1. 10:14 25th Feb 2010

    notes: 10

    comments:

    Creating new markets isn’t so easy

    A couple of days ago, I had a phone call with a partner of an early stage VC firm whose portfolio is filled with successful startups you’ve heard of. Halfway through our conversation, they told me: We only invest in companies that believe they can be worth $1 billion dollars. If you think you’d be happy with $50-100 million, you’re not the right company for us. The companies we invest in generate $100,000 per month in revenue within 6-12 months of launch, and $1 million per month in revenue by 1 year after that. How do you plan to do that?”

    What?

    I was shocked. I can’t think of a single non-ecommerce startup that can boast $100k in monthly revenues within 6-12 months of launch AND were creating a new market. Not Google. Not Facebook. Not Twitter. Not Yahoo. Maybe Apple? Microsoft?

    As Steve Blank so eloquently says, when you are creating a new market, you have no idea how long the flat part of the hockey stick really is. That’s because you are creating a new product that people don’t even know they want, because they’ve never seen anything like it before. And you are creating something based on a mountain of assumptions, because you don’t know what people will want once they know they want something. 

    This is all to say, choose your investors wisely. 

    (NB — This partner, by the way, has never started their own company or worked at a startup.)

     
    1. mcdavis said: If they’re generating $100k a month in 6-12 months, did they really need to seek out investment in the first place?
    2. winenutnyc reblogged this from caterpillarcowboy and added:
      can get it. My real problem...isn’t helpful at all to you. Of course you’d
    3. tkbv reblogged this from caterpillarcowboy
    4. kylewritescode reblogged this from caterpillarcowboy and added:
      Another excellent read...Dave. Always interesting...you’re...
    5. caterpillarcowboy posted this
     
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