VC money doesn’t make you rich.
It makes your investors rich.
It gives you a seat at the table... but it’s not your table.
Let’s break it down:
1/ You lose control.
You’ll be running someone else’s vision.
And once you’re on that treadmill, there’s no getting off.
They’ll push you to scale at all costs, even when you know it’s too soon.
You’ll make decisions based on their timelines, not yours.
2/ It’s a distraction.
Fundraising takes time.
A lot of time.
Pitching, negotiating, waiting.
That’s time you could’ve spent getting customers, iterating, or improving your product.
You’re playing the fundraising game, instead of the business game.
3/ It’s not a partnership.
They want their 10x return.
You want to build something valuable.
But the VCs will push you to sell before you’re ready, to take shortcuts, and to compromise on what really matters: building something real.
So what should you do instead?
Bootstrap.
Build with your own cash.
Grow slowly.
Focus on cash flow.
Give your customers something they want today, not in 3 years.
You’ll be lean, scrappy, and move faster than any VC-backed competitor.
And here’s the secret: You’ll keep 100% of the equity.
You get rich by building, not by raising.
You get rich by owning the damn thing.
You’ll have more control, less pressure, and more freedom to make your own choices.
The VC money is the trap.
Don’t fall for it.
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👉 Upskill your employees in SAP, Workday, Cloud, AI, DevOps, Cloud | Edtech Expert | Top 10 SAP influencer | CEO & Founder
5 months ago
J.Y Delmotte owning 100% of your company is freedom. No one is telling you when to scale or how to run your business.
You make decisions based on what’s best for your product, not on a timeline that suits someone else’s return on investment. Keep the reins in your hands.
scales startups from 10 to 500+ without chaos | No BS HR | Building human workplaces with People first Operations | Fractional HR | 18 Years in Startups
5 months ago
It also costs your team because you spend more time looking after investors than you spend creating a strong team.