Between 10th May and 13th June 2022, we asked 206 pre-seed and seed founders about their previous experience raising venture capital, the amount of funding they’ve raised at their current company to date, where their company is headquartered, and the gender makeup of their founding team.
Then, we asked them to choose their top 3 factors (from a list of 14) that would be most important to them when choosing between two VCs – all things being equal on deal terms and valuation.
The most popular factor when choosing a VC is the fund’s sector knowledge and understanding of the founder’s business – 53% of participants selected this option.
Just 5% of respondents picked the diversity of a fund team and the potential it has to shape diversity on their cap table in their top 3 factors.
Founders with experience raising VC at previous companies are more likely to choose a fund based on track record and brand, as well as references from other founders, than those that have no prior experience.
63% of North American-based founders chose ‘introductions to prospective customers’ as one of their 3 factors, compared with just 30% in Europe.
All-male and mixed-gender founding teams were more likely to value factors that increased the likelihood of raising a future funding round than all-female teams, who put greater weight on factors that indicate a good fit with the current fund team.