Let’s talk about a hard truth. Investors do not fund ideas, they fund execution. You may have a brilliant concept, a revolutionary product, or a game-changing vision, but if you do not present your business in a way that aligns with investor expectations, securing funding will remain elusive. I say this from 2 points,

(1) From the point of someone who chased elusive funding and eventually caught hold of it .

(2) From someone who has taken out time to further study Venture finance at one of the best universities in the world and really pull back the curtains to discuss what really goes on.

So what separates funded startups from those that struggle to raise capital?

I can share with you that it all comes down to positioning. Investors do not take blind risks. They make calculated bets on businesses that show clear potential for growth, scalability, and a strong return on investment.

Before You Pitch Investors, Answer These Three Critical Questions.

Is Your Business Model Super Sexy? Investors want to be excited by knowing and understanding exactly how your startup will make money and scale. If your revenue model is fuzzy, hazy and unclear or too dependent on external factors and control, it will be difficult to convince investors to back you. So let me ask you this for starters? Can you explain your revenue model in one sentence? Do you have multiple revenue streams or a predictable, recurring revenue model? Have you identified the lifetime value of a customer (LTV) versus customer acquisition cost (CAC)? If you can not answer this straight away and an investor cannot immediately see how and when they will get a return, your pitch will likely fall flat. So to avoid that keep on reading all the way to the end and take action today.

Do You Have Undeniable Proof of Demand? Investors do not fund ideas. They fund traction. This is where many early-stage founders go wrong. They believe they need funding to build their product first. But investors want to see that your market is already responding before they click on that payment transfer button. Here are your next questions! Do you have early customers or a growing waitlist? Have you secured partnerships or letters of intent (LOIs) from potential buyers? Are your key performance indicators (KPIs) trending in the right direction? Even if you are pre-revenue, showing traction in any form makes you significantly more fundable.

Is Your Pitch Triggering Commitment? A great pitch does not just inform, it persuades. It must frame the investment as an opportunity too good to ignore. Investors hear hundreds of pitches. The ones that stand out do three things well: They tell a compelling founder story – Why you? Why now? What is your unique insight into the market? They demonstrate urgency – If an investor waits six months, will they have already missed out? They make saying yes easy – A well-structured deal with clear terms is easier to commit to. How Should Your Business Idea Be Structured and Presented?

Having a great idea is not enough. The way you structure and present your business determines how investors perceive its viability and growth potential. Here is what you need to focus on:

A Clear and Scalable Revenue Model: Investors need to see how you will make money, sustain growth, and eventually become profitable.

Problem-Solution Fit: Does your product solve a painful and urgent problem for a large enough market? The bigger and clearer the pain point, the stronger your case.

Market Size and Opportunity: Investors are looking for businesses that can scale. Can you demonstrate a large total addressable market (TAM) and a clear path to expansion?

Go-To-Market Strategy: A great product is useless without a solid strategy to acquire users and customers. Do you have a repeatable way to gain traction?

Founding Team Strength: Investors bet on people as much as the product. Does your team have the expertise, network, and resilience to execute?

When you structure your business in this way and present it with clarity, confidence, and data-backed proof, you make it easy for investors to say yes. What This Means for You If you are struggling to raise funding, the problem is rarely the idea. It is almost always how the business is structured, presented, and pitched. Most founders try to raise capital before they have these five key pieces in place. Does this sound or look like you?

The good news is if it, don’t worry its our secret! What has been your biggest challenge in raising capital? Think on this and please by all means send me a response, I want to hear from you, sam@thehowtoclub.com . or visit https://www.thehowtoclub.com/

Lastly ,If you want to be part of a wider group with insights on how to position your startup for investors, send me a message. I would be happy to guide you in the right direction.

Regards Sam