Ask HN: What usually happens after a VC asks for a demo?
Posted by stijo 5 days ago
I had a VC call that went well. They asked for a demo, mentioned looping in an operating partner, and I shared details etc. Since then it’s been quiet (a day or two).
For folks who’ve raised before or worked in VC: Is this typically just internal review time, or does silence after a demo usually signal a pass?
Not looking for validation, just trying to understand how this phase usually plays out.
Thanks.
Comments
Comment by baranmelik 1 day ago
Comment by unslop 3 days ago
Comment by malux85 4 days ago
When I finished raising my pre-seed round I had a big list of investors that I had talked to, some a warm, some said no, some said yes. I always asked them if I could put them on my cool updated list, and then shared fun things with them (short emails - 4 sentences and a screenshot, hey look what we did!)
By the time it came to raise seed we were 2.5x oversubscribed in 2 weeks - because I had spent the previous year relationship building with all of them.
Remember VCs are reviewing a bunch of companies all at once, you are not the only thing they have to think about today.
Follow up in a few days, and send a short (20 seconds max) video attached in case they don’t have time to organise to see the demo.
VCs are busy so “do the work” for them, don’t ask a question - ask a question, anticipate the answer and then send the answer too.
These are long term relationships you are building so treat them as such.
Comment by varshith17 4 days ago
Comment by muzani 4 days ago
Anyone with access to money can do VC, but generally past some point of slowness, good founders just don't take the money as it does more harm than good. It's also faster and cheaper to get to market these days, and there's too much opportunity cost going around for months asking people what they think for $100k instead of directly going to market.
Comment by rl3 3 days ago
There's also that possibility.
Comment by brettgriffin 4 days ago
They will wait and see if there's any deal heat.
Are you talking to other funds? You need to talk to as many funds as possible in a 2-3 week period to create leverage. Do not talk to a single or small number of funds in a process[0]. Best case they will snake the round at a discount, worst case you'll give up a ton of leverage and kill the process.
[0] unless you have close relationships with a stable of funds. you do not.