Transcript
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This is Rich Maloy with SpringTime Ventures, bringing you the VC Minute, quick advice to help startup founders fundraise better.
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Our guest this week had the experience of raising both during boom times and during the market downturn.
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I'm sure many of you that are listening have had the same experience, or if you haven't, you can hear the stark differences in Alex's experiences.
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And what I love about this is how he wraps up the week.
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So stay tuned for how he changed his mindset through this process.
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But first I'd like to thank AVL Growth partners for being a great partner to the VC minute.
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Outsourcing your finance and accounting function is a no brainer for startups.
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And you need to work with a firm that specializes in high growth companies.
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Founded in 2009.
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AVL has fueled the success of over 1200 early stage companies.
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Specializing in raising capital, M&A, financial modeling, scaling, and bringing financial transparency and a disciplined approach to the companies they work with.
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Head to AVLgrowth.com and explore how they can be pivotal to your growth.
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I'm Alex Ryden, founder CEO of Guest House.
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Guest house is a Denver based company.
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We're the 1st tech platform for home staging.
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We bring together top designers and furniture from the best brands to make staging faster, easier and more accessible than it has ever been.
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We can talk about raising during boom times versus raising during challenging times.
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We had fundraise 1st, right at the tail end of 2020.
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so we closed our 1st seed round in 2021.
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That was a 3M dollar seed round that was led by Range Ventures.
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Raising during boom times, I think was definitely my experience my first go around.
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I actually didn't try to fundraise at all.
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A good friend of mine started a company called Soona, Liz, she's awesome.
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She was partnering with us, and I just was talking to her about the business and she said, you should fundraise.
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And I said, nah, I've had some experience with it and with other companies that I wasn't running and I don't know if it's right for this business.
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I'm not sure.
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And she said, well, you should really at least meet this guy, Chris, he's great, starting a fund here.
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I think the tech you've built is amazing.
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And she was our total advocate.
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I have so much to thank her for,especially looking back.
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She introduced us to Range and we ended up having a great conversation with Chris Erickson and Adam Burrows.
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And in the same week, I was talking to Chris and Adam, I was also talking to a strategic about potentially licensing our business to them and having them pay us and just cash flowing it really well.
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They found out that I was talking to a fund, Chris and Adam gave us a term sheet a couple of days after we had conversations and this strategic gave us an LOI to acquire the business.
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So I had a really good challenge on my hands which was do I sell or do I build?
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I had 3 weeks actually of debating that and trying to figure out what the best path was.
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And we had some stuff going on with the family too.
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It was a lot over 3 weeks.
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And just came to the decision that we wanted to build and so we ended up taking the term sheet from Range and raising the rest of that round.
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I think once we took the term sheet it was probably a 3 week process, but it felt like 3 years if that makes sense.
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Because you're just like, oh, my gosh.
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Well, what if I don't get a yes?
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And what if this isn't closed?
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But thinking back, it was such a short timeline.
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3 weeks to get something done was no time at all.
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And we had a lot of people just wanting to get into the deal, especially after we close that first tranche of 2 million into it.
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Once we had that.
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We kind of had a period of time where we kept talking to folks.
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Again, it felt like 2 years, but it was 2 weeks where I kept talking to folks and I'm like, I'm just getting a bunch of no's.
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I'm getting a bunch of no's.
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And then finally, we were talking with a couple funds and they knew each other.
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And they ended up having a conversation.
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One committed to me on the phone.
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The other one obviously knew it was happening, immediately calls me after, and then we have three more funds that were after those trying to get in.
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Once it was subscribed, it was oversubscribed very quickly.