How Startups Can Prepare for Hard Times
As venture capital firms turn off the funding spigots, cash-deprived startups are withering. These articles show how to stay afloat.
As venture capital firms turn off the funding spigots, cash-deprived startups are withering. These articles show how to stay afloat.
Growthfire LLC's Eapen Chacko, an advisor to private equity firms, discusses how these options are different, and where they can overlap.
The "friends and family round" is often the first step in raising money after self-funding your startup with your savings, yet nobody really tells you how to do it.
Where you live may determine how you live if your business goes bust: whether you keep or lose your home…or even worse, end up both homeless and in debt.
An ineffective or non-existent financial/accounting system in an early-stage enterprise can cause challenges that threaten its survival.
Funding a business in midlife these days can be challenging, and some methods are more fraught than others. Here are five options.
Contrary to what you might think, ventures that are launched during a recession and survive it can gain long-term strength – if they build efficient operations.
Research shows startups how to weigh the benefits and risks of working with a CVC and how they can protect their interests.
Startups need people and money. Their first venture capital partner can shape how future investors and employees perceive them.
It's not only what you say in a crowdfunding pitch, it's also how you say it. Your voice should convey both passion and preparedness.
Fred Wilson's basic framework on how much money entrepreneurs should raise from venture capitalists when pursuing the VC model of entrepreneurship.
Supported by the Richard M Schulze Family Foundation