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5 Ways Bootstrapping Can Make You A Better Business

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Every startup is keenly aware of how much money it has, and, more importantly,

how much money it doesn’t have. As a result, for most startups, the goal is
to score a big round of venture capital funding and then to finally get out of
fundraising mode and into the business of growing the company.

But even if you get a round of funding, it rarely ends there.

More often than not, Series A becomes Series B; Series B becomes Series C; and
so on, and while you’re out spending all day and all of your energy raising the next
round of financing, it dawns on you: Your business isn’t about its mission anymore.
Your business is now in the business of seeking funding. Some would even suggest
that bootstrapping is overrated and that the #1 skill of an entrepreneur is raising
capital, and I couldn’t disagree more.

Now, don’t get me wrong – countless successful businesses were launched with
the help of VC funding. But I’m writing this piece to share some of the surprising
benefits of building your business without it.

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Customers Are a More


Sustainable Source of
Funding

In my opinion, it all comes back to the customers


and sustainability. Without investor funding, a
company is forced to listen to customers as if they
were the bosses. And let’s face it – they are. In any
successful company, they pay the bills. After all,
it isn’t Apple’s investors that line up around the
block for those pretty new iPhones every season
(although I’d like to see that).

Raising money from your customers also forces you to build a product that’s not only
desirable, but which people will actually pay for. If you don’t care to hear me preach, listen
to patent junkie Thomas Edison, who said, “I never perfected an invention that I did not
think about in terms of the service it might give others … I find out what the world needs,
then I proceed to invent.”

Focusing on the customers helps you avoid what can be a destructive funding-centric
mindset as described above. Some even advise that, as soon as you close the first round,
you should be gearing up for the second round. In my opinion, focusing on the customer
and building profitable products is much more likely to lead to a sustainable business.

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It’s Too Easy to Spend


Investors’ Money

Going at it alone forces you to use capital extremely


efficiently, which creates a strong culture and builds in a
huge competitive advantage moving forward. This scrappy
“us-against-the-world” approach is good, and it leads to a
team made of founders instead of employees. Not having
millions to burn also makes you hungrier to find ways to
improve organically, as opposed to by attempting to spend
your way out of problems and challenges.

As Paul Graham has said, “When you raise a lot of money,


your company moves to the suburbs and has kids.”

Building On a Budget
Can Sometimes Build a
Better Product

Without a huge amount of funding in the bank, it’s


also much easier to pivot to a better product or
strategy based on real paying customer feedback.

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Without funding, you’re forced to find product/market fit through customer feedback
and at a much faster pace. You simply don’t have the luxury of an 18-month burn rate,
vacations included.

It’s all or nothing and the customers call the shots. Or, as Eric Ries would put it, “Don’t be in
a rush to get big, be in a rush to have a great product.”

Starting a Company
Costs Much Less Now

The economics of startups have fundamentally


changed in the past few years, making it extremely
easy to start a company on a shoestring budget.
What used to take millions to build a few years
ago, can be done with a few thousand and a couple
cases of Redbull today.

Sometimes all you need is a small seed round of financing to build an awesome
minimal viable product that early users will pay for, helping to fuel additional product
improvements. The key here is to find a specific demand in a large market and fill that void.

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You Call the Shots and


Reap the Rewards

If you avoid VC funding, you have more


control over everything from operational
and financial policies to the big items like
your company’s vision. When you agree to
accept funding, on the other hand, you give
up some control and become subject to
potentially demanding investors who want
to see returns.

As a result, your company can become much less flexible and nimble, as analysis and
conservatism impede your decision-making and risk-taking.

The ability to be inventive and take risks is supposed to be the main advantage of a
startup – don’t be so eager to grow up that you miss out on your company’s young, wild,
and reckless years.

Even if you do need funding, as everybody knows, the best time to raise capital is when
you don’t actually need it (e.g. SquareSpace). It’s like dating – those that don’t seem to
need a partner are often the most desirable. Seeking funding when you’re desperate leads
to bad terms and “take it or leave it” partnerships; coming from a place of strength, in
contrast, leads to desirable terms, valuation, and top-flight partners.

Moreover, if your goal is ultimately to sell the company, you can obtain a more favorable
and profitable deal if you aren’t subject to financing structures and didn’t unload a chunk
of the company early on (e.g. WuFoo).

In short, I think more startups should focus less on raising venture capital and more on
their customers. At the end of the day, they’re the ones who will help you build an awesome
product and pay your bills.

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