Fun Raising
Kyle's path into VC is unique and worth the listen on its own. He was a cybersecurity consultant who started the Secure Ventures podcast during COVID simply because he wanted a "How I Built This" for cyber CEOs. That podcast became his accidental entry into venture, and it informs a lot of his advice: he has literally interviewed hundreds of founders in the trenches, so his pattern matching is grounded in what works, not just what pitches well. The In-Q-Tel model itself is something most founders have never had explained clearly. Kyle walks through both check types: a standard ~$250K equity check designed to build early relationships, and a larger $1 to $3M check that comes bundled with a paid design partnership and statement of work between the startup and one or more federal agencies. That second structure means In-Q-Tel's diligence is genuinely different from a typical VC, often closing between rounds rather than on a round, and requires building internal champions on the agency side. For any founder whose technology could serve national security, this is a playbook you rarely hear articulated. On the fundraising mechanics, Kyle is refreshingly blunt about things founders get wrong. He pushes back on seed founders who only chase tier-one logos, warns that VCs absolutely do text each other to verify claims about your process, calls out how a six-minute self-intro reads as insecurity, and shares why being cagey about revenue or hiding behind NDAs is an instant red flag. He also offers a sharp framing on FOMO: the real buzz isn't created by pushing hard on any single investor, it's created when three different investors independently mention your company to each other in the same week.
36 episodios
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