6 Lessons Learned From Raising $2 Million
6 Lessons Learned From Raising $2 Million · Entrepreneur

Recently, one of my clients was presented with some funding options and closed about $2 million in seed funding. This isn’t the first time I’ve worked with a company that was closing funding, and I’m sure it won’t be the last.

This gives me the rare opportunity to see the process from the top down. With a view that clear, some lessons rose to the top, and as with most lessons, they can be applied across the board. If you are looking to close $50K in seed or $1B in Series C, this is what you need to know:

1. Fundraising is a long, long process.

This cannot be overstated. Just because you have a great idea, and the investors that you’ve been talking to love everything and want to invest, it doesn’t mean that you’ll be closing quickly. If you are looking to close funding, make sure your cash burn rate is set to handle a long closing process. Let’s walk through how the process works in an ideal world:

  • You’re talking with investors casually. They like your idea and want to learn more. Two to four weeks pass until you formally pitch.

  • You have a formal pitch, and you absolutely crush it. One to two weeks pass while you negotiate valuation and potential terms.

  • You get a term sheet. Awesome, you deserve it. Go sign it, and get paid. One to two more weeks of back and forth with legal to get the terms finalized.

  • Close the deal. One to two months or so to work though the vetting, legal work and general run-around of the closing process. Welcome to due diligence.

  • Get paid, and go build some more. One month hold on funds before the first traunch hits your account.

So in a perfect world, you have about three months from an excited investor to cash in the bank.

Related: A Female Founder's Tips for Fundraising

2. Pick one -- work or fundraise.

It is hard to do real work when fundraising. Most people will tell you that its possible, and it is, but they’re both full-time jobs, and you should be prepared for a massive hustle. If you’re starting this process, find some solid people that you can delegate to, stock up on coffee and start meditating, exercising, kickboxing or whatever it takes to keep yourself sane, relatively stress-free and productive through this grueling process.

3. Everyone’s goals need to align.

You would think that this is a given, but sadly, it's not. You must be crystal clear and transparent on your goals and so must your prospective investor. If your goal is getting a positive cash flow, and your investor’s goal is to grow the user base to increase valuation for the next round, you have a problem.

Related: How to Entice Investors to Fund Your Startup

It's best to lead with your goal and find an investor that is either happy with your plans, can convince you why their goal is better or is willing to form a new goal that makes everyone happy.