My favourite reason for not investing from a British investor (Haatch) was “Yes, we can do the entire round. The New Year starts in April, we have the capital to deploy, and we’d love to invest”. Followed by endless rounds of people being away or busy when it came time to collect the cheque and “we definitely still want to invest” when asked.
I loved the bit in the post about "VCs cold calling and then rejecting the next day." When I was CTO/Co-Founder full time, I had one VC cold-call and pursue me unsolicited...and then he acted like I owed him a bunch of data and acted like I wasn't taking "the opportunity [to speak with him]" seriously. It seemed he just wanted competitive inside data. I think the problem is that anyone can call themselves a VC, even if they dont have any track record.
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 34.9 ms ] threadNot surprised of any of those, but I'm surprised in the lack of doubts about the team, which is a recurring topic among investors.
> The biggest firms in your space aren't doing this, therefore it's not worth doing
> Your competitors are executing badly now but they will start to execute better in the future
do not sound unreasonable, they sound plain incompetent. Or at least not what I imagine as the skillset found in a VC.