A Basic Guide to Working Better With Your VCs in 2023 - The Entrepreneurial Way with A.I.

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Thursday, December 22, 2022

A Basic Guide to Working Better With Your VCs in 2023

#SmallBusiness

So in the Boom Years of late 2020 to early 2021, a lot of best practices working with VCs fell apart.  Founders stopped caring.  VCs did so many deals, they stopped caring.  Everything was Up, Up and Up!!

Now, it’s tougher times for almost everyone.  If nothing else, it’s dramatically harder to get funded at the Series A and B stages, and almost impossible at C and D unless you are executing to perfection.  More on that here.

With that, it’s time to get back to working with and managing your VCs and board better.  I’m going to come up with a list of things most venture-backed startups did … through about 2020.  And then just stopped doing.

#1.   Have Board Meetings Every 60-75 Days.  Just Do It.  You may not like them, you may think they are unnecessary.  But VCs just don’t stay as engaged without board meetings.  And until you are bigger — say $20m-$30m+ ARR — quarterly isn’t often enough.  Too much changes.  Especially if you don’t have a ton of cash on hand.   More here

#2.  Get The Founders’ Comp for The Coming Year Approved in Writing, Including And Especially Anything Nonstandard.  But Even Just Your Base Salary.  It’s pretty much required, but most founders stopped doing.  This only puts you at risk if things don’t go well.  I have no idea what most founders I’ve invested in pay themselves.  Trust is good, but disclosure + trust is even better.  If your investors find out in tougher times that you’re paying yourselves what seems to be too high a salary, it will if nothing else breed some misalignment.  Or more.

#3.  Get a Real Financial Plan for the Year Approved, Including a Formal Burn Rate Budget.  Way, way too many startups haven’t gotten a 2023 plan approved yet.  It’s really not OK.  If you do it, and get it approved — then at least somewhat, the responsibility is shared.  And everyone understands the risks and prognosis.  And then iterate with 3 plans:  a Base, A Stretch, and A Bad Case.  More on how to do that here.

The 3 Financial Plans You Need for The Year: C-90, C-60 and C-10 (Updated)

#4.  Send Out Very Promptly Monthly Investor Updated By Email.  It’s OK If They Are Only 90% Accurate.  Don’t wait for the perfect numbers back from some outsourced finance firm.  Send a quick flash update the day the month closes, if you can.  It only builds and inspires confidence.  It doesn’t have to be perfect.

#5.  No Surprises.  Telegraph bad news way, way ahead of time.  VCs are wired for bad news, but they are also wired to process things and be patient.  Give the earliest heads-up possible on bad news.

#6.  Carefully forecast and re-forecast your Zero Cash Date.  And share it in every monthly update.  Your cash out date is a dynamic metric.  So update.  Every month.  And make it as core to your investor-level metrics as your MRR is.

#7. Stop doing so many written consents on Carta and otherwise.  Why?  Because it will force you to do them live at Board Meetings.  This isn’t a common tactic, but one I’m recommending more and more.

#8. Improve How You Report Metrics, Especially Gross Margins.  Too many founders were fast-and-loose with a lot of metrics the past few years.  It’s time to lock them down.  Especially for folks with gross margins less than 70%, to be very rigorous with what your gross margins really are.  At least so folks know.

#9. Ask for Tough Feedback.  Most VCs have just stopped giving critical feedback.  Why? They don’t think it’s in their interest anymore.  They’d rather see many startups struggle than risk getting a “bad reputation”.  So you gotta ask for it.  And if you do, your VCs and investors will respect you more.  Because only the best really ask for and can take tough feedback.

To some, this will look like a very basic checklist.  But it isn’t, or at least, isn’t anymore.  Almost everyone stopped doing at least some of even all of this stuff.  But if you don’t, your investors are less likely to be there when you need them.  Not the best look these days.

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Jason Lemkin, Khareem Sudlow