Jason M. Lemkin It depends. But it’s probably not a waste of time. In an ideal world, if you are selling a true Enterprise SaaS product, you’d Sell High and you Aim High. You go as high in the org as you can penetrate, as close to the budget holder. Not...
Jason M. Lemkin I don’t know for sure, but one way at a higher level to think about it is that a “Fat” startup in ’15 that will easily burn $800K+ a month. Ex-Facebook, Google, etc. engineers are expensive. Get together 20 of them, a small...
Jason M. Lemkin I think what Jet.com is, is what VCs call “Star Fracking”. Ok, they don’t say ‘fracking’, but you know what I mean. VCs in very large firms are looking for huge returns deploying huge amounts of capital. That’s a...
Jason M. Lemkin I think Marc Bodnick probably nailed it. More generally, very charismatic CEOs doing something that sounds disruptive with social proof (e.g., famous angels) … can recruit really amazing people to the board if they really work at it. Mentoring...
Jason M. Lemkin Let me just add one small amplification to Garry Tan’s A+ answer (which I agree with 100%) just to be helpful. If a VC shows any real interest (and yes, the line between real and faux can be hard to see) … be persistent. Many VCs have 2...
Jason M. Lemkin No. I did this. I funded our beta myself. No one cared. Generally, VCs will be fine if it really matters if the company reimburses you for incorporation and other trivial costs from VC proceeds. If this number becomes much more than a few tens of...
Jason M. Lemkin Not necessarily easier, at least not at this moment in time. It should be much easier to raise at $30k MRR vs $0. But … At $0 … the potential is limitless. At $30k, it’s still early … but … the potential is measurable. If...
Jason M. Lemkin Ultimately, only one thing matters: Closing / making a couple of investments in the very, very best start-ups. But: Adding value does not matter. To the founders it does, but not to the VC firm. Not really. Sourcing candidates / VPs for portfolio...
Jason M. Lemkin I wouldn’t even remotely care. Valuations go up and down once you IPO. They always do: It’s just in private companies, it’s very rare you can see it. Valuations aren’t marked up and down with any regularity, and even if they...
So many things have gotten better on the product side of SaaS in the past few years. Amazing tools, the evolution of AWS as “enterprise grade”, so many great things. One thing I am less impressed with though is the evolution of SaaS security —...
Jason M. Lemkin In most funds with > 2 partners, it’s turns out the partners don’t really vote. Not really. Most funds with >= 3 partners have traditional Monday partner meetings. Companies come in and pitch. Deals are socialized and discussed,...
Q: Did investors who invested in Theranos do poor due diligence? No. Of course not. Having said that … doing diligence on truly disruptive changes in science is hard. My first start-up as a founder, NanoGram Devices, made implantable batteries from proprietary...
Ok we’re gonna try to get on a roll here with Get In Early. As a reminder, Get In Early will profile hot up-and-coming SaaS start-ups you’ve almost heard of. That in 12 months you’ll definitely heard of. The criteria are: $1m < ARR < $10m...
Q: Square’s S-1 shows that Starbucks transactions cost the company $77.1M, but Square only charged Starbucks $62.9M. How was this ever a good idea? Stepping back a bit, I think it’s important to not put excessive pressure on any one marketing initiative....
Q: Aside from Colonel Sanders who made his fortune at 73 can you tell me of any start-up companies that the CEO was over 60 yrs old and became a multi-millionaire? I don’t have a definitive list, but 2 that are interesting to me in The Internet: Neil Clark...