At Udemy, we were 3 first-time entrepreneurs trying to raise seed capital. We made every mistake in the book.
We got 200+ no’s and wasted 12 months fundraising.
We eventually pulled through, just barely. 😅
This thread shares our mistakes as lessons for founders.
**Read On**
We built an impressive product, but we were nobodies.
We thought: we need money to build our vision, so let’s go talk to some investors.
WRONG.
Nobody gave a fuck that we needed money. We needed to prove we deserved their money.
We met some associates and intermediaries who might introduce us to investors.
Few decision-makers wanted to meet with us.
We should’ve stopped there.
If getting meetings is hard, it will take you forever to raise.
Instead, spend your time building product + getting traction.
I was frustrated with investors: treated them as adversaries who asked dumb questions. My derision turned them off.
Learn to understand and appreciate investors. Follow them on Twitter, listen to podcasts from @HarryStebbings or @eriktorenberg.
An investor's job isn't easy.
They kiss a ton of frogs just to find one deal that may make them money 10 years from now.
They only win if you become a billion dollar company.
Don’t kid yourself - if you aren’t the right fit, bootstrap.
Risk-adjusted, bootstrapping can make you happier and more successful.