Dispelling the biggest myths about raising small rounds from smaller investors April 04, 2023 | [Read Online]( [A newsletter about raising capital for early stage growth companies]( [fb]( [tw]( [in]( [email](mailto:?subject=Post%20from%20Pitch%20Anything%20Playbook&body=3%20Frames%20That%20Control%20Small%20Check%20Investors%3A%20Do%20you%20know%20the%20biggest%20myths%20about%20raising%20small%20rounds%20from%20small%20investors%3F%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fpitchanything.com%2Fp%2F3-frames-control-small-check-investors) Before we get into todayâs Playbook, I wanted to say THANK YOU to all the people whoâve participated in these polls so far. I read every single comment you leave, and today, Iâm going to do a âMailbagâ edition and respond to some of the most interesting or insightful ones. Letâs dive in. -Oren By the way, check out this out ⦠I hosted a demo SURGERY in my office HQ last Friday. It was pretty amazing to see the latest technologies that can save your life in a real surgical setting. 60 investors came to see this live demo in my office with two surgeons, scrub techs and real procedures. The patient lived! If you need to demo any kind of product, let me know, itâs a great place for investors to see what youâre doing in person: Pretty crazy to have this right in the office ⦠anyone want to buy a liver? :-) The Pitch Anything Playbook:
Mailbag Edition Yesterday, I asked our Pitch Anything Playbook community what the SMALLEST check size theyâd take in a $5m round⦠And Iâve gotta say, I was a bit surprised by the results â and some of your comments ð â so far. About 24% of people who took the poll are willing to accept a minimum check size in the $50k-$100k range⦠And based on some of the comments I read â which Iâll be responding to some of them below â thereâs way too much confusion out there around working with small balance check writers. If you have High Status and youâre using the Pitch Anything Process, small investors can be an extremely lucrative channel for your capital raising program - no matter what stage youâre at. If you have low Status⦠small check writers are going to drive you insane. The secret to tapping into this lucrative retail market of small balance investors? Frame your pitch as a financial product that is easy to understand, and easy to buy. Because if you are a master of pitching your deal â and have tight securities documents that provided all the required disclosures â you can pick up $25k-$100k checks in 15 minutes of easy work. Pretty soon, 25K + 50k ⦠50k +100k â¦. that turns into real money that other entrepreneurs and VC would be jealous of. This is why I want to unpack some of the underlying reasons why youâre experiencing friction in general when raising capital, especially from small balance check writers. In one way or another, youâll see that all of my responses below will come back to âFix All Your Money Problems using The F.A.S.T. Funding Method.â Mailbag #1: â⦠takes too much timeâ¦â On the surface, this argument sounds completely logical because on a dollars-raised-per-hour basis, because if I can get a $500k check for 4-hours of work, thatâs better than just $50k. But the truth is, the $500k - $1m is one of the hardest check sizes to get. Look. $500k is real money. This type of check requires some actual hard work by the investor just to fund you: to get that money liquid (Itâs likely not sitting in cash), it has to go through tax, legal and accounting. By the way, Iâve found that âtax, legal and accountingâ are the Three Wise Men telling your investor NOT to do your deal - another hurdle for you to overcome. Letâs talk about who this $500k check writer actually is (and how heâs probably within 12 miles of your office:) - He is a $100m+ Crazy Rich Guy (CRG): Guy or Gal, these can either be great passive investors or a complete nightmare to have on your cap table. If you donât know how to control these personalities â and can keep them away from you, your team, your clients, and the office â avoid them entirely at this stage of your business. - This is an Industry insider in whatever business/market you do: These investors are in your deal because they have some sort of experience in the thing you do, can underwrite the deal themselves, and if something goes horribly wrong they can step in to save the day and manage the downside risk. Youâd be surprised by the number of companies Iâve seen that are run by an investor who had to step in and take over to protect their investment. Both of these $500K âlocal-areaâ investors sounds appealing, but come with some weird problems⦠Mainly, theyâre big enough to push you around on terms, and then wind up with too much ability to influence you and your decisions. Thatâs the real upside to getting good at smaller check writers â Because no one will have any substantial equity or voting rights, you can significantly reduce the risk of you losing control. WRONG FRAME: A small investor gets a lot of your time in order to understand the deal and ask a lot of questions. RIGHT FRAME: Your Amazing pitch is 15 minutes start-to-finish, and you control the timeframe and amount of information they get eg. limited information rights (via ppm and teaser). Summary: What I can clearly read from this comment is that they donât have a 15-minute pitch with a âtoughluckâ time frame. Ultimately, they are giving control of the process to small investors. Mailbag #2: âI only want âseriousâ investorsâ This is a slam dunk case of ânot having a scalable processâ for running a capital raise. Because hereâs the reality of being a Captial Raising CEO. At all times, youâre doing one of three things. - Raising a Round: You are currently running a process that involves moving cohorts of investors through defined stages â Introductions, Submit an Indication of Interest, Due Diligence, and Submit a Letter of Intent. - Closing a Round: You never want to arrive at the closing table with ONE investor. This is a recipe for getting re-traded at the last minute when you have no other options and youâre out of time. Make sure youâve got optionality at closing by having enough buyers at the table. - Pre-selling the Next Round: There is almost zero chance that you will only raise one round of capital for the remainder of your business (unless you sell it or go bankrupt). Any time youâre not actively fundraising, you are expanding your investor relations program to get yourself prepared for the next round of financing, whenever it is you finally need to tap into it. If you donât have these three processes completely nailed, it means you donât have a way of corralling all these interested small check writers into a single fundraising event. WRONG FRAME: Hey Mr. Small Investor, Iâm interested in your opinion and am ready to answer all your questions no matter how ridiculous. RIGHT FRAME: When I want your opinion, Iâll give it to you. If you feel like youâre hand-holding small investors, whatâs probably happening is youâve allowed the investor to feel like a big shot Venture Capitalist, and he feels obligated to ask tons of hard-to-answer questions⦠eg. âwhatâs the statistical basis for your market size assumption.â You donât need to let small check writers act like big ones. They are buying an off-the-shelf âretailâ investment product from you that provides limited access to a great deal. Thatâs the ONLY conversation. Mailbag #3: âItâs the WHO that mattersâ The whole point of moving to smaller check sizes is you donât have to be as concerned about the investor. You donât need to meet his grandparents, take him to dinner at Mastroâs Steakhouse and debate whether or not Kirk really did find God in Star Trek IV. Hereâs the key takeaways about - Take the investor. If you donât like them later you can just kick them out and give their money back. - Itâs not enough money for the investor to track monthly about whats happening in the company - You can bundle them up into one line item on the cap table called âCommon A Retailâ - Youâre not giving up board seats, observation rights, significant voting rights, or control provisions - Most important, THEY are signing YOUR documents, not the other way around. This means you dictate price AND terms⦠a very rare thing for a small company. âHow do I package a $5m round, $50k at a time, and still have time to run my business?â If youâre an operating company who is highly interested in raising your next round from small balance investors⦠Iâll be publishing some more content about this topic as long as thereâs participation in these polls. How much time per WEEK do you spend on capital raising activities? Pick select an option below. On the next page, leave a comment and let me know whats working (and whats not) - [Zero minutes / week](
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