Companies raising the same amount of money have different post-money valuations depending on the round name.
Eg. If a seed-stage round raises $15M, that company is likely valued at $58M post-money. Whereas if a Series B company does so, the startup is typically worth $93M.
Why?
1. The companies that are raising Series B have likely raised more capital over multiple rounds than the earlier stages. So the valuation ππ΅πΌππΉπ± be higher accounting for the excess capital already on the books.
2. The later the stage, the higher the traction / underlying business metrics needed to justify the next round (typically).
3. Some round name fraud happening? Founders do sometimes choose to raise a "seed" when they've already raised significant capital in order to stand out relative to their peers..
#startups #Seed #SeriesA #SeriesB #founders
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