Raising venture capital at any stage of company growth requires tremendous effort from entrepreneurs. Admittedly, our industry tends to celebrate these financings a bit too much — it’s gasoline for the car and not the destination, after all — but it’s still a difficult, sometimes lengthy process for which founders deserve some recognition. But because of that time-intensiveness and difficulty, entrepreneurs can often feel they’ve been pulled too far away from growing their businesses — i.e., the real work — and wish to completely switch off the fundraise process once the check clears. That drive to focus on helping customers and growing their companies is even more commendable than the ability to raise capital.
However, no matter how badly a founder wants to be done with their investor-facing process, it’s simply not over as soon as the round closes. There are several tactical consequences of successfully raising venture capital that every founder MUST complete which, unfortunately, are often overlooked or pushed off until they create more work and stress for both entrepreneurs and their new investors.
So rather than making a binary switch from Fundraise Mode to Build Mode, a founder who chooses to bring in outside investors needs to pause momentarily and account for two things as soon as a round closes:
- Tying up loose ends from the fundraise
- Laying the groundwork for a good relationship with your new investors.
But because every entrepreneur juggles so much every day and feels that tug back towards building a business (which, again, is a good one to heed), completing these tasks can be easier said than done.
To make things easier and help you stay organized, we created a short, tactical checklist for founders as part of our Growth Guides series of resources.
(As a reminder, you can find all our startup resources here.)
The checklist below is full of critical to-dos you simply can’t overlook, whether you’re setting a schedule for your board meeting, finding the necessary insurance plans, or communicating with your lawyer about your regulatory filings and how they align with your PR strategy.

Note that this list was created specifically with seed-stage startups in mind. While it may be somewhat useful for later-stage companies, seed is our entire focus here at NextView Ventures and, predictably, on The View From Seed.
We hope this helps you stay on-task and efficient!




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