ProcurePro is a fast-emerging construction procurement startup that has powered over $30 billion of construction spend. Alastair Blenkin, Founder and CEO, and his team ran one of the smoothest fundraise processes, culminating in a $6.15m raise, led by Airtree, with participation from some of the top construction tech founders in Australia of the past generation, Leigh Jasper and Paul Perrett, who founded and sold Aconex for $1.6bn in 2018.
We see ~2,500 pitches each year, and across our 10 years of venture, ProcurePro’s fundraising materials stand out as the very best for a Series A SaaS startup. Their compelling pitch deck and a clear and detailed growth model aside, one particular document caught our eye that we’d never seen before: their Business FAQ.
ProcurePro’s Business FAQ complemented their pitch deck rather than replacing it. Pitch deck slides often have too much or too little detail, leaving the reader to navigate through a mountain of information, or with lots of unanswered questions that are considered table stakes–and a Business FAQ is the antidote to these problems.
Here’s how a Business FAQ helps your startup’s fundraising materials stand out (and more importantly, we’ve got a template to get you started).
Slides can be great for distilling the “why” and highlighting business metrics with beautiful “up and to the right” charts. But investors also want to understand the “how”- the thoughtfulness of the business's approach across its different operations.
ProcurePro’s Business FAQ doc was clear and concise, demonstrating how the team were thinking about the key elements of the business, from pricing and contracting to ICP (Ideal Customer Profile) and its approach to Go-To-Market and much more (see templates below). Slides are great at conveying the narrative but often don’t cover these details, nor are they usually shared as part of initial due diligence materials. By sharing their approach to these elements in their Business FAQ, ProcurePro clarified the shape of the business and gave investors a sense of management’s robust thinking.
Written memos force clarity in thinking. The structured format of the Business FAQ document was easily digestible, helped reduce ambiguity and encouraged detail orientation. For transparency, at Airtree, we use the memo format for all of our investment decision-making, borrowing from Amazon’s Six-Page Memo Format. Here’s a little excerpt from an email from Jeff Bezos in 2004 on why memos are much preferred to PowerPoints:
"Well-structured, narrative text is what we're after rather than just text. If someone builds a list of bullet points in Word, that would be just as bad as PowerPoint.
The reason writing a 4 page memo is harder than "writing" a 20 page PowerPoint is because the narrative structure of a good memo forces better thought and better understanding of what's more important than what, and how things are related.
Powerpoint-style presentations somehow give permission to gloss over ideas, flatten out any sense of relative importance, and ignore the interconnectedness of ideas."
In any startup, nuance and context dictate why certain approaches were taken, or trade-offs were made, and this isn’t always immediately obvious when going through a slide deck. ProcurePro addressed these in their Business FAQ, which served to pre-empt questions and helped investors get a glimpse of their strategic acumen.
Pre-empting questions saves investors and founders time from extra calls or email threads. Help the investor you're connected to champion your startup to their colleagues in the investment team when they pitch your case internally.
Two additional benefits:
Alastair Blenkin, Founder & CEO of ProcurePro
Having been through two fundraises now ($2.2m Seed and $6.15m Series A), what’s made a challenging process (somewhat) easier is taking that outlook that:
98% of the work is preparation; ideally, the rest goes smoothly.
Let’s be real; fundraising is a LOT of work. On top of building your business, you’re working on many iterations of your slide deck, perfecting your story, building investor lists, contact details, and CRM setup. Then, when you lock in meetings and get follow-up questions, you need to know how to answer every single one. The last part spurred me to pre-emptively draft our Business FAQ as part of our Series A raise materials.
Here’s why it’s worth putting in the work upfront on your Business FAQ:
Beyond the fundraise, we’re still seeing benefits from the Business FAQ. We’ve started sharing our fundraise materials with senior hires to help them understand and build conviction in our business during the recruitment journey.
Was it worth the effort? Absolutely.
These are generic templates (with a skew towards B2B SaaS startups) for Seed and Series A fundraising. Use them as a guide, not as a mandate. A few tips:
Download the Business FAQ template.
Big thanks to Alastair Blenkin for raising the bar on fundraising docs and sharing this document with us! (If you see him around, please buy him a beer).