VCs love to say things like âwe are entrepreneur friendly.â Itâs trendy, catchy, and looks good on a blog post. But, as Iâve said in my post Your Words Should Match Your Actions, one can âdamage their reputations by having their words not match up with their actions.â
Now â this post isnât about responding to emails. Nor am I trying to be preachy. Iâm not trying to explain a new behavior. Rather, Iâm making an observation about something Iâve experienced â both as an entrepreneur and investor â since my first angel investment in 1994.
Hereâs the situation, as reported this morning by an experienced CEO of a company we are investors in.
âWeâre raising money. I have a good intro session. Prospective investor wants to meet in person, see a demo. We have a good 2nd meeting. We agree on action items. I go away and follow up.
Radio silence.
Follow up again.
Radio silence still.
The first time it happened I was inclined to think it was the investor and that they just couldnât find the time to send an email response saying, âsorry â no longer interestedâ. Then, it happened again this month.â
Now â initial non-responsiveness â whatever. Lots of people donât respond to emails, intros, or requests for meetings. But after two in-person meetings, to be non-responsive is just plain rude.
How hard would be it be to say âHey â great spending time with you â but this isnât something I want to pursue.â Or maybe âSorry for being slow â Iâve been swamped â I donât have time for doing this right now.â Or â well â anything.
Iâve had this situation come up so many times that Iâm immune to it. I assume that the VC isnât interested. But Iâm amazed at how the reputational damage follows the person around. And then â at some point in the future â that VC is looking for a response for something. Hmmm â¦
Iâve had this happen with LPs. When we went and raised our first fund in 2007, plenty of people wouldnât meet with us. Thatâs fine. Lots said they werenât interested after a first meeting. Totally cool. But some met with us but then were completely non-responsive after the meeting. Ok â whatever. But when those non-responsive LPs call me today asking for something â whether itâs to get together to âget to know me betterâ, or to get a reference on someone else they are looking at, or to learn more about what I think about the market for hardware investments, itâs really hard to get on the phone and spend time with them. I do â because thatâs my nature â but I always remember their non-responsiveness.
I hear â and say â âNo thank youâ all the time. Every day. 50 times a day. Thatâs just part of the role I play in business. But I always try to say âNo thank you.â Itâs just not that hard. Especially when I know someone, or have engaged with them in some way.
Are you the guy the experienced CEO just encountered? How would you feel if your name â and your firmâs name â just went out via email to 60 CEOs attached to this story? Maybe you donât care, but if your message is âwe are entrepreneur-friendly VCsâ you just undermined the reputation of your firm in a major way.
(Brad has been an early stage investor and entrepreneur for over 20 years and is currently a managing director at Foundry Group.)
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