Note: this article was written with hardware startups in mind, but most of it applies to any other startup.

We Know Who Funds Hardware (or Other Categories), But Not Why

To take the case of hardware startups (our focus at HAX): you can find lists of hardware investors and trends, but it is a bit like giving you a pair of skis and telling you “go that way, really fast, if something gets in your way, turn”. It shows you the pieces but doesn’t tell you how to play the game.

In a presentation I gave recently I highlighted the following:

  1. Classic way
  2. Reality
  3. Hacks
  4. End game

Mostly because the game is not always what it appears to be.Let’s get started.

The Classic Way

It’s the advice you hear everywhere, and then some. I managed to condense it to five words starting with “T” :)

“I don’t hate Hardware, but I pity the fool.”

So Traction, Team, Tech, Timing and Target.

All this is great, but the reality is harsher than that.

2. The Reality

The game is rigged!Well, not really, but you’ll see what I mean.

Getting attention is really hard, so VCs often rely on filters to deal with the flow of demands. A recommended startup gets immediate attention.

A typical VC sees over 1,000 startups per year, and invests in less than 1%

I couldn’t find a clever alliteration nor an acronym this time, so bear with me.

But all hope is not lost! I also listed a few #hacks.

3. Hacks

My extensive vocabulary allowed me to find an unprecedented EIGHT hacks starting with “C”. Coverage, Celebs, Cheap, Champion, Corps, Conditions, China, Crypto.

4. End Game

This is a bit of a new topic, but if you have already raised a seed round or more and are considering your next round, it is worth asking yourself whether an early exit is not a better option.

How much momentum do you have?What is the true market potential?Are conditions changing?

Fortune favors the prepared and 90% of exits are M&A (CB Insights reported 3,358 total tech exits in 2016–3,260 M&A, 98 IPOs — so M&As are 30x more common). Over 60% happening at series B or before so be mindful of your asymptote & inflexion point.

To learn more about exits, you can join our Exit Masterclass in June in London(June 5), Paris (June 12), SF (June 19) and NYC (June 22).

If you find more Ts, more Cs, or have comments, comment away, tweet or email me at [email protected].

Now it’s all good.