Fundraising: Preemption vs Process
Fundraising is an art that requires playing to one's animal spirits whilst maximizing the leverage you have as a founder. Get it right, and you walk away with the best terms, the best partners, and enough capital to fuel the next stage of growth. Get it wrong, and you either over-optimize yourself out of a deal—or take one too early, on less favorable terms.
In the world of fundraising for a startup, there are two primary dynamics- preemption vs process. Do you take an early, preemptive offer from an investor who wants to lock you in before a formal raise, or do you run a structured fundraising process to maximize your options?
Odds are a company will face both dynamics through its lifetime and no single approach is best- let’s break it down.
What Is Preemption?
Preemption happens when an investor moves before you're officially raising, offering to lead your round on the spot. They want to secure an allocation before other VCs get a chance to bid.
It can be flattering. It can be fast. But is it the right move?
Why Investors Love It
- They avoid competition, which means they control the terms
- They secure a deal before momentum (and valuation) drives up the price
- They get to deepen their relationship with you before others even know you’re raising
Why Founders Say Yes
- It eliminates the grind of a fundraising process. No decks, no meeting mania, less stress
- It gives certainty in an uncertain market
- If it’s the right investor, it can be the best long-term move
But there’s always a trade-off...
The Power of Process
A structured fundraising process gives you maximum control over the outcome. Instead of taking the first offer, you create a competitive environment where multiple investors bid for your company.
Why Process Wins
- Competition drives better valuation and terms. More bidders = better pricing
- You get to choose the best investor. The best deal isn’t always about valuation—it’s about finding a partner aligned with your vision
- You retain ball control. Instead of reacting to inbound interest, you control the narrative, set the timeline, and pace of movement
When Process Backfires
- Fundraising takes time, and time is a killer in fast-moving markets
- Investor sentiment can shift. Drag things out too long, and the FOMO that drove early interest can vanish
- If you don’t have a compelling enough story, a drawn-out process can lead to worse outcomes, not better
So, how do you decide?
Factor | Preemption | Process |
---|---|---|
Valuation | Lower (no competition) | Higher (more bidders) |
Speed | Fast (weeks, not months) | Longer, but potentially worth it |
Negotiation Power | Investor has leverage | Founder has leverage |
Certainty | Higher (one committed investor) | Risk of process dragging on |
When to Say Yes to a Preemptive Offer
Preemptive offers aren’t inherently bad. Sometimes, they’re the right move. Here’s when it makes sense:
- If the market is shifting. If capital markets are tightening, taking a strong early offer can be better than running a process that goes nowhere
- If the investor is A+. If the offer is coming from your dream investor—the one you’d want leading your round no matter what—locking them in early might be smart
- If your company is hot. A well-timed preemptive bid can work in your favor if you can use it to negotiate slightly better terms, secure funding, and get back to work
When to Run a Full Process
If you have the leverage to run a process, you probably should.
- If multiple firms are circling. When more than one investor is already interested, you have built-in competition
- If your metrics justify a valuation step-up. If you’re outperforming and know you can push for better terms, let the market decide
- If market conditions are founder-friendly. In hot markets, FOMO drives pricing and deal speed. Investors don’t want to miss the next breakout company