
Too many founders treat fundraising as validation. It isn’t.
Capital is a tool—useful only when applied to a clear problem. Raising money without clarity amplifies inefficiency.
Before fundraising, founders should be able to answer:
- What exactly will this capital unlock?
- Why can’t this be achieved with current resources?
- What changes post-fundraise?
In India, bootstrapping is not a weakness. It is often a proof point. Many strong businesses delay external capital until they have predictable revenue or operational leverage.
As early-stage investors, we prefer founders who respect capital—not chase it.
Raising money won’t fix:
- Poor product-market fit
- Weak execution
- Founder indecision
But in the right hands, at the right time, capital can accelerate outcomes dramatically.
Fundraise with intent, not anxiety.
