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5 Steps to Finding Your Starting Valuation

Tim Berry Tim Berry

4 min. read

Updated December 3, 2024

Last night we were talking about getting angel investment and valuation, which is one of, if not the, most important points in the discussion. Valuation is essentially price.

Say you want to bring in $150,000 from an angel investor. The immediate question from the investor will be something like: “at what valuation?” Sometimes that’s called “pre-money valuation,” because the instant the deal happens the valuation will change into post-money valuation, which is always higher–because your company just got some new cash.

Your answer sets your deal equivalent of an asking price. If you say $500,000, then you’re offering the investor 30 percent of your company for $150,000. If you say $300,000, you’re offering 50 percent. If you say $1 million, then you’re only offering 15 percent.

Which leads to the question:

How do I find my starting business valuation?

And that’s a good question, and very hard to answer. Sure, you want some compromise between what you want to give as a percent of ownership in your company and what investors would want to buy. Investors will simply say no if it’s not an attractive offer. But that’s still very vague.

  • In the case of an existing business with some history, you do have some formulas you can use. For a great site on that business interpretation of valuation I suggest bizequity.com, the Zillow.com equivalent for small business.
  • When we're talking about startups, however, you don't have history and you can't really apply formulas based on sales, revenue or even intellectual property (although that could be more relevant).

So here’s my concrete suggestion:

1. Calculate starting costs

That’s two lists, the expenses you have to incur and the assets you have to have at the starting point–except cash. Leave that blank for a bit. Add those all–except for cash assets–to the starting costs, to get an amount, a number in dollars.

2. Calculate cash flow

Start with the lean period at the beginning, before your sales cover your costs. Make a good guess at how much money you need to cover the deficit spending to get you to an operational, month-by-month break-even level of cash.

3. Find the break-even point

That shows you what you’ll need to get to cash-flow break-even. In the last two months, the cash flow is positive, so the negative balance starts shrinking. With that estimate as a best guess, you go back into your startup costs calculation and add in the cash required.

4. Set the investment amount

Having done that, you now know what you need from investors. Set that as the amount of investment you’re seeking. Then–and here it gets hard, to be sure–you need to decide how much of your company you’re going to offer to an investor in exchange for that amount.

5. Consult with a professional

Get some help here if you can. Ask somebody with experience in startups, or dealing with angel investors, or both. Ask an attorney you can trust, who should also be somebody with experience. The thing is, how much of your company you offer to investors is about a compromise between what you’d like–none, free money–and what will entice the investors to write checks.

At this point a lot depends on your overall business offering, the cards your company brings to the table. Investors want as high a return as possible, with as little risk, but in relation to return. How experienced is your team? How defensible is your product? How rich is the market? All these factors determine what kind of a deal will be acceptable to investors.

Experiment with what you offer

Let’s say, in this case, you’re new at startups, you have very little track record, and you want to attract an active angel investor as a partner. So maybe you set your initial valuation at $750K, meaning you’re offering to give away 2/3 of your ownership to get the money you need. You’re being realistic about what will attract an investor. You’d better really, really like that investor, because he or she will essentially own your company. But this is a hypothetical case and, without a lot of experience and defensibility, that may be the best you can do.

Or maybe you’ve got better cards to play: You’ve got a team with startup experience and a defensible new product, with some intellectual property, and it looks like an attractive market. That makes you able to set a stronger valuation, and maybe–we hope–still make it an attractive offer to investors. So maybe you say you’re valuing it at $1.5 million. You’re offering investors one-third of your company for $500K.

So there’s a quick and (I hope) simple summary of how you set the initial (pre-money) valuation when you want to attract investment.

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Tim Berry

Tim Berry

Tim Berry is the founder of Palo Alto Software , a co-founder of Borland International, and a recognized expert in business planning. Tim is the originator of Lean Business Planning. He has an MBA from Stanford and degrees with honors from the University of Oregon and the University of Notre Dame. Today, Tim dedicates most of his time to blogging, teaching and evangelizing for business planning. His full biography is available on his blog.