What are the startup funding stages? How they work and the goals for each stage

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  1. Introduction
  2. What are the startup funding stages?
    1. Pre-seed stage
    2. Seed stage

From a global perspective, startups receive a massive amount of funding. While venture funding – the largest source of capital for startups – declined in 2023, the second quarter of 2023 still saw around US$60.5 billion in global funding. To understand how startups use this funding, you'll need to familiarise yourself with the life cycle of a startup. From the earliest days of ideation and conception to the late-stage period of exponential growth and high revenues, each stage of a startup's journey is funded in different amounts and from different sources.

While there are similarities between startups at the same stage – even when they are in different industries – startups have different timelines for moving from stage to stage. One company might go from the pre-seed stage to initial public offering (IPO) in five years, while another company might have five years between its Series A and Series B funding rounds. And neither of these startups is more likely than the other to succeed in the long term. Moving a startup deftly through the stages of growth requires a real-time analysis of the factors that govern your specific business, without relying too much on what other businesses have done.

Here is an overview of the startup funding stages and the concerns and goals to bear in mind for each stage.

What's in this article?

  • What are the startup funding stages?
    • Pre-seed stage
    • Seed stage
    • Early stage (Series A and B)
    • Late stage (Series C)
    • Exit stage

What are the startup funding stages?

The different stages of a startup's life cycle can be broken down in various ways. Some might recognise just three broad stages: the early stage, growth stage and late stage. And while you could place any startup into one of those categories with accuracy, it's more common to define the stages of a startup using a more detailed framework of five stages. This framework is oriented around the progressive funding stages that many startups go through.

Timelines can vary: one startup might spend years in one stage while another spends just a few months there, and others might skip some stages entirely. But startups within each stage share some important traits, which makes this framework useful for gaining a quick, high-level understanding of any given startup. Here are the stages and what startups focus on during each one, as well as how they're funded:

Pre-seed stage

What happens: the pre-seed stage is the first stage of startup growth. In this stage, founders are defining the fundamental reasons why they're forming their new business. They need to articulate what the business is, describe the problems they intend to solve, define their market differentiation and create a plan to execute their vision.

Some of the important questions to consider in the pre-seed stage include:

  • What is the problem we're hoping to solve?
  • What is the solution we're offering?
  • What market opportunities exist around this problem?
  • Who are the audiences experiencing this problem?
  • Who else is currently offering a solution?
  • How is our new solution different or better than what's currently available?
  • What does a minimum viable product (MVP) of this solution look like?
  • What resources are needed to bring the MVP to market?

How pre-seed stage startups are funded: personal financing, family, friends, accelerators, crowdfunding, pre-seed funds and angel investors

Stages

Typical Funding Amount

Team Size

Primary Goals

Common Investors

Pre-seed

$10K–$500K

1–5

Define idea, build MVP, validate problem/solution fit

Founders, friends, family, angel investors, accelerators

Seed

$500K–$2M+

5–15

Prove product-market fit, refine business model

Seed funds, angel investors, early-stage VCs

Series A

$2M–$15M+

10–30

Scale GTM strategy, hire key roles, generate revenue

Venture capital firms, corporate VCs

Series B

$10M–$50M+

30–100+

Expand into new markets, grow operations, optimize unit economics

Growth-stage VCs, late-stage investors, strategic partners

Series C

$30M–$100M+

100–500+

Scale aggressively, prepare for exit, possible acquisitions

Late-stage VCs, private equity, corporate investors, hedge funds

Exit

Varies (hundreds of millions to billions)

Varies

Monetize investment, reach liquidity, enter public markets

Public markets (IPO), acquiring companies, investment banks

Seed stage

What happens: the seed stage is all about validating the vision that the founders laid out in the pre-seed stage. This is where the team starts to test the core business idea, learn at each step of the way and refine the approach. Most companies only earn a small amount of revenue during this stage, but the goal is to grow slowly while exploring the business direction.

For most startups, the seed stage focuses on the concept of product-market fit. Product-market fit means satisfying a need for a specific audience. It answers the question, "Does what we're offering fit perfectly into its unique spot in the market?"

Product-market fit is a complex concept to apply to a specific business, which is partly why it's the focus of seed-stage activity. Startups typically use seed funding to prove that product-market fit exists – and then they use these proof points to raise additional funding during a Series A round in the early stage. But before startups can assess whether they are on the right track to achieving product-market fit, they have to define what that would look like and decide which performance metrics would accurately measure whether they've accomplished it. By the end of the seed stage, startups should have a strong idea of what to do, how to do it and how to measure success.

How seed-stage startups are funded: Seed funds, syndicates, angel investors, venture capitalists (VCs)

The content in this article is for general information and education purposes only and should not be construed as legal or tax advice. Stripe does not warrant or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, adequacy, or currency of the information in the article. You should seek the advice of a competent lawyer or accountant licensed to practise in your jurisdiction for advice on your particular situation.

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