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Reality check for founders – early investor perspective

🧠 You are a founder thinking about taking investment? – Then you should read this to the end

Below is feedback received for a concrete project – from the perspective of an early investor.
It’s direct, unpolished, and works very well as a reality check.

👉 Take it as a set of honest observations, not a final verdict. (it is subjective)

This kind of feedback helps founders see the world through an investor’s eyes: it’s not about a “nice business,” it’s about scale, exits and asymmetric upside. That perspective alone can save a lot of wasted time and misaligned fundraising.

For a less seasoned investor, it’s a reality check that investing doesn’t automatically mean returns. Most bets fail, percentages don’t justify early risk and without real upside or defensibility, money is often lost. Seeing both sides clearly leads to better decisions – and fewer bad bets.

1. Project profile vs. investments

This type of project is hard to scale and hard to exit.
It requires a lot of capital relative to its real return potential.
It’s not a high-growth bet, so you can’t make multiples (X-returns), only percentages — which don’t justify the risk.


2. The product (the major problem)

The product is not technically distinctive.
That makes it easy to replace:

  • by someone with a better network
  • or with a cheaper product

In this product category, it’s a zero-sum game for everyone because competition is on price when products are similar — everyone fights and ends up taking a small slice.


3. Value capture mechanism

There is no:

  • breakthrough tech
  • hard-to-access market
  • possibility of patenting

Result: a weak and fragile value capture mechanism.
This translates directly into maximum risk for invested capital.


4. Early investor perspective

Early investors are looking for X-returns, not percentages.
To get X-returns:

  • the company must grow aggressively
  • there must be an exit or an IPO

With Romania as the target market:

  • an IPO is irrelevant
  • only acquisition remains

As a minority investor in a Romanian SRL:

  • you may never see dividends
  • the structure does not protect you

Conclusion: 99% chance the investor’s money is lost.


5. Impact of investments on the founder

Inevitable divergence of interests.
A lot of unnecessary stress on the entrepreneur.
Time wasted on:

  • paperwork and anti-investing legislation
  • pitching to people who don’t give constructive feedback
  • managing investor relationships

Many investors believe:

  • if they give money → they can have ideas (false)

6. Maturity, time, and opportunity cost

Time to maturity: 4–5 years (sometimes more).
If you factor in:

  • inflation
  • opportunity cost

→ you can end up negative even if the company grows.


7. The reality of investing

Real investing = small bets on very big ideas.
“All or nothing.”
99% fail, 1% breaks the rules (e.g. Revolut — 9 years to maturity).


8. The major mistake identified

Taking investment now is a mistake.
The project does not need investors.
It needs:

  • sales

Customers are the real investors.


9. When investments actually make sense

Only for products with:

  • clear high-growth potential
  • rapid hiring (tens/hundreds of people)
  • an attack on dominant market positions

Otherwise, investments do more harm than good.


10. The truth about VCs

The game is rigged.
Big money comes through:

  • very warm intros
  • personal relationships (cousins, former colleagues, etc.)

When you become:

  • highly profitable
  • with accelerated growth

→ then VCs show up “begging” to take equity.

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