
Fundraising is a common first step in bringing an entrepreneurial vision into reality. Fundamentally, fundraising includes getting funding to cover startup costs, product development, operations, and initial market entry. Some entrepreneur usually start with friends and family, and reach out to personal networks for seed capital that comes flexible terms. As the startup scales and grows, and has a stream of revenue, entrepreneurs would then usually attempt their chances at getting funding from an angel investors and venture fund to scale and further grow their business. Some investors mentorship and business acumen beyond just funding. Some founders skip fundraising through friends and family, or crowdfunding and go directly to attempting to raise capital from investors. Investor influence, providing resources and credibility, is critical for success (Siddik, A. et al., 2024). For some founders, a small business is not in their vision and from the start they have a plan to exit through an initial public offering (IPO) and so gaining investor capital is essential from the beginning. Institutional venture capital follows once a startup shows product-market fit and a clear path to rapid growth.
Venture Capital, Business economics, Business, Fundraising, Small Business/trends, Startup Growth
Venture Capital, Business economics, Business, Fundraising, Small Business/trends, Startup Growth
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