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Note: this article was written with hardware startups in mind, but most of it applies to any other startup.
We Know Who Funds Hardware (or Other Categories), But Not Why
To take the case of hardware startups (our focus at HAX): you can find lists of hardware investors and trends, but it is a bit like giving you a pair of skis and telling you âgo that way, really fast, if something gets in your way, turnâ. It shows you the pieces but doesnât tell you how to play the game.
In a presentation I gave recently I highlighted the following:
- Classic way
- Reality
- Hacks
- End game
Mostly because the game is not always what it appears to be.Letâs get started.
The Classic Way
Itâs the advice you hear everywhere, and then some. I managed to condense it to five words starting with âTâ :)
âI donât hate Hardware, but I pity the fool.â
- TractionThis is real milestones, like technical demo, work-like-look-like prototype, customer feedback, corporate pilots ⊠Show you get things done! It is NOT media coverage, Youtube views and other vanity metric. Note that misguided customer discovery can also lead to undue confidence in the demand for your product. What i-Corps does really works, just do that.
- TeamDo you have the experience or pedigree? (Sold a company? ex-Google? Industry? Stanford? Etc.).
- TechIs it hard to do? Defensible? (secret sauce rather than patents) Affordable?
- TimingWhy now? Did something change in the market or in tech enablers?
- TargetYou canât convince people. Just find more of those who believe. Or as I like to repeat âif you want to change people, change peopleâ. In particular, stay away from those who say âhardware is hardâ.
So Traction, Team, Tech, Timing and Target.
All this is great, but the reality is harsher than that.
2. The Reality
The game is rigged!Well, not really, but youâll see what IÂ mean.
Getting attention is really hard, so VCs often rely on filters to deal with the flow of demands. A recommended startup gets immediate attention.
A typical VC sees over 1,000 startups per year, and invests in less than 1%
I couldnât find a clever alliteration nor an acronym this time, so bear with me.
- InsidersA lot of deals are not cold calls but done via recommendations, and are never really âsocializedâ beyond the immediate network of founders. So VCs have the choice between highly recommend deals and ⊠your deal. Tough!
- Social proofWith the right labels and endorsements, VCs flock to a deal because it not only looks high potential but less risky. It makes sense that serial entrepreneurs have learned something in previous ventures (founder is a career) and will mostly make new mistakes.
- LocalLetâs go to Silicon Valley for 2 weeks! There is so much money there, youâll have no problem finding some even if itâs from a second or third tier VC! As it turns out, it rarely works. Why? Because you have zero track record locally, poor intros, maybe the wrong legal setup, and maybe you donât know the cultural codes. Most VCs donât have a problem if youâre not in the Valley (itâs too costly and hard to recruit at early stage), but outside the U.S. is another story. Unless you have outstanding tech and U.S. customers already, look for VCs locally for your first round. Yes, you might not get as good a deal, but youâll waste less time, and youâll get a deal.
- Cash flowWith hardware, cash flow is an issue. VCs hate to finance working capital. If you scale with structurally negative cash flow, you will just scale the problem.
- B2BConsumer is mostly out. Enterprise / Industry and Health Tech are in. Five years ago HAX was investing in ~75% B2C, now itâs less than 25%. Mostly because (1) Consumers are very price sensitive. $100? Better have Apple quality! and (2) Most consumer products are ânice to haveâ, not âmust havesâ. There seem to be higher motivation for STEM, because itâs an investment in the future of kids.
But all hope is not lost! I also listed a few #hacks.
3. Hacks
My extensive vocabulary allowed me to find an unprecedented EIGHT hacks starting with âCâ. Coverage, Celebs, Cheap, Champion, Corps, Conditions, China, Crypto.
- CoverageMedia is mostly a vanity metric, but it can help. If you donât have âhardware pornâ to show off like a cyborg or a flying car, focus on human interest stories, humor or an exciting vision of the future. For more ideas, read the timeless presentation by Mike Butcher from TechCrunch.
- CelebsEngage with the right one and youâre golden. Think Beats and Dre. One startup was making a high-tech mike (which I bought on the spot as I am considering podcasting) and said a BBC announcer loved it. Done!
- CheapDonât starve but be frugal. This will make you less dependent on outside funding. Some companies in Illinois spend $1,000 per founder per month. Others have relocated to Shenzhen until they ship. We have several companies at HAX who are getting complex products to market with no other external VC funding (sometimes they use grants or win prizes, and start selling POC or products to customers). Bootstrapping all the way to profit! (and keeping 90% of their company)
- ChampionYou donât have the network for warm intros? Find ONE angel who has it. Such person can help syndicate a deal.
- CorpsCorporates can pay you for POCs or other. Some are considerate enough to be mindful of your cash flow and pay early.
- ConditionsLook at improving your cash flow by reworking your contracts with your suppliers, distributors and customers. With some luck your clients will pay you upfront and youâll pay your factory 60 days after delivery and reach Cash Flow Nirvana. Factories can be your bank, and itâs non dilutive! Be sure to meet the owners, who are often entrepreneurs, and make friends. If they canât give you good enough terms, take your (tiny) business elsewhere.
- ChinaAt HAX we are big advocates of prototyping and manufacturing in China. Mostly because of SPEED and EXPERTISE (ask Tim Cook). And contrary to popular belief you donât need high volumes. Another thing for which China is great is investment. There is more VC money there than in U.S. since 2017, and many Chinese VCs are happy to invest overseas (in USD) as they find the deals cheaper than China (they also see more potential as they include the Chinese market in their projections).
- Crypto ;pWe havenât found a way yet, but if you can have a blockchain angle, youâll be able to access another class of investors. At the moment you best bet is to repaint your hardware company as A.I., Machine Learning or even âbehavioral analyticsâ. Youâll get more attention. Many of our robotics and health tech startups are legit A.I. or ML companies. Maybe yours is too!
4. End Game
This is a bit of a new topic, but if you have already raised a seed round or more and are considering your next round, it is worth asking yourself whether an early exit is not a better option.
How much momentum do you have?What is the true market potential?Are conditions changing?
Fortune favors the prepared and 90% of exits are M&A (CB Insights reported 3,358 total tech exits in 2016â3,260 M&A, 98 IPOsâââso M&As are 30x more common). Over 60% happening at series B or before so be mindful of your asymptote & inflexion point.
To learn more about exits, you can join our Exit Masterclass in June in London(June 5), Paris (June 12), SF (June 19) and NYC (June 22).
If you find more Ts, more Cs, or have comments, comment away, tweet or email me at ben@hax.co.
Unusual Ways To Get Funding For Your Startup was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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