This is First Round's effort to provide an in-depth snapshot of what founders across the entire tech ecosystem are thinking and doing, what they're excited about and worried about, and how they're seeing the market. We surveyed venture-backed founders from everywhere — less than 25% from the First Round community — and received over 500 responses, volunteering their experience and opinions.
2. Why a
Survey?
What does it mean to be a startup entrepreneur
in 2015? And how can sharing this experience help
everyone? These are the questions we seek to answer
every week on the First Round Review and through the
many events, online forums and other programs we
run internally.
Now we want to leverage this approach to provide an
even more in-depth snapshot of what founders across
the entire ecosystem are thinking and doing, what
they're excited about and worried about, and how
they're seeing the market — things that could very
well change dramatically over the next several years.
We surveyed venture-backed founders from
everywhere — less than 25% from the First Round
community — and received over 500 responses,
volunteering their experience and opinions.
What follows is what we're calling the 2015 State of
Startups, designed to share meaningful insights into
what it's like to run a startup today.
4. 1Most think it won’t get easier to
raise funding.
We asked the 500+ founders who took our survey whether they think it's going to get
easier or harder to raise capital in the next 12 months. The results were overwhelming.
Of those founders with a point of view: 95% of Series Seed, 97% of Series A, and a
whopping 99% of late-stage founders say it's going to remain the same or get harder.
Given that 80% of these founders also said they raised exactly what they wanted or
more in their last round of funding, it sounds like folks are expecting a rapid shift in the
funding environment.
5. 273% say we're
in a bubble.
While a third of founders said they don't know whether we're in a bubble or not, those
with a point of view tend to think we are. Interestingly, this depends on the type of
company they're running. Enterprise company founders deny the bubble twice as
often as their consumer company peers. Given that twice as many enterprise
founders also think they'll be profitable in the next year, their outlook is more optimistic
on the whole.
6. 3No one has a clue
about the IPO market.
About a third of founders said there would be more IPOs next year, a third said fewer
IPOs, and the last third said they thought things would stay pretty much the same.
There doesn't seem to be a ton of clarity around this topic — even among late-stage
companies, there's still no consensus.
Oddly, we did find that a huge chunk of early-stage founders believe their companies
will go public in the next 3 years, whereas most late-stage founders said it would take
more than 7 years for their companies to IPO. It seems the further you go down the
road as an entrepreneur, the more distant that horizon gets.
7. 4Women-led companies are more
diversity focused.
44% of women-led companies have a 50/50 gender ratio, while only 25% of men-led
companies do. 87% of women-led companies have some initiative in place to increase
diversity, while only 62% of men-led companies do.
8. 5Founders see the power shifting from
entrepreneurs to investors.
We asked founders who they think has held the power in negotiating deals over the
past few years. 63% said entrepreneurs have had the upper hand compared to 37%
who said investors have. When we asked them what will happen in the next few years,
only 46% saying entrepreneurs will have more power and 54% saying investors will
take the lead.
9. 6Hiring the right people and revenue
growth top the list of founder concerns.
Despite many founders saying the
bubble is close to popping and
that it will get harder to raise
capital, their number one concern
remains finding and hiring the
best talent. This is perceived as
more a 'make or break' prospect
than competition and customer
churn too. Also fascinating:
Building the right culture to keep
this talent happy and effective is a
bigger concern than raising
money or losing customers.
10. 7Co-founder relationships
change with age.
Founders over 30 are 40% more likely to be solo founders than their younger peers.
But even when they do have co-founders, their relationships are still different. They
tend to have calmer, more collegial connections with their co-founders. By
comparison, twice as many founders under 30 say their co-founder relationship is
strained. But they also say they're best friends with their co-founder 33% more often
than their older peers.
11. 8Bitcoin is overhyped while autonomous
vehicles are underhyped.
We looked at the ratio of
people who thought certain
technologies were overhyped
to those who thought they
were underhyped. It appears
founders think that almost
everything is overhyped today
— with wearables and Bitcoin
topping the list. The only
underhyped technologies are
mobile and autonomous
vehicles. It’s surprising that
smartphones have been
around for over 8 years, yet
founders still see them as the
most underhyped opportunity.
12. 9Founders fear long-term failure, but not
the short-term mistakes that lead to it.
Founders' strategic concerns
don't mirror their tactical
priorities. Founders were
concerned about growth
stagnation but not focused on
customer churn, and they
worried more about raising
capital than reducing their
burn rate. There seems to be
focus on long-term sources of
failure, rather than the short-
term conditions that could
lead to that failure.
13. 10 Elon Musk is the far-and-away most
admired leader in technology.
We asked founders to write in which current tech leader they admire the most and we
got 611 different names back. Sounds like there wouldn't be consensus, but a full
22% — nearly a quarter of respondents! — said Elon. The next most popular CEO was
Jeff Bezos, with 7.5% of the vote. Mark Zuckerberg got 3.3% and Larry Page 2.6%.
Sheryl Sandberg was the most popular woman submitted with only 0.7% of the vote.
14. Complete
Survey Results
While we selected 10 data points to highlight, the survey actually yielded
many interesting, surprising, non-obvious results. See below for everything
from how often companies rely on bridge loans to what they're
paying for office space.
15. 1. Do you expect it to get harder or easier to raise
venture capital in the next 12 months?
16. 2. How many firms did you pitch when raising your
last round of funding?
17. 3. How long was your entire fundraising process
for your most recent round?
18. 4. If you intend to go public, how long do you
think it will be until your IPO?
56. Thanks
We had some incredible help making this project possible. Many thanks to
Visage for creating all the newsroom graphics. And to Will Aldrich and Nick
Teckman at SurveyMonkey who made sure we did everything right
(including our math). We’d also like to thank Silicon Valley Bank, SV Angel,
TechStarts, DreamIt, Kent Goldman, Paul Arnold and Ligaya Tichy for
making sure the survey found its way into the right hands.