What Investors Really Want to See in a Startup Before Saying Yes
You’ve crafted the perfect pitch, built your deck, and landed a meeting with an investor. Now what?
It turns out, investors aren’t just looking at your idea. They’re evaluating dozens of invisible signals — from how you speak to how your traction compares to similar companies at your stage.
So what do investors actually want to see before saying yes?
Let’s break it down, based on insights from top firms like Andreessen Horowitz, First Round Capital, and Y Combinator.
1. Traction That Proves You’re Solving a Real Problem
Traction is more than revenue — it’s evidence that your product works and people want it.
Depending on your stage, this could include:
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✅ Early revenue growth (e.g. $10K–$50K MRR)
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✅ User growth rate and retention
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✅ Paid conversions from pilots or freemium
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✅ Enterprise LOIs (Letters of Intent)
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✅ Strong testimonials or case studies
“We’re looking for signs the dog is eating the dog food.”
— Sarah Tavel, Benchmark Capital
If you’re pre-revenue, show strong user engagement or waitlists — or evidence of serious unmet demand.
2. A Clear and Massive Market Opportunity
Even great products fail if the market is too small.
Investors want:
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TAM / SAM / SOM estimates backed by credible sources (e.g. Statista, IBISWorld)
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Top-down and bottom-up market sizing
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A compelling vision of how you’ll expand that market
🧠 Pro Tip: Avoid saying “this is a $1T market” unless you can prove how you’ll realistically capture a piece of it.
3. A Founding Team That Can Execute
For most early-stage investors, team > idea.
They’re asking:
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Do the founders have relevant experience?
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Can they hire and manage top talent?
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Have they built anything impressive before?
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Are they coachable and mission-driven?
“We bet on the jockey, not just the horse.”
— Naval Ravikant, AngelList
Having a technical co-founder, prior exits, or startup experience helps — but grit, clarity, and leadership matter most.
4. Founder-Market Fit
Just like product-market fit, founder-market fit is real.
Ask yourself:
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Why you for this space?
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Do you have insider knowledge or a personal stake?
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Have you worked in this market or felt this pain?
Investors want to know you’re the right person to solve this problem — and will keep going even when it gets hard.
5. A Scalable Business Model
They want to see a path to $100M+ valuation. That doesn’t mean your startup needs $1M in revenue today, but you should be able to explain:
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How you acquire and retain customers
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Your margins and cost structure
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How you scale distribution (e.g. B2B SaaS, marketplace dynamics)
Include:
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LTV (lifetime value)
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CAC (customer acquisition cost)
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Burn rate (if post-raise)
If you don’t have these yet, articulate how you’ll test and refine them.
6. Momentum and Speed of Execution
Are you building fast? Are things happening?
Metrics that show momentum:
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Product launches or iterations
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Team growth
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Rapid feedback loops from users
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Updates that show you listen and adapt
Many investors track this over time from your updates — so be consistent.
7. Vision That Inspires and Scales
Yes, you need traction — but your vision has to excite them too.
What does your company look like if everything works?
Investors want to back:
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Category creators (not just improvements)
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Mission-driven founders
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Teams that can dominate or disrupt a space
Make it tangible:
“We believe every small business should have access to real-time banking — and we’re building the Stripe of SMB finance.”
8. Timing That Works in Your Favor
Is this the right time for your product?
Timing includes:
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Regulatory changes (e.g., AI rules, fintech updates)
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Market pain spikes (e.g., supply chain crisis, creator monetization shift)
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Tech maturity (e.g., AI models enabling new product types)
Show investors why now is the moment to act.
9. Defensibility or Moat Potential
At early stages, this doesn’t have to be patents — but it should be something.
Types of early moats:
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Proprietary data
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Network effects
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Hard-to-replicate tech
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Strategic partnerships
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Brand or community
Be honest — don’t claim a moat that doesn’t exist. Instead, show how one could form.
10. Fundraising Alignment and Use of Funds
Investors also care about:
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How much you’re raising
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Why that amount (and how far it gets you)
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Whether you’re raising at a fair valuation
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Your future raise plans (pre-seed → seed → Series A)
🧠 Tip: Tie every dollar to a milestone:
“We’re raising $1.5M to launch v2, expand to 2 more verticals, and reach $40K MRR.”
What Turns Investors Off Instantly
❌ No clear market size
❌ Flimsy metrics or vanity traction
❌ Poor communication or vague answers
❌ Unrealistic projections (e.g., 10x growth every quarter)
❌ No real differentiation
Citations & Further Reading
Conclusion: Build What Investors Can Believe In
Fundraising isn’t about convincing people with hype — it’s about showing them:
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You’re solving something real
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You’ve proven people want it
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You have a team who can build it
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There’s a long-term upside that makes it worth the risk