I
Investor
Verified@ivangdavila
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SKILL.md
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Investment Assistance Rules
Evaluation Framework
- Team first, market second, product third — great teams pivot, weak teams fail with great ideas
- Total addressable market must justify the outcome — small markets cap returns regardless of execution
- Why now? — timing explains why previous attempts failed and this one might work
- Defensibility: what stops fast followers? Network effects, switching costs, regulatory moats
Due Diligence
- Verify claims independently — founders are optimists by nature
- Customer references reveal reality — talk to users, not just the deck
- Cap table complexity is a red flag — messy history creates messy futures
- Check founder references from people who worked under them, not just peers
- Technical diligence for tech companies — code quality and architecture matter
Financial Analysis
- Unit economics must work or have clear path — customer acquisition cost vs lifetime value
- Burn rate and runway — how long until they need more money?
- Revenue quality: recurring beats one-time, diverse beats concentrated
- Gross margin determines scalability ceiling
Term Sheets
- Valuation is one term among many — control, liquidation preferences, anti-dilution matter too
- Pro-rata rights protect against dilution — fight to keep them
- Board composition affects governance — observer seats aren't voting seats
- Understand the waterfall — who gets paid in which exit scenarios
Portfolio Strategy
- Power law: one winner returns the fund — size positions accordingly
- Diversification across stages, sectors, and time — concentration risk kills
- Reserve capital for follow-ons — initial check isn't the whole position
- Write-offs are normal — don't let losers absorb disproportionate attention
Red Flags
- Founders who can't explain the business simply
- Metrics that don't reconcile with each other
- High burn with unclear use of funds
- Reluctance to share customer contacts or financial details
- Excessive focus on competition rather than customers
Value-Add
- Introductions have real value — make them warm and relevant
- Operating experience helps but don't micromanage — you're not the CEO
- Pattern recognition across portfolio — share learnings between companies
- Be available for crises but not for routine decisions
Market Cycles
- Good companies get funded in all markets — great companies get funded cheaply in down markets
- Valuation discipline matters more when prices are high
- Dry powder in overheated markets positions for corrections
- Public market comparables affect private valuations with lag
Exit Considerations
- M&A is more common than IPO — build relationships with corporate development
- Secondary sales provide liquidity before exit — know the rules
- Timing pressure differs for funds vs angels — fund lifecycle affects decisions
- Alignment with founders on exit expectations early
Overview
Evaluate opportunities, conduct due diligence, and manage portfolios using core investment principles. It emphasizes team quality, total addressable market, timing, defensibility, and disciplined capital allocation.
How This Skill Works
A structured approach: assess team, market, and product; verify claims with customer references and independent checks; analyze unit economics, burn, and revenue quality; evaluate term sheets and governance; and build a diversified portfolio with reserves while recognizing write-offs as normal.
When to Use It
- Evaluating seed or early-stage opportunities where team quality, TAM, and defensibility matter most.
- Conducting due diligence on founders, customer references, cap table, and technical architecture for tech companies.
- Assessing unit economics, burn rate, runway, and revenue quality before a financing round.
- Structuring portfolio strategy with diversification across stages and sectors, plus reserve capital for follow-ons.
- Verifying alignment on exit expectations and governance terms during term sheet negotiations.
Quick Start
- Step 1: Align on team quality, TAM, and Why Now before digging into numbers.
- Step 2: Verify claims with customer references, independent checks, and cap table review.
- Step 3: Analyze unit economics, burn runway, term sheets, and plan portfolio allocation with reserves.
Best Practices
- Start with team-first evaluation, market size (TAM), and Why Now to justify the opportunity.
- Verify claims independently and talk to customers, not just the pitch deck.
- Scrutinize cap table and governance terms; pro-rata rights and observer seats matter.
- Evaluate unit economics, gross margin, and runway to ensure scalable returns.
- Maintain portfolio discipline: diversify, reserve capital for follow-ons, and share learnings across investments.
Example Use Cases
- A SaaS company with recurring revenue, strong gross margins, clear CAC vs LTV, and a defendable TAM passes due diligence.
- A founder who cannot clearly explain the business triggers deeper review and potential red flags.
- A cap table with complexity prompts governance questions and potential control risks.
- A portfolio-wide pattern recognition leads to better investment choices and lower risk.
- An exit-focused plan identifies M&A opportunities and uses secondary sales for liquidity.
Frequently Asked Questions
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