How much and what to raise VC money for

Miguel Fernandez
Miguel Fernandez
Co-founder & CEO
UPDATEd on
September 20, 2024
·
5
min read
How much and what to raise VC money for

You’re a SaaS founder and you’ve just raised startup funding or growth capital from a reputable VC. We tip our hats to you—that is no small feat in any times, and particularly in the lingering COVID environment. 

As you discovered (or are about to, if you are embarking on a VC pursuit), raising venture capital takes a lot of time and attention. The equity funding process can take many months to complete (not particularly a form of founder-friendly SaaS financing when you’re building a team, working out your product rollout, and more). And with it, comes the issue of dilutive startup funding. UGH. 

Venture capital for SaaS financing

VCs like the SaaS vertical for startup financing. SaaS companies offer long-term, predictable recurring revenue (who doesn’t love that?). They make decisions based on your business model, sales and marketing plan, and exit strategy.

On the SaaS founder side of the fundraising process, you make two important decisions:

  • How much money to raise — i.e., how long of a runway will the raise support
  • What to raise the money for — i.e., which investment areas will the raise support

Let’s unpack each of those in turn. We will leave the choice of your VC investor(s) aside — it’s easier to just work with hard numbers.

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#1: How much venture capital should my SaaS company raise?

Typically, the decision of how much venture capital to raise is driven by your P&L /cash flow model and things you want to prove out—or hypotheses to test—by the time next fundraise comes around (e.g., series B if you just raised A). Here’s how a VC funding transaction may go, factoring in the “how much” and the “what for” elements.

  • You present the VC with a plan full of ambitious milestones you need the money to achieve
  • You build in a buffer of 25% to account for any unforeseen circumstances, thereby raising more than you need
  • Let’s assume you are expecting an average burn of $500,000 per month, and you want a safe 13 months of runway. To achieve that, you raise $6.5M in A and gave away approximately 15% of the company

Let’s also assume:

  • You have $5M in annual recurring revenue (ARR)
  • 2/3 of your contracts are paid monthly or quarterly
  • And you are waiting up to 12 months to see all cash flows associated with these contracts

What if I told you that instead of $6.5M, you could afford to raise only half the amount and keep about 8% of your company as a result? Sounds pretty good, right?

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Closing the cash flow gap with alternative funding

As a SaaS founder, part of the reason for the first VC raise was to close the infamous cash gap Miguel wrote about in our previous blog post. This cash flow deficit resulted from cash lagging product investments and customer acquisition at your SaaSCo. Effectively, half of the dilution came about because of inability to recycle cash locked up in your business.

What’s the alternative funding source? Your recurring revenue. Your SaaS could be (gradually) unlocking up to $3M in cash from your monthly and quarterly paying customers. This amount could grow further to $5M+ assuming you keep on growing at a healthy rate. 

Breaking it down: In practice, your VC investors give you $3M which means around seven months of runway. The other seven months of runway comes from unlocking cash tied up in your operations, while you keep 8% of the business. At Capchase, we enable SaaS founders to extend the runway by up to 50–60%. (And we hope you don’t have to fundraise from VCs again.)

#2: What to raise venture capital for?

You are working hard to grow your SaaS company into a large and successful business. You need growth capital funding; but selling equity to fund your business is the most expensive type of financing. Therefore, you should only use it to invest in true growth engines of your SaaSCo—your talented team that will turbocharge your business many times over in two areas:

  • Product development – hire the best engineers and data scientists to enable construction of your rocket ship
  • Customer acquisition & retention -- those brilliant AEs and marketers that spread the word about your incredible SaaS product

Does venture capital make sense to fund your entire operation?

Depending on the type of SaaS product you are selling, the payback can vary from a few months to several years when calculated on gross/contribution margin basis. This is before accounting for payment terms and the often-yawning gap between bookings and cash. Time for another funding solution.

Unfortunately, conventional thinking is to just go for that next VC raise. And many SaaS founders lack appropriate alternative funding options. Until now, this has meant that founders sold more of their equity to fund … working capital. (Can you see how this is not a founder-friendly option?)

There’s a better way to get additional startup funding or growth capital for your SaaSco.

Capchase: the non-dilutive funding option

With Capchase, you get to focus your VC dollars on the stuff that truly matters for your SaaS company’s success—developing amazing products and bringing them to market.

When it’s time for SaaS founders to raise more money, you may decide to go for round B or C and raise more venture capital. However, SaaS founders have an alternative to dilutive equity funding. With Capchase, you can support your raise with our non-dilutive SaaS funding solution.

Supporting your raise with Capchase

It takes some time for us to get to know your business and fully scale into a high addressable multiple of ARR. We advise founders to get in touch right after they raise equity, or even better, think of Capchase as complementary to their VC funding round. The sooner we start working with your SaaSCo, the faster we can scale and the better the cost of financing we can propose.

Cost of capital

Don’t take our word for it; read our customer stories to learn how Capchase is helping SaaS founders fund their companies with non-dilutive financing. Come join our non-dilutive revolution.

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Learn more about programmatic fund: Capchase.com/Grow