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> This sounds good, but we’ve seen As happen for Saas companies with ARR between $200k and $9m with plenty of companies failing all along that range.

Is that intended to say failing or falling?




"Failing" was intentional. Both words would be true, but in this case I'm pointing out that the metrics do not guarantee the round.


How did a $9m ARR company fail to receive a Series A? Disagreement over terms?


Plenty of potential reasons. Stagnant growth, really poor executive team that got lucky, serving a dying industry, tapped out growth potential, poor unit economics, etc.


Financial or legal liabilities. Of the few rounds I got to see anything like transparency, I saw one get hung up because they had allowed an uncertified investor in during the seed. I think that guy might have been the only investor to get their money back because they had to buy him out and the money ran out before they closed the round.

(Some VCs are perfectly happy to let you run low on funds to get better terms).


It's just hard to get a business to $9m with too many of those in place, and I'm assuming that the unit economics of any SaaS are really good unless it's one of those products that is built on human labor like voice transcription.


ARR is revenue. The company could be losing money.




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