Snippets

Daily Read #119 – Lessons From Top Women Entrepreneurs on Getting a Startup Funded.

3 Mins read

Quick snippets from my morning read on Wednesday, 12th May 2021

In today’s morning read, we learn from the Women that have raised and continue to raise funding for their business and other ventures as well as inspiring others to do the same.

Beatriz Acevedo

Suma WealthIf you go into a room where everyone looks the same and no one looks like you, think, “No one has my experience, and that’s why I’m valuable.”

Alexandra Zatarain

Eight SleepTo build a strong, diverse investor roster, you need to start early and be patient. It’s much easier and better to get women investors in the early rounds.

Renee Dua

HealJust when you think you really should give up: Don’t. With the five minutes extra that you put in, there might be someone around the corner who wants to help you. It happens just at that moment where you’re like, it’s not going to happen.

Jeanne David

Outer AisleWe had to raise money to build our manufacturing facility. There was so much skepticism from investors. We made a pact that we wouldn’t be desperate to get the money. We walked away from some deals with far-reaching onerous terms. If you don’t do the math and understand what the legal covenants mean, very quickly an investor owns your company. Also: Get a very good securities attorney.

Lori Coulter

SummersaltLearning how to tell our story differently was the biggest thing that allowed us to raise $17 million. Investors tend to ask female founders mostly “prevention” questions–in other words, how are you going to mitigate risk? Male founders mostly get “promotion” questions: How big can this be? If you never get the opportunity to paint the biggest picture of your business, you never get to tell the real story. Even if you get a prevention question, respond with a promotion answer–tell them how big your business can be. Present the biggest picture of your opportunity. Show them you aren’t thinking small and go for it.

Angela Benton

StreamlyticsIf you choose to go the investment route, make sure you really understand the power dynamic: You’re trying to get money from someone, and you’re selling equity. That doesn’t mean you don’t have any power. You need to ask: Are they a good fit for what you’re building? And if they aren’t, you should feel OK and empowered to say, “Thanks for considering us. I don’t think it’s a good fit.”

Rachel Drori

Daily HarvestYou need to really hang in there until you can find investors who are aligned with your values and believe in what you are trying to do. Values can easily go by the wayside when you’re thinking a dollar is a dollar no matter where it comes from. But it really isn’t.

Katerina Schneider

RitualMost of the advice that I got in the beginning was to raise as much money as possible. I believe the opposite. Especially now. It’s all about efficiency.

Kellan Hays

Good Nature AgroIn impact investing, there are still investors who have a mindset of, “We are going to help those poor people in Africa.” That’s not what you want. Look for people who understand that you’re building a business to solve a problem.

Karen Cahn

IFundWomenDo not quit your well-paying day job with benefits to become a startup founder. Starting a business is hard, gritty work. It pays zero for a long time, and you need to be financially stable while you’re building your business.

Sandra Johnson

Global Mobile FinanceFocus on a particular type of investor. I needed to focus on a global thinker, and someone who shows that by how they walk, not how they talk.

Jill Angelo

GennevI had to get to where I was comfortable with the business not happening. And when I finally arrived there, the money came. When you release yourself of expectation or hope, it changes your confidence and your being, and people see that about you.

Read the rest of the article here.

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