Si vous entendez de gros chiffres à propos de startup, sauf événement exceptionnel, ça se passe ailleurs qu’en France, voire qu’en Europe.
US funds invest in case your company succeeds, whereas in Europe, they invest because your company succeeded.
Another way to phrase this? The biggest fear for a US investor is to miss out on a big hit. When Peter Thiel was asked what his worst investment was, he replied “not (doing) the Series B round of Facebook”. See the difference? Instead of going over the many investments he made that turned out to be failures, he’s blaming himself for a risk not taken.
Et ça cadre très bien avec ce que j’ai pu voir. Ici on investit à minima, pour alimenter un business qui a déjà prouvé son fonctionnement, ou pas loin, avec des business plan à 3 ans. Là bas ils analysent plutôt la capacité de l’équipe à créer quelque chose, et la solidité du projet.
At the seed stage, US investors know that spending weeks analyzing the ‘total addressable market’ (or TAM) is a waste of time. The most interesting companies are those that expand their TAM as they go. For example, before Google came along, the market for PPC SERP ads was non-existent; today it’s a multi-billion dollar market with a clear leader.
But that doesn’t deter European investors from requesting a full deck, including a three-year business plan as a prerequisite to any form of conversation. If your path to profitability is not already proven, you will have a hard time getting as much as a phone call.
Différence de culture, mais pas que. Le reste du billet vaut aussi la lecture.
Photo d’entête sous licence CC BY-NC-SA à partir d’un travail de Marc Thurman
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