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Triangle Startup Venture Funding, Valuations & Deal Terms
Description
In this special solo episode of Triangle Tweener Talks, Scot goes beyond the two-part Tweener Times report to walk founders through what the data actually means in practice. This episode exists for one reason: to give Triangle founders clearer goalposts, better context, and fewer surprises when they sit down to raise capital.
Tune in to hear:
- How founders can self-service fundraising expectations using real Triangle data
- The most common caps, discounts, and raise sizes at each stage
- Why $1M ARR is a major valuation inflection point
- SAFE vs convertible note vs priced round, when each actually makes sense
- What investors look for at Seed vs Series A (and why many founders get stuck)
- How founder-market fit and AI trends skew early valuations
- Why Triangle companies often raise less, and why that’s a strength
Where to read each part:
Part 1: https://www.tweenertimes.com/p/part-iii-triangle-startup-venture
Part 2: https://www.tweenertimes.com/p/part-iiii-the-triangles-first-and
Where to Find Scot Wingo:
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thescotwingo/
- Tweener Times: https://www.tweenertimes.com/
- X: https://x.com/scotwingo
In this episode:
00:00 – 03:00 Why this data exists & the founder questions it answers
03:00 – 07:00 How the Tweener Fund dataset was built (and anonymized)
07:00 – 15:00 The origin of the Tweener List and index strategy
15:00 – 22:00 How funding stages are defined by company progress
22:00 – 35:00 SAFEs, convertible notes, priced rounds — explained
35:00 – 45:00 How deal structures change from Pre-Seed to Series A
45:00 – 59:00 Valuations, raises, and dilution by stage
59:00 – 1:07:00 What founders should actually do with this data
If this is your first time really digging into venture fundraising, you’ll hear a few terms that investors use casually but aren’t always obvious. Here’s a quick guide to the most common ones we reference in this episode:
- Pre-Seed: The earliest stage of venture funding. Often used to fund initial product development, early customer discovery, or getting to a first version of product-market fit. Rounds are typically smaller and more founder-bet driven.
- Seed: The stage where a company has early traction and is working to prove repeatability. Investors expect evidence that customers want the product, not just that it can be built.
- Series A: A growth-oriented round where the question shifts from “Does this work?” to “Can this scale?” Metrics, revenue quality, and go-to-market execution matter much more here.
- Valuation: The implied value of your company during a fundraise. In early stages, this is often based more on progress, team, and market than on traditional financial metrics.
- Pre-Money vs. Post-Money
- Pre-money: Your company’s valuation before new capital is invested
- Post-money: Your valuation after the new money comes in
This distinction matters a lot for understanding dilution.
- Dilution: The percentage of ownership founders give up when they raise capital. More money or a higher valuation doesn’t always mean less dilution — structure