Startups should approach fundraising in phases 2 and later by taking the best of the options in front of them right now
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Argument #063d64de 1 0 2
If it is true that...
Startups should approach fundraising in phases 2 and later by taking the best of the options in front of them right now 1 0 2Then it must be true that...
If someone makes you an acceptable offer, take it 1 0 2Argument #07984123 1 0 2
If it is true that...
Startups should approach fundraising in phases 2 and later by taking the best of the options in front of them right now 1 0 2and
If someone makes you an acceptable offer, take it 1 0 2and
If you have multiple incompatible offers, take the best one 1 0 2and
Don't reject an acceptable offer in the hope of getting a better one in the future 1 0 2Then it must be true that...
If you're raising money from many investors, roll them up as they say yes 1 0 2Mentions
Paul Graham/How to Raise Money
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Related Propositions
Startups should approach venture capital firms before they run out of money 1 0 2Startups that raise money usually do it more than once 1 0 1Fundraising is distracting and can halt other operations in a startup 1 0 2A startup should either be in fundraising mode or not 1 0 2When raising money, a startup should focus its whole attention on it so it can get done quickly and get back to work 1 0 2The amount a startup should raise depends on the startup's needs, not on the amount investors are willing to invest 1 0 2The right strategy in fundraising is to have multiple plans depending on how much you can raise 1 0 2If you have multiple founders, pick one to handle fundraising so the other(s) can keep working on the company 1 0 2Fundraising usually takes off fast for the startups that are most successful at it 1 0 2It is possible to raise too much money in startup fundraising 1 0 2