After gaining initial traction, many startups chose the venture path to double down on growth. However, raising your first round can be a time-consuming process, especially for first-time entrepreneurs that lack the network to start with and tools to handle first contacts.
Fortunately, LaGrowthMachine is here to help you reach investors at scale. Using our free custom-built database of investors and the power of personalized cross-channel sequences, you’ll be able to cope for the lack of network, warm them up before getting in touch and get a chance at pitching business angels and funds.
It’ll then be up to you to convince them of your amazing vision, execution, and ambition.
In this GrowthMaster post, we’ll share with you :
We will take LaGrowthMachine as a fictional example. Fictional because for those that know us well, LaGrowthMachine is a bootstrapped company.
Seed fundraising starts with identifying the right investors that have an investment scope matching your company. It’s not wise to mass-contact investors through any database you may find without proving first you’ve done your research.
We’ll walk through different approaches you should use to building your list of potential investors.
Getting an introduction from a trusted person is the golden ticket to actually pitching investors. Before using databases, reach out to your incubator/accelerator, fellow entrepreneurs and friends. Entrepreneurs are your best chance at getting introductions, as they’ve probably gone already through the painful process of raising money and building up relationships with investors.
It’s always best to get an introduction from a trusted person, but as many first-time entrepreneurs, you might now have that opportunity. The other approach relies on using databases :
Then there is LaGrowthMachine’s Business Angel Bible : Gritt.io. It’s a custom built database of all the above, in which you can find your institutional and angel investors per country or past investments, and import the results as a CSV into LaGrowthMachine.
While it’s tempting to contact everyone on the list, investors hate receiving generic email. It’s important to do your own research and check that:
Reaching out to a SaaS investor if you’re a MedTech will lead you nowhere. Same if you reach to a Series B investors while raising a seed.
If you’re using the databases above, you’ll be able to build a CSV containing the first name, last name, LinkedIn URL, past investments as custom variables matching your scope. While not mandatory, using past investments as justification variables will help you increase reply rate significantly, because it’ll show you have done your own research.
Upload the result of your research into LaGrowthMachine. To do so, go to Leads and click on “import leads” and then click on "import csv".
Investors get solicited by startups all day long. Blasting emails and generic Linkedin requests will have a very low chance of converting. In order to stand out, it is necessary to have a conversational approach by first warming up the investor and then getting in touch based on the lead’s behavior.
Warming-up an investor isn’t easy. Probably they’ve never heard of you nor your company. We break down this barrier by creating proximity and first visiting his profile long enough to send a notification to the lead. Then LaGrowthMachine will like his latest tweet and follow him and visit the profile again a day later.
People can’t help being curious about who showed interest in them. These subtle actions almost always result in your lead researching you or your company
You’ve created proximity and trust with basic human interactions. It’s now time to contact them. Linkedin has a 300 character-limit on connection request. Your copy has to be straight to the point. We recommend mentioning :
Having first warmed-up the lead and providing strong value through research and metrics should end up with decent positive reply rate. Don’t expect too much at this point, as Linkedin isn’t investors’ first choice when it comes to getting deal flow.
But what do we do if your potential investor didn’t reply?
Despite doing great research and sending an impressive copy, it’s probable that your reply rate will be quite low. That’s because most investors get overwhelmed on Linkedin. Hopefully, it’s very easy to follow-up via email with LaGrowthMachine, since you’ve used the enrich function to automatically find their email.
On email, you have no theoretical limit on length, but avoid boring out potential investors with long emails. Nobody will read it: precision is of the essence.
First off, the subject line has to compel email opening. Lead with value: “Startup investment opportunity” will never work”. Arise interests “LaGrowthMachine – Raising 1m€ – 22% MoM, 70k€ MRR” is just the right mix: straight to the point and providing compelling metrics to prompt a read.
Now the copy :
If you feel you need more training on copywriting to investors, do check out Bill Wilson’s article on how to send the perfect cold email to an investor.
By now if the prospected investor hasn’t replied, it isn’t a great sign. Let’s assume they just didn’t have time to review or reply and send another email. This time taking into account what they’ve done.
This is where providing the deck comes handy. Links and attached we send through emails can be tracked. If the lead clicks viewed the deck, it must be that you got his curiosity, but not yet his attention.
Let’s use that knowledge to our advantage to yet again reassure the potential investor with behavioral personalization. Looking carefully at the template, you’ll see that we divide our actions based on two behaviors :
The former allows us to write an email mentioning the deck they read as the first sentence.
Don’t forget to update your leads on new commitments. You can always update the template of an email in the “Templates” Tab, even after the start of a Campaign. Letting investors know more people are committing can generate Fear of Missing Out (FOMO).
For the latter (i.e. hasn’t clicked), since we know they haven’t read the deck, it’s good practice to put it again. As mentioned before, if committed money increased, don’t forget to mention it to generate some FOMO.
If the potential investor didn’t reply by then, there is a high probability that he isn’t interested. It could also be that the investor interpreted your deck wrong. To make sure, let’s send one last email asking why they turned you down. Not only it is a good way of closing the loop, by showing you’re appreciating of feedbacks, but it may also help you improve. And if indeed they interpreted badly some elements of your deck, you’ll get a chance to defend yourself.
With LaGrowthMachine's hands free lead generation platform.
Comments
Ross Knights
18 days ago
“LGM has been a key partner of Aviz.io since day 1: to prospect customers, to recruit, to raise funds... I’ve used LGM for everything with great success (except to make coffee)”
Ross Knights
18 days ago
“LGM has been a key partner of Aviz.io since day 1: to prospect customers, to recruit, to raise funds... I’ve used LGM for everything with great success (except to make coffee)”
Ross Knights
18 days ago
“LGM has been a key partner of Aviz.io since day 1: to prospect customers, to recruit, to raise funds... I’ve used LGM for everything with great success (except to make coffee)”