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Series B Lessons Learned

The primary lesson I learned in both of our rounds of funding is that the best investor is an enthusiastic investor, and this was especially true in our second round.

When True Ventures invested in Puppet Labs last year, we had been talking to other firms but not actively pitching, and their enthusiasm for working with us, along with their great reputation and references, encouraged us to just work with them and get back to business. We could have tried to find other investors or held out for a larger valuation, but the amount was the right amount, the partners were great, and we were able to get back to work without ever having to formally pitch to a bunch of other investors (or even True – we never did build a deck for them).

When we decided that raising a second round of funding was a good idea, we spent a couple of months asking potential investors what they would like to see from us and what they thought of the story we were telling. I’ve been told that this kind of meeting is a bad idea – that every meeting with a VC should be a pitch meeting – but that just seems silly. If you think someone’s good enough to be an investor, they’re good enough to give you advice and feedback, and, if you don’t trust them enough to give you real feedback, then you probably don’t want them investing in your company.

We got varying levels of interest in that first round of conversations, and we kept talking to more people until we had a story that seemed like the right story and pool of great investors who seemed interested. This is when we started formally pitching, and the difference between an interested investor and an enthusiastic investor became very clear. Everyone we talked to said we should talk again soon, but Matt Murphy of Kleiner called again the next week, had us pitching in front of his team a week later, and had a term sheet in front of us the next day. That’s enthusiastic. It’s also almost exactly the same story as we had with True.

The key here is that the enthusiasm came before any terms or valuation for the deal were discussed. This enthusiasm has worked out great in our relationship with True, and it gives me great hope in our relationship with Kleiner.

I expect we could have gotten a higher valuation in both rounds if we were willing to pitch to more firms, but I don’t think we’d have gotten investors who believed as much in what we’re doing.

That leads us to the second lesson – it’s about the business, not about the money. Sometimes you have to raise money, but that raising keeps you from working on your business. If you decide to spend another quarter out looking for a better deal, that’s a quarter where you’re paying more attention to investor meetings and presentations than you are to running your business.

This is especially important for me. I basically hate the money-raising process – I want to write software, close deals, hire people, talk to customers, or present to hundreds of potential users, not present to just tens of people who won’t use the software. Telling your story again and again, continuously refining in the face of hopefully difficult questions, is incredibly informative, but it doesn’t get your release out the door and it doesn’t convince a potential customer that you’ve got the right solution to their problems. I’m not sure I ever would have even raised an A round if Puneet and True Ventures hadn’t been so enthusiastic about working with us.

In the intervening year, I’ve had to become much more of a CEO than a developer, but I still don’t like raising money. I like the challenge, and we were able to effectively refine our story, but I was thrilled to get back to building software and working with customers.

So my second lesson is to keep focus on the fact that money raising is about the business, not the process. We’re lucky enough and planned well enough that we had plenty of money left in the bank when we started to raise our second round, but we ran it pretty close with our first round – our sales pipeline was entirely empty, and, given that our sales cycle is a couple of months long and this had been my only source of income for 4 years, we let ourselves get into a dangerous position because we got too focused on closing the deal.

Find an enthusiastic partner, close the round, and get back to work. If you can’t find the enthusiasm, ask yourself if you’re really willing to sacrifice the next 3-6 months of work to get a deal closed.

I guess I have a couple of other small notes about our round. First, our initial term sheet mattered a lot. True set a strong precedent by providing great terms in the first round. Also, we were able to get one term sheet hack into our deal that enabled us to sell a small portion of our shares without having to ask every investor first. This is unlikely to come up any time soon, but I have a friend who was at his startup for 13 years through $55m in venture raised in something like 11 rounds of funding, and his life got very complicated when he wanted to sell a bit before the company went public. This small carve-out can make a huge difference, and it’s very little skin of your investor’s back.

Now get back to your business!

This post was written by Luke Kanies, CEO & Co-Founder of Puppet Labs, a True Ventures Portfolio Company.

PuppetLabs Raises $5M Series B Round from True Ventures, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, and Radar Partners

Huge congrats to Luke, Teyo, and the rest of the PuppetLabs team for raising their recent round of funding!  We are excited to welcome Kleiner Perkins to the deal along with the addition of Kevin Compton from Radar Partners to the Board.  Both Kevin and KPCB bring a wealth of experience in building great companies.

The company has made tremendous progress since True first led the A round last year.  Puppet is used by thousands of organizations across several major verticals while becoming a critical component of the next generation data center. With Puppet, automation and reusability are finally become a reality inside data centers where system administration has traditionally been a roadblock.

We look forward to partnering with PuppetLabs on the next phase of their journey!

The official press release is listed here.

Why we invested in Reductive Labs

We are thrilled to announce our investment in Reductive Labs and its flagship product Puppet, the popular open source framework for automating IT management. At True, we are strong believers in the vision behind cloud computing as we have witnessed first hand how many of our startups have been able to seamlessly scale at tremendously low costs. We are truly witnessing the power of Moore’s law being applied not just to products, but now to the entire business formation process.

Today’s emphasis on the cloud in enterprises both large and small has led to massive growth in the use of machines that are both physical and virtual. As a result, the complexity behind managing these machines has grown exponentially and enhanced the need for technologies like Puppet. While IT management software is not as sexy as the latest consumer Internet startup (which we also love), it is the nuts and bolts that help make cloud computing a reality, and it is an incredibly exciting market.

Beyond the market opportunity, the strength of Puppet really lies in the rich community of contributors and users that continue to grow at a rapid rate. Users of the Puppet framework span several verticals across the globe and include Google, Digg, Twitter, New York Stock Exchange, Barclays Capital, Oracle, Sun, Red Hat, Harvard Law School, Stanford University (and several True portfolio companies!). As we’ve learned through our experiences with companies like Automattic, building a community does NOT take money but rather focus, talent, patience and a commitment to continually delivering outstanding product.

We are also extremely excited about the opportunity to work with Founders Luke Kanies, Andrew Shafer, and Teyo Tyree, who have known or worked together for more than a decade. Luke and Andrew actually first met as college roommates and both Luke and Teyo worked as system admins for several years. In fact, Luke decided to create Puppet almost 4 years ago when no existing solution met his needs. You could therefore say Puppet is a solution written for system admins by a system admin – very cool indeed!

At True, our first, second and third priorities are the people behind any idea, and Luke, Andrew and Teyo represent exactly the type of visionary team that we strive so hard to work with.

Congratulations Luke, Andrew, and Teyo and welcome to the True family! See you all tomorrow at Structure09.

Best,
Puneet & the True Team

Reductive Labs Raises $2M

We are excited to announce True’s investment in Reductive Labs Series A round!

Reductive Labs is changing IT systems management with its flagship product Puppet, which is an open source IT automation project that enables businesses to scale by automating infrastructure. Customers using the Puppet framework include Google, Digg, Twitter, New York Stock Exchange, Barclays Capital, Oracle, Sun, Red Hat, Harvard Law, and Stanford.

Congratulations, Luke, Andrew, Teyo & team!