fail stories

Why I failed to fundraise in the past.

I have tried to fundraise before, unsuccessfully. Now, looking back, I believe the attempts were unsuccessful for some key reasons: 
Most importantly: 
❌ I didn’t pitch the right business… 
😟 to the right people!!!

But even if I had the right pitch, I wouldn’t have made it, because:
⏱️ I didn’t dedicate enough time to the raise (I spent more than 50% of my time on the business)
😰 I was unable to push through the low times, which suck but they’re a necessary part of every fundraise so far as I’ve heard…


The right business:
Marketplaces are incredibly hard (especially for first time founders) and expensive to grow, for a multitude of reasons that I will go into in another post… 
So when I was trying to raise a relatively small amount of money, for an expensive business, whose unit economics were far from figured out, it was an immediate red flag for any professional investors I pitched.

Every fundraising attempt that I failed, I was purely trying to pitch the marketplace business. And like a broken clock, I still continued to pitch that same business for the first 5 months of my 2022 raise, from Oct 2021 to Feb 2022.

After I tried to push a lot of excitement out into the world, and I had very little energy come back in return, I finally started to listen to the world and explore what might be wrong.

I tested variations of pitches & businesses in my head, on paper, with friendly potential investors, with customers, and with friends in the industry.

For a couple of calls, where I was sharing the new idea with friends in the industry, I tried going a step further and asking them if they’d be willing to put a tiny bit of money into the idea. I asked for the minimum I thought I could take (logistically): £3k

A few said yes. One said hell yes and offered more than 10X the amount I asked for. Because he understood the need for the solution, he’d seen me slave over this company for years, and he believed in me.

That changed everything!!!

It was the beginning of March 2022. I suddenly had more than 0% committed (my target was £150k at the time). And I had an evolution of the business idea, that not only excited other people, but more importantly excited me. That friend’s offer was a massive boost to my confidence, and that combined with a business that was endlessly inspiring for me, gave me an infectious energy that people could hear in my voice on every call.

I ended up closing £140k in 6 weeks (more on that later).

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This is the story of how I successfully fundraised (£295k at £1.5m pre-money). It started in October 2021 and ended in Q1 2023.

This is NOT a playbook for how you should do it. Every person's journey is different.

But I hope this might inspire you for possible paths you can explore.
Follow #tuttifundraising and I’ll share more insights when I have time to write them around building the business.

(This content was originally created for LinkedIn)