TechCrunch News 2024年11月18日
Precursor’s Charles Hudson believes founders should test their investors
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Precursor Ventures的管理合伙人Charles Hudson在AfroTech大会上分享了投资决策的经验,他强调了产品市场匹配和市场吸引力之外,建立投资人与创业者之间信任的重要性。Hudson认为,创业者可以通过测试投资人对小问题的反应来判断其是否值得信赖,并指出诚实和情绪智力是建立信任的关键要素。他鼓励投资人给予创业者真诚的反馈,并强调信任是需要双方共同努力建立的,而不是理所当然的。此外,Hudson还强调了创业者情绪智力的重要性,因为它能够帮助创业者应对创业过程中遇到的各种挑战和压力。

🤔 **产品市场匹配和市场吸引力是投资的基本标准:** 创业公司需要证明其产品能够满足市场需求,并获得一定的市场份额,才能吸引投资者的关注。

🤝 **创业者应测试投资人对小问题的反应:** 通过观察投资人面对小问题时的态度和反应,创业者可以判断投资人是否能够在创业过程中提供有效的支持和帮助,并判断其是否值得信赖。

🗣️ **诚实和坦诚是建立信任的关键:** Hudson认为,投资人和创业者之间坦诚沟通,才能建立起牢固的信任关系,从而促进合作和发展。

🧠 **情绪智力是创业者必备的能力:** 创业过程充满了挑战和压力,情绪智力可以帮助创业者更好地管理情绪,应对压力,并与团队成员、合作伙伴和投资者建立良好的关系。

💪 **创业者需要证明自己能够克服困难:** Hudson建议投资者关注创业者过往的经历,例如爱好、旅行、创业经历等,以此判断其是否具备应对创业挑战的能力和毅力。

Charles Hudson, managing partner of Precursor Ventures, told an audience at AfroTech the basics of knowing when to invest: A company should have product-market fit and some form of traction. 

But the next thing he said garnered some surprised looks from the audience: Founders should test investors with a small issue to see how they react to problems. ”I’m on a board with someone who tends to blow up every time the founder brings them a problem,” he said. “As you can imagine, the founder has basically stopped bringing problems to them.” 

And that, in itself, can be a problem — both in investing and in life. When someone feels they can’t trust you with little problems, odds are they will not trust you with big problems, either. Hudson said these little tests can help weed out the constructive problem solvers, and help to establish trust early on. “There are people you would tell your deepest, darkest, secrets, and there are people that you would bring ordinary problems to.” 

Hudson has a lot of experience in establishing trust with founders. His firm has invested in more than 400 companies, including the social networking apps why?! and Diem, as well as the diaper company Kudos. The firm has $250 million in assets under management, sitting on around $89 million in dry powder, according to PitchBook. 

He shared with the high-level executives in the audience what he looks for in a pitch deck (a balance of storytelling and data); a good team (to see whether the founder has good hiring judgment; and even founders’ previous startup experience. But what really stuck out was how he spoke about the importance of vulnerability and the skills needed to build trust, including how to have a conversation, and how to convey emotional intelligence. 

It’s quite rare to hear an investor be so open about the importance of being so open. “Not every investor that passes or gives you feedback is going to say the truth,” he said. The moderator then asked if investors should tell the truth more, to which Hudson responded that “this whole ecosystem would work better if people just told the truth.” 

He and his team try to give a founder as much feedback as they want to hear. But they often aim to go deeper than that. 

“I think it’s a beautiful thing when an investor and a founder can get to a place where they trust each other to be honest and open,” he said. “Vulnerability can go both ways.” 

He said he’s met a lot of investors who think they deserve a founder’s trust. But that’s something that should be earned, he said. “You wouldn’t approach any other relationship in your life, expecting a stranger to tell you their deepest darkest secrets and trust you with them.” 

He said he always tells founders that his goal is to get to a place where they can trust each other. That way, hard feedback can be taken as if it is coming from a place of care. 

For similar reasons, Hudson said he puts a lot of weight on emotional intelligence, “because I do think it underpins a lot of the challenges you’ll have as a startup,” he continued. 

Founders need to learn how to hire, evaluate, and influence people, a company, partners, and investors. There is a relationship between emotional intelligence and emotional well-being, he said. “One of the things I’m always testing for is, ‘do I think this person is going to be able to manage the emotional ups and downs of startup life,’” he said. This is why he always looks for other challenging tasks a founder has taken on as a clue to see how they handle stress. 

“That could be a hobby, that could be travel, that could be a startup, that could be a nonprofit,” he said. “I just want to see some evidence that a person has worked on something difficult and stuck with it. Because startups are a big bundle of challenges.” 

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投资 创业 信任 情绪智力 沟通
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