pool) / total_shares
Example: $5M pre + $2M raise + 10% pool
- Post-money: $7M
- Investor owns: $2M / $7M = 28.6%
- Pool: 10%
- Founders: 61.4%

With 15% pool pre-money:
- "Pre-money" is really $5M - 15% = $4.25M effective
- Investor owns: $2M / $6.25M = 32%
- Pool: 15%
- Founders: 53% ← see the difference?

Rule 5: Get a good lawyer. Don't negotiate term sheets yourself. Startup lawyers (Cooley, Wilson Sonsini, Gunderson, Orrick) know what's standard. Budget $15-30K for a priced round.

Word-for-Word Negotiation Scripts

On valuation: "We've seen comparable companies at our stage and traction level — [example 1], [example 2] — raise at [X] to [Y] pre-money. Given our [specific metric that's strong], we believe [your number] reflects fair value. What's driving your thinking on valuation?"

On option pool: "We're happy with a 10% pool — that covers our hiring plan for the next 18 months. A 15% pool pre-money effectively reduces our valuation by [$ amount]. Could we either reduce the pool to 10% or calculate it post-money?"

On liquidation preference: "We'd prefer standard 1x non-participating. Participating preferred with a cap could work, but uncapped participation significantly changes the economics for founders and early employees in moderate outcomes."

On board seats: "At this stage, we think a 3-person board with 2 founders + 1 investor makes sense. We'd love your input and governance, but founder control is important to us while we're still finding our groove."


Phase 7: Due Diligence Preparation

DD Readiness Checklist

Prepare these BEFORE you start fundraising. Scrambling during DD kills deals.

Corporate Documents

  • [ ] Certificate of incorporation (Delaware C-Corp preferred)
  • [ ] Bylaws
  • [ ] Board minutes (all meetings)
  • [ ] Stockholder agreements
  • [ ] Cap table (fully diluted, option grants, vesting schedules)
  • [ ] 83(b) election filings for all founders
  • [ ] State registrations / qualifications

Financial

  • [ ] Financial statements (last 2 years + YTD)
  • [ ] Bank statements (last 12 months)
  • [ ] Tax returns (federal + state, last 2 years)
  • [ ] Revenue by customer (concentration analysis)
  • [ ] Accounts receivable aging
  • [ ] Budget vs actuals
  • [ ] Financial model (3-5 year projections)

IP & Technology

  • [ ] Patent filings / applications
  • [ ] Trademark registrations
  • [ ] IP assignment agreements (ALL employees + contractors)
  • [ ] Open source usage audit
  • [ ] Technology architecture overview
  • [ ] Security audit / SOC 2 status

Team & HR

  • [ ] Employee list with titles, start dates, compensation
  • [ ] Employment agreements (all employees)
  • [ ] Contractor agreements (all contractors)
  • [ ] Option grant schedule
  • [ ] Benefits summary
  • [ ] Key person dependencies
  • [ ] Customer contracts (template + material contracts)
  • [ ] Vendor agreements (material)
  • [ ] Pending / threatened litigation
  • [ ] Regulatory compliance status
  • [ ] Privacy policy + terms of service
  • [ ] Insurance policies

Metrics

  • [ ] Monthly revenue / ARR waterfall (last 12+ months)
  • [ ] Cohort retention data
  • [ ] Unit economics (LTV, CAC, payback)
  • [ ] Pipeline / bookings data
  • [ ] NPS / customer satisfaction data
  • [ ] Churn analysis by cohort

Data Room Organization

📁 Data Room/
├── 📁 1-Corporate/
│   ├── Certificate_of_Incorporation.pdf
│   ├── Bylaws.pdf
│   ├── Board_Minutes/
│   └── Cap_Table_[date].xlsx
├── 📁 2-Financial/
│   ├── Financial_Statements/
│   ├── Tax_Returns/
│   ├── Bank_Statements/
│   └── Financial_Model_[date].xlsx
├── 📁 3-IP_Technology/
│   ├── IP_Assignments/
│   ├── Architecture_Overview.pdf
│   └── Security_Audit.pdf
├── 📁 4-Team_HR/
│   ├── Org_Chart.pdf
│   ├── Employment_Agreements/
│   └── Option_Grants.xlsx
├── 📁 5-Legal/
│   ├── Customer_Contracts/
│   ├── Vendor_Agreements/
│   └── Insurance_Policies/
├── 📁 6-Metrics/
│   ├── Monthly_Metrics_Dashboard.xlsx
│   ├── Cohort_Analysis.xlsx
│   └── Pipeline_Report.xlsx
└── 📁 7-Pitch_Materials/
    ├── Pitch_Deck_[date].pdf
    ├── Executive_Summary.pdf
    └── Product_Demo_Link.md

Phase 8: Cap Table Management

Cap Table Fundamentals

cap_table:
  company: ""
  date: ""
  total_authorized_shares: 10000000

  common_stock:
    - holder: "Founder 1"
      shares: 0
      vesting: "4yr/1yr cliff"
      vested_shares: 0
      percentage: 0.0
    - holder: "Founder 2"
      shares: 0
      vesting: "4yr/1yr cliff"
      vested_shares: 0
      percentage: 0.0

  preferred_stock:
    - round: "Seed"
      investor: ""
      shares: 0
      price_per_share: 0.0
      amount_invested: 0
      percentage: 0.0
      liquidation_preference: "1x non-participating"

  option_pool:
    total_reserved: 0
    granted: 0
    exercised: 0
    available: 0
    percentage_of_fully_diluted: 0.0

  fully_diluted_shares: 0  # common + preferred + all options

Dilution Math Every Founder Must Know

Round-by-round dilution example:

Event Founders Seed Investor Option Pool Series A
Formation 100% - - -
Option pool (10%) 90% - 10% -
Seed ($2M at $8M pre) 72% 20% 8% -
Option pool refresh (+5%) 68.4% 19% 12.6% -
Series A ($10M at $40M pre) 54.7% 15.2% 10.1% 20%

Key insight: After a typical Seed + Series A, founders often own 50-60%. This is NORMAL. The goal isn't to minimize dilution — it's to maximize the value of your remaining shares.

$100M exit at 55% ownership = $55M. $500M exit at 40% ownership = $200M. Take the dilution that unlocks the bigger outcome.

Pro-Rata Rights

Pro-rata rights let existing investors maintain their ownership percentage in future rounds.

When it matters: If a Seed investor has 15% and doesn't participate pro-rata in Series A, they get diluted to ~12%. With pro-rata, they invest enough to maintain 15%.

Founder impact: More pro-rata participation = less room for new investors = potential conflict. Manage this by setting clear allocation frameworks.


Phase 9: Fundraising Process Management

The Fundraising Sprint (8-12 Week Framework)

Weeks 1-2: Preparation - Finalize pitch deck - Build financial model - Set up data room - Build target list (50-80 investors) - Write outreach templates - Request warm intros (takes 1-2 weeks to materialize)

Weeks 3-4: Tier 3 + Early Tier 2 Meetings - Practice pitch with 10-15 investors - Refine based on questions and feedback - Identify common objections, prepare responses - Update deck based on learnings

Weeks 5-6: Tier 1 + Tier 2 Meetings - Pitch your dream investors with a polished deck - Create urgency with momentum ("we have 3 partner meetings next week") - Share any early interest/term sheets (carefully)

Weeks 7-8: Term Sheets + Negotiation - Receive and compare term sheets - Negotiate key terms - Check investor references (CRITICAL — call 3-5 portfolio founders) - Select lead investor

Weeks 9-12: Close - Finalize legal docs with lawyers - Fill remaining allocation (angels, smaller checks) - Wire transfer + board setup - Announce (if desired)

Weekly Pipeline Dashboard

fundraising_pipeline:
  week: 0
  date: ""

  funnel:
    total_targets: 0
    outreach_sent: 0
    meetings_scheduled: 0
    meetings_completed: 0
    second_meetings: 0
    partner_meetings: 0
    term_sheets: 0

  conversion_rates:
    outreach_to_meeting: 0.0
    meeting_to_second: 0.0
    second_to_partner: 0.0
    partner_to_ts: 0.0

  momentum_signals:
    - "" # "3 partner meetings scheduled for next week"

  concerns:
    - "" # "Common pushback on market size"

  next_week_actions:
    - ""

Follow-Up Cadence

After Action Template
First meeting Thank you + materials Send within 2 hours
1 week Follow-up + update Share new metric or customer win
2 weeks Check-in "Wanted to share [progress]"
Monthly Investor update Send to all investors in pipeline
Pass Graceful accept Ask for referrals + add to update list

Monthly Investor Update Template

Subject: [Company] — [Month] Update: [headline metric]

Hi [Name],

Quick update on [Company]:

📈 Key Metrics
• ARR: $X (+Y% MoM)
• Customers: X (+Y new)
• [Key operational metric]: X

🏆 Wins
• [Biggest win this month]
• [Second win]

🔥 Challenges
• [Honest challenge — shows self-awareness]

🎯 Next Month
• [Key goal 1]
• [Key goal 2]

We're raising [amount] — happy to chat if this is interesting.

Best,
[Name]

Investor update rules: - Send monthly, even before you're raising - Be honest about challenges (builds trust) - Keep under 200 words - Include 1-2 specific metrics with trajectory - Send to everyone — passed investors sometimes come back


Phase 10: Post-Close & Governance

First 30 Days After Close

  • [ ] Set up board meeting cadence (quarterly)
  • [ ] Send announcement to team, customers, press (if desired)
  • [ ] Update cap table and legal docs
  • [ ] Set up board reporting package
  • [ ] Have 1:1 onboarding with each board member
  • [ ] Begin hiring per use-of-funds plan
  • [ ] Set up monthly investor update cadence

Board Meeting Template

board_meeting:
  date: ""
  duration: "90 minutes"

  agenda:
    - topic: "CEO Update"
      duration: "15 min"
      content: "High-level strategy, key decisions, morale"

    - topic: "Financial Review"
      duration: "15 min"
      content: "Revenue, burn, runway, budget vs actual"

    - topic: "Product & Metrics"
      duration: "15 min"
      content: "Key metrics, product roadmap, customer feedback"

    - topic: "Deep Dive Topic"
      duration: "20 min"
      content: "One strategic topic for board input (GTM, hiring, partnerships)"

    - topic: "Open Discussion"
      duration: "15 min"
      content: "Board member questions, concerns, opportunities"

    - topic: "Closed Session"
      duration: "10 min"
      content: "Exec compensation, sensitive matters"

Board Package (Send 3 Days Before Meeting)

Section Contents
Executive Summary 1-page: wins, challenges, key decisions, help needed
Financial Dashboard P&L, balance sheet, cash flow, runway, burn
Metrics Dashboard ARR, growth, retention, pipeline, conversion
Product Update Shipped features, roadmap, key customer feedback
Team Update Headcount, open roles, notable hires/departures
Strategic Decisions 1-2 topics requiring board input or approval

Phase 11: Alternative Fundraising Strategies

SAFE Notes (Pre-Seed / Seed)

When to use: Pre-seed and seed when speed matters more than precision.

SAFE Type Best For Watch Out
Valuation Cap only Most common. Sets maximum conversion price Cap IS your effective valuation
Discount only Rare. X% discount to next round price Risky — no ceiling on conversion price
Cap + Discount Best protection for investors Most dilutive for founders
MFN (Most Favored Nation) Very early, no valuation signal Converts at best terms given to any investor

SAFE best practices: - Use Y Combinator standard SAFE (don't modify) - Post-money SAFEs are now standard (clearer dilution math) - Stack no more than $2-3M in SAFEs before pricing a round - Track ALL SAFEs in your cap table (they WILL convert)

Revenue-Based Financing

When to use: You have revenue but don't want to give up equity.

Provider Typical Terms Best For
Pipe Advance on ARR SaaS with annual contracts
Clearco % of revenue repayment E-commerce, DTC
Lighter Capital Revenue share SaaS $200K-$5M ARR
Traditional bank Venture debt Post-Series A

Venture Debt

When to use: Extend runway between equity rounds without dilution.

  • Typical terms: 2-3 year term, interest + warrants (0.5-2% of equity)
  • Usually available after Series A (sometimes Seed)
  • DON'T use venture debt as a substitute for equity — use it as a supplement
  • Rule: Never take venture debt that represents >25% of your last equity raise

Quality Scoring

100-Point Fundraising Readiness Rubric

Dimension Weight Score (0-10)
Traction & Metrics 20% /10
Pitch & Story 15% /10
Financial Model 15% /10
Team & Founder-Market Fit 15% /10
Market Opportunity 10% /10
Data Room Readiness 10% /10
Investor Pipeline Quality 10% /10
Legal & Corporate Structure 5% /10

Weighted score = Σ (weight × score × 10)

Score Grade Action
85-100 A Launch fundraise immediately
70-84 B Fix 1-2 gaps, launch in 2 weeks
55-69 C Significant work needed (4-6 weeks)
40-54 D Major gaps — build more traction first
0-39 F Not ready. Focus on product-market fit

Common Mistakes

# Mistake Fix
1 Raising too early (weak metrics) Build traction first. Bad first impressions are permanent
2 Raising too little (12 months runway) Raise for 18-24 months. Fundraising takes longer than expected
3 No warm intros (all cold outreach) Network for 6 months before you need to raise
4 Pitching dream investors first Practice on Tier 3, then work up to Tier 1
5 Optimizing only for valuation Terms matter more. 1x non-participating > higher valuation with participating
6 No BATNA (only one term sheet) Run a parallel process. Multiple term sheets = leverage
7 Ignoring investor references Call 3-5 portfolio founders. Ask about behavior in bad times
8 Sloppy data room Prepare everything before you start. Scrambling kills momentum
9 Top-down market sizing Bottom-up always. Show your math
10 Not sending investor updates Monthly updates to all investors, even those who passed

Edge Cases

First-Time Founder

  • Lean on advisors who've raised before
  • Consider an accelerator (YC, Techstars) for credibility + network
  • Accept slightly lower valuation for a great investor with strong brand
  • Double your timeline estimates — everything takes longer the first time

Down Round

  • Try alternatives first: bridge round, extension, venture debt
  • If unavoidable: negotiate pay-to-play provisions (forces all investors to participate)
  • Communicate proactively with existing investors — no surprises
  • Reframe the narrative: "We're resetting to grow sustainably"

Bootstrapped → First Raise

  • Lead with your profitability story (rare and valuable)
  • You have MASSIVE leverage — you don't NEED the money
  • Negotiate from strength: higher valuation, better terms, board control
  • Consider raising a small round ($1-2M) to test the VC relationship

Founder Solo (No Co-Founder)

  • Address it head-on: "I'm looking for my #2 — this round funds that search"
  • Show strong advisors / early team members
  • Demonstrate extreme execution velocity as proof you can recruit
  • Consider finding a co-founder before raising (strongest signal)

International Founder (Non-US)

  • Incorporate in Delaware (non-negotiable for US VCs)
  • Use Stripe Atlas, Clerky, or Firstbase for setup
  • Consider US-based angels first for credibility
  • Time zone overlap with US investors matters — schedule accordingly

Natural Language Commands

When this skill is active, the agent responds to:

  1. "Assess my fundraising readiness" → Run Phase 1 assessment
  2. "Build my investor target list" → Phase 2 pipeline creation
  3. "Review my pitch deck" → Phase 3 quality checklist
  4. "Draft investor outreach" → Phase 4 templates
  5. "Build my financial model" → Phase 5 projections
  6. "Analyze this term sheet" → Phase 6 red flag analysis
  7. "Prepare my data room" → Phase 7 checklist
  8. "Calculate dilution for [amount] at [valuation]" → Phase 8 math
  9. "Plan my fundraising sprint" → Phase 9 timeline
  10. "Prepare my board meeting" → Phase 10 package
  11. "Compare SAFE vs priced round" → Phase 11 alternatives
  12. "Score my fundraising readiness" → Quality rubric

Built by AfrexAI — Autonomous AI agents for business growth.

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