Startups

5 innovative fundraising methods for emerging VCs and PEs

Comment

money sprouting from five plants
Image Credits: Hiroshi Watanabe / Getty Images

David Teten

Contributor

David Teten is founder of Versatile VC and writes periodically at teten.com and @dteten.

More posts from David Teten

Approaching institutions to raise capital for your venture capital or private equity fund is relatively transparent, but what if you’re targeting family offices and high-net-worth individuals? I see five innovative new methods for raising capital that emerging managers such as Versatile VC are using, which I’ve ranked in roughly descending order of popularity:

  1. Join online communities and virtual conferences where investors participate.
  2. Use a platform that helps other investors access your fund.
  3. Generally solicit under the 506(c) designation.
  4. Launch a rolling fund.
  5. Crowdfund from retail investors into your general partnership.

Will Stringer, CEO of Chisos, feels most family offices won’t respond to cold outreach. “You need to build a true relationship with family office investors or other general partners that can make warm intros to family office decision-makers,” he says. “Family offices, more than any other allocator, rely on trust. [It’s] not always the case (and always changing), but today it’s still the majority.”

The obvious solution therefore is to get in touch with your friends who have earlier raised or pitched to the family offices. You may also find professional intermediaries who are willing to make an introduction to family offices.

That said, the five methods I outline below may be faster and more efficient.

Join online communities and virtual conferences where investors participate

To meet other VCs (some of which may become LPs), among your options are Confluence, Gen Z Mafia, InnovatorsRoom (European focus) and TechAviv (Israeli focus). To find others, see: How to find the right online communities. I maintain a proprietary database of the communities I’ve found most valuable, which I share with other members of the Versatile team.

These venues allow you to efficiently get in front of many pre-qualified investors and follow up with those who seem like a tight fit. Unsurprisingly, the best online communities are limited strictly to LPs. Ideally, you’d partner with an anchor/friendly LP who can pass the word on your fund to other potential investors.

In general, at virtual conferences, I recommend first fill out your online profile with all possible keywords and your photo. Side-channeling is powerful and is the equivalent of going into a corner at a conference and talking privately. Look up the profiles of all the people attending a conference or in an online community and send the relevant folks a customized message introducing yourself.

This is one of the primary advantages of virtual events versus traditional face-to-face conferences, where people do not conveniently wear a hat with their LinkedIn profile visible.

At the public forums, make sure to ask insightful questions. Nechama Leibowitz, a prominent Bible scholar, emphasized the analytic difference between a question and a kushiyah (a Hebrew word with no English equivalent). A question is a request for information, e.g., “When did the first COVID-19 deaths occur in the USA and South Korea?” (Answer: the same date.) A kushiyah is the result of a sense of difficulty or problem, based on an understanding of the information: “I noticed that the USA had 79 times more COVID-19 deaths per capita than South Korea. Why the disparity?” When you ask a kushiyah, other attendees will recognize they’re working with someone who has done the homework and taken the next step to probe.

Lastly, follow up promptly. The whole goal of a virtual event is to get in one-on-one conversations with the relevant people there. In the absence of other cues, your speed in following up is taken as a proxy for the seriousness with which you take a new relationship.

How to attract large investors to your direct investing platform

There’s a caveat, though: Make sure you’re aware of legal restrictions on general solicitation, unless you are generally soliciting (discussed below).

Use a platform that helps investors access your fund

Institutional and retail investors access can funds via a number of platforms such as Allocate, CAIS, Context365, iCapital Network, OurCrowd, Palico, PrimeAlpha, Revere and Trusted Insight. A number of other firms offering access both to direct investment opportunities and funds include iSTOX, Sharenett, Manhattan Street Capital, Proteus, and Yieldstreet.

These platforms can be an efficient way to get in front of a large number of pre-qualified investors, but most investors here want to see a track record and a simple story. If you aren’t spinning out of a previous fund with a clearly attributable track record, you will likely have challenges in actually closing capital with this route. The costs are highly dependent on the platform and you may pay a percentage of your management fee, a percentage of carry, a flat upfront fee, a monthly recurring fee or a combination.

You should also generally solicit under the 506(c) designation. I was a partner at ff Venture Capital when we were the first institutional VC fund to use “general solicitation” to raise capital. Rule 506(c) allows solicitations of capital that are exempted from reporting requirements, similar to rule 506(b) — the traditional mechanism fund managers use to raise capital — but allows “general solicitation” to the broader public, including advertising.

Rob Leclerc, founding partner at AgFunder, said, “We’ve used Reg D 506c for the last four years in raising our venture capital funds, because it limits the censoring we need to place on our own communications. Every business on the planet uses advertising to market to potential customers, including Boeing, which is selling quarter-billion-dollar jets. Why should investment funds be any different? To be clear, with a 506c offering, the fund manager is still in control of who gets fund allocation and the investor minimum.”

As an example, read how McKeever Conwell breaks down his tech stack for handling LPs in a 506(c) raise.

There are a number of disadvantages to general solicitation. You have an obligation to verify that investors are in fact accredited by reviewing their tax forms, bank statements and other documents. However, you can outsource this for as little as $60 to companies such as VerifyInvestor.com or EarlyIQ.

General solicitation also requires that you engage with a large number of potential investors, many of whom will not have a serious interest in investing. You can burn a lot of cycles with tire-kickers.

Lastly, when you’re raising capital for a fund, you’re fundamentally selling a luxury good, which is seen as more valuable because it’s scarce. That’s part of the secret of the hedge fund industry’s success in gathering assets. General solicitation can damage that perception.

Rolling funds

AngelList has popularized a rolling fund structure, using their Rolling Venture Funds. The first few clients under this structure include Naval Ravikant, Sahil Lavingia, Dave Morin, Diaspora Ventures and W Fund. For helpful overviews, see: Will rolling funds roll over the venture capital industry?; Rolling venture funds through the good times and the bad; and Rolling funds — welcome to the uncommitted LP. For a more critical take, see: Why we ultimately decided not to do a rolling fund.

AngelList is making this process very convenient, but you can theoretically reduce your cost by synthetically replicating the structure yourself. The Fund Group at Wilson Sonsini vetted the rolling funds’ legal structure and could probably clone it for you. Bryant Smick at Carney Badley Spellman also helped create something similar.

In addition, AngelList hired Belltower Fund Group to act as the fund’s administrator, managing back-office functions including accounting, tax reports and LP ledgers. “AngelList acts as the fund’s Investment Adviser working alongside the fund managers to ensure the LPs are treated fairly and in a consistent manner. This can take the form of checking for conflicts, verifying information and ensuring that all laws and regulations are complied with,” Chris Harvey wrote in the Law of VC post above. Belltower could presumably do this for you too.

Crowdfund from retail investors into your general partnership

Backstage Capital raised $5 million on Republic, and Earnest Capital and Chisos Capital are running Reg CF campaigns (see Sacra’s analysis of Earnest). Will Stringer observed that these platforms “double as a marketing effort, as thousands of people will presumably see the offering and many will be investors or entrepreneurs that could lead to opportunities. Another advantage is having thousands of investors brought in to the success of your business as well as your portfolio companies. You have an instant community of people who are willing to help you and your portfolio source talent, solve problems and make intros.”

But, Stringer added, “You have thousands of investors to track and keep updated. Most of the platforms streamline this effort fairly well, but it is still more work than having one or two (or 0) GP investors. Raising at the GP allows you to pay salaries and legal bills, but it does not solve your investment capital problem. The capital raised cannot be used to invest in other companies.”

The costs can be material, and your success depends heavily on the current size of your network. For instance, Backstage has a massive network and huge brand name recognition; they likely spent very little on marketing.

Disclosure: I’m an investor in Republic via HOF Capital, where I was formerly a managing partner. Thanks to Prabhat Gusain for research help. I’m not a lawyer and this is not legal advice. This essay is a summary of a class I taught for the Oper8r VC fund accelerator.

Should you give an anchor investor a stake in your fund’s management company?

More TechCrunch

Meta’s Oversight Board has now extended its scope to include the company’s newest platform, Instagram Threads, and has begun hearing cases from Threads.

Meta’s Oversight Board takes its first Threads case

The company says it’s refocusing and prioritizing fewer initiatives that will have the biggest impact on customers and add value to the business.

SeekOut, a recruiting startup last valued at $1.2 billion, lays off 30% of its workforce

The U.K.’s self-proclaimed “world-leading” regulations for self-driving cars are now official, after the Automated Vehicles (AV) Act received royal assent — the final rubber stamp any legislation must go through…

UK’s autonomous vehicle legislation becomes law, paving the way for first driverless cars by 2026

ChatGPT, OpenAI’s text-generating AI chatbot, has taken the world by storm. What started as a tool to hyper-charge productivity through writing essays and code with short text prompts has evolved…

ChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot

SoLo Funds CEO Travis Holoway: “Regulators seem driven by press releases when they should be motivated by true consumer protection and empowering equitable solutions.”

Fintech lender SoLo Funds is being sued again by the government over its lending practices

Hard tech startups generate a lot of buzz, but there’s a growing cohort of companies building digital tools squarely focused on making hard tech development faster, more efficient and —…

Rollup wants to be the hardware engineer’s workhorse

TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 is not just about groundbreaking innovations, insightful panels, and visionary speakers — it’s also about listening to YOU, the audience, and what you feel is top of…

Disrupt Audience Choice vote closes Friday

Google says the new SDK would help Google expand on its core mission of connecting the right audience to the right content at the right time.

Google is launching a new Android feature to drive users back into their installed apps

Jolla has taken the official wraps off the first version of its personal server-based AI assistant in the making. The reborn startup is building a privacy-focused AI device — aka…

Jolla debuts privacy-focused AI hardware

OpenAI is removing one of the voices used by ChatGPT after users found that it sounded similar to Scarlett Johansson, the company announced on Monday. The voice, called Sky, is…

OpenAI to remove ChatGPT’s Scarlett Johansson-like voice

The ChatGPT mobile app’s net revenue first jumped 22% on the day of the GPT-4o launch and continued to grow in the following days.

ChatGPT’s mobile app revenue saw its biggest spike yet following GPT-4o launch

Dating app maker Bumble has acquired Geneva, an online platform built around forming real-world groups and clubs. The company said that the deal is designed to help it expand its…

Bumble buys community building app Geneva to expand further into friendships

CyberArk — one of the army of larger security companies founded out of Israel — is acquiring Venafi, a specialist in machine identity, for $1.54 billion. 

CyberArk snaps up Venafi for $1.54B to ramp up in machine-to-machine security

Founder-market fit is one of the most crucial factors in a startup’s success, and operators (someone involved in the day-to-day operations of a startup) turned founders have an almost unfair advantage…

OpenseedVC, which backs operators in Africa and Europe starting their companies, reaches first close of $10M fund

A Singapore High Court has effectively approved Pine Labs’ request to shift its operations to India.

Pine Labs gets Singapore court approval to shift base to India

The AI Safety Institute, a U.K. body that aims to assess and address risks in AI platforms, has said it will open a second location in San Francisco. 

UK opens office in San Francisco to tackle AI risk

Companies are always looking for an edge, and searching for ways to encourage their employees to innovate. One way to do that is by running an internal hackathon around a…

Why companies are turning to internal hackathons

Featured Article

I’m rooting for Melinda French Gates to fix tech’s broken ‘brilliant jerk’ culture

Women in tech still face a shocking level of mistreatment at work. Melinda French Gates is one of the few working to change that.

1 day ago
I’m rooting for Melinda French Gates to fix tech’s  broken ‘brilliant jerk’ culture

Blue Origin has successfully completed its NS-25 mission, resuming crewed flights for the first time in nearly two years. The mission brought six tourist crew members to the edge of…

Blue Origin successfully launches its first crewed mission since 2022

Creative Artists Agency (CAA), one of the top entertainment and sports talent agencies, is hoping to be at the forefront of AI protection services for celebrities in Hollywood. With many…

Hollywood agency CAA aims to help stars manage their own AI likenesses

Expedia says Rathi Murthy and Sreenivas Rachamadugu, respectively its CTO and senior vice president of core services product & engineering, are no longer employed at the travel booking company. In…

Expedia says two execs dismissed after ‘violation of company policy’

Welcome back to TechCrunch’s Week in Review. This week had two major events from OpenAI and Google. OpenAI’s spring update event saw the reveal of its new model, GPT-4o, which…

OpenAI and Google lay out their competing AI visions

When Jeffrey Wang posted to X asking if anyone wanted to go in on an order of fancy-but-affordable office nap pods, he didn’t expect the post to go viral.

With AI startups booming, nap pods and Silicon Valley hustle culture are back

OpenAI’s Superalignment team, responsible for developing ways to govern and steer “superintelligent” AI systems, was promised 20% of the company’s compute resources, according to a person from that team. But…

OpenAI created a team to control ‘superintelligent’ AI — then let it wither, source says

A new crop of early-stage startups — along with some recent VC investments — illustrates a niche emerging in the autonomous vehicle technology sector. Unlike the companies bringing robotaxis to…

VCs and the military are fueling self-driving startups that don’t need roads

When the founders of Sagetap, Sahil Khanna and Kevin Hughes, started working at early-stage enterprise software startups, they were surprised to find that the companies they worked at were trying…

Deal Dive: Sagetap looks to bring enterprise software sales into the 21st century

Keeping up with an industry as fast-moving as AI is a tall order. So until an AI can do it for you, here’s a handy roundup of recent stories in the world…

This Week in AI: OpenAI moves away from safety

After Apple loosened its App Store guidelines to permit game emulators, the retro game emulator Delta — an app 10 years in the making — hit the top of the…

Adobe comes after indie game emulator Delta for copying its logo

Meta is once again taking on its competitors by developing a feature that borrows concepts from others — in this case, BeReal and Snapchat. The company is developing a feature…

Meta’s latest experiment borrows from BeReal’s and Snapchat’s core ideas

Welcome to Startups Weekly! We’ve been drowning in AI news this week, with Google’s I/O setting the pace. And Elon Musk rages against the machine.

Startups Weekly: It’s the dawning of the age of AI — plus,  Musk is raging against the machine