5 Ways Venture Funding Will Radically Change In This New World

Startups need to brace for fewer seed rounds, harsher terms and more earthly valuations

Adam Bluestein
Marker

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Photo: Mike Kemp/Getty Images

“My mom used to tell me, ‘I think you were born with a horseshoe up your ass,’” says Eric Rea.

He has reason to feel lucky. He’s CEO of Podium, a messaging platform for small businesses that’s based in Lehi, Utah, which at the end of March closed on a $125 million Series C round. It was one of the largest venture deals of a first quarter unlike any in memory — and not in a good way. Like most financing events consummated during the Covid-19 shutdown, Podium’s deal, which valued the fast-growing SaaS business at about $1.5 billion, had been negotiated well before any shelter-in-place orders were issued. But despite a significant change in macroeconomic conditions, Rea says, “we got the round done at the exact terms signed at the end of February.”

Thanks to getting a jump on the pandemic — and an existing relationship with returning investors, led by Y Combinator’s Continuity Fund — “we got lucky,” he says. “They would have had a legitimate rationale to say they changed their mind based on new evidence.” Other founders, he knows, are having a tougher time, facing not only Covid-discounted valuations, but the reemergence of some dicey deal terms…

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Adam Bluestein
Marker

I write about business, science, and things that people do for fun. Work published in Fast Company, Inc., Men’s Journal, Proto, Marker. Vermonter by choice.