Valuing a startup can feel like plotting a course in the dark, as you try to reconcile significant uncertainty and risk with a clear-headed financial assessment. By understanding the purpose, drivers and methodology behind startup valuation, founders and investors can get much more value out of the process, and produce a result that encourages constructive fundraising negotiations and ensures fairer, more rational outcomes.
The essence of valuing a startup goes beyond mere numbers; it is about weaving a compelling and coherent narrative that encapsulates a startup’s vision, strategy, and potential for growth. This narrative serves not only as a beacon for potential investors but also as a roadmap for founders, guiding them towards achieving their ambitions with clarity and precision.
In context, we suggest a structured approach to tackling valuation for founders and investors – balancing the quantitative with the qualitative to offer a holistic view of a startup’s value. It can be broken down into four main steps, described below:
Understanding the Purpose of Valuation
- Your Pitch, in Numbers: Recognize that valuation figures are not just numbers but narratives that encapsulate a startup’s vision, strategy, and potential. The aim is to communicate your ambition and potential in a form that is coherent with all of your other story elements. For example, what you say about roadmap for business growth and market expansion in your pitch should be clearly reflected in your financials to demonstrate to investors that the numbers are thorough, well considered, and informative.
- Illustrating Potential: A valuation helps potential investors to understand the potential risk to reward ratio of your business, which is crucial to understanding whether you represent an attractive opportunity. For example, corporate investors or private equity firms can be interested in a more mature company with slower growth, if it corresponds to less risk, compared to venture capital or angel investors who are generally looking for younger startups with the potential to become billion dollar companies.
We help founders, investors and advisors to produce clear, transparent valuation reports which lays out all of the drivers of a startup’s valuation. We also offer workshops to accelerators and startup bootcamps which dive into the role that valuation plays in a coherent fundraising story. See a recorded example here.
Step-by-Step Approach to Valuation
Step 1: Verifiable Characteristics
- Start with the Basics: Focus on qualitative traits, especially in the early stages. Assess the team’s expertise, market traction, product uniqueness, and competitive positioning.
- Use Comparative Methods: Apply methods like the Scorecard and Checklist to benchmark your startup against peers or industry averages across various criteria.
- Solid Benchmarks: Make sure you are benchmarking against a reasonable comparison for valuation. At the earliest stages, this is often influenced more by regional trends than by industry.
We’ve streamlined the Scorecard and Checklist methods by sourcing all of the input via a 37-question questionnaire, pulling valuation benchmarks for average and maximum valuations from transactions listed on Crunchbase, and calibrating the method with our historical data.
Step 2: Financial Projections
- Outline Growth and Profitability: Your projections should detail how you intend to grow into a market, your path to profitability, future funding rounds, and ultimately the potential for an exit.
- Connecting with Strategy: While focusing on financials, don’t lose sight of both the underlying business strategy and the intangibles that underpin your projections. It is crucial that your projections are coherent with your story, your go-to-market, and your long term strategy.
- Top-Down Check: A simple Google search (or ChatGPT?) can go a long way to finding examples of revenue growth and profitability from other companies, to make sure your projections aren’t too outlandish. We have articles covering industry averages, as well as some of the fastest growing startups.
- Setting the Right Tone: Be realistic yet optimistic. Ensure your projections are grounded but also reflect the ambition of your venture. Investors want to see what happens when things go right, not a hedged vision with compromises.
We ask for a minimum of three years of financial projections in order to calculate a valuation. You can go further than that if you wish, though it’s a compromise of showing risk vs adding additional uncertainty. We have a huge amount of guidance and advice on our Financial Projections Template page.
Step 3: Market Context
- Similar Transactions: Look for similar companies which have raised capital recently, which can help guide your valuation and provide market context. This helps position your valuation in the current market conditions and investor expectations.
- Public vs Private Multiples: While private transactions are more directly relevant as a comparison, it’s also much harder to find enough data for meaningful application. Public companies are obviously a more dependable source, and offer a big-picture perspective on industry growth and risk factors.
Through the Valuation Delta™ Analysis module, you can find some recent similar rounds via Crunchbase to give you perspective on similar transactions. We use a public company industry average by default, for our EBITDA multiples, though you can also build a list of specific public comparables via our Advanced Multiples module, or research your own private multiples to use.
Step 4: Multiple Perspectives
- Offering a Balanced View: Combining multiple methods ensures a comprehensive valuation, blending non-financial factors (team quality, market potential) with financial projections and return possibilities, to triangulate the startup’s value.
- Adapting to Growth Stages: While qualitative methods useful in early stages when data is scarce, and quantitative methods (such as DCF methods) are more applicable as the company grows and financials stabilize, a weighted combination allows valuation to evolve as the startup matures.
- Meeting Investor Expectations: By mirroring the varied methods investors use, founders can align their valuation with investor perspectives, streamlining negotiations and improving communication during fundraising.
We combine five different valuation methods, each offering a different perspective on value, in a weighted average according to the stage of development. For a deep dive into how that all works, we have a full methodology paper available on our website.
Final Thoughts and Advice
- Engage with the Process: Valuation is not a one-off task but an ongoing process that requires regular updates and adjustments based on new data and market conditions.
- Seek Expert Input: Don’t hesitate to consult with financial advisors, business partners, experienced founders and investors to validate your assumptions and methodologies.
- Use Valuation as a Strategic Tool: Beyond attracting investment, use your valuation as a tool for strategic planning, setting milestones, and measuring progress.
In conclusion, the valuation of a startup is not just the assignment of a monetary figure; it is an attempt to quantify risk and reward, requiring a deep understanding of both the qualitative and quantitative facets that contribute to a startup’s worth. By breaking down the valuation into manageable steps and emphasizing the importance of narrative, potential, and strategic planning, it is much easier to approach an otherwise overwhelming topic. Equidam’s role in providing founders and investors with the tools and knowledge necessary for startup valuation reflects the value of clear, standard frameworks and best practices in this otherwise murky part of the growth journey.
In the end, the goal of valuation is to illuminate the path forward, enabling founders to articulate a compelling vision of the future that resonates with investors, partners, and customers alike. Through this lens, valuation becomes a pivotal tool in the startup’s arsenal, driving strategic decision-making and fostering an environment where ambition and pragmatism converge to create lasting value.