Member-only story

What You Should Know About Bootstrapping Phase

James Church
6 min readJul 21, 2022

--

Bootstrapping is the earliest phase of an entrepreneur’s fundraising journey. In fact, it doesn’t usually involve raising external funds at all, because the bootstrapping phase is typically solely self-funded.

It’s the time when you’ll be testing your idea, proving your concept, and might even be creating a very basic prototype. It’s also the time when you may decide to bring somebody else in as a co-founder, someone who shares your vision and complements your skill set. But you don’t have to do that. If you prefer to go it alone and you’ve fine-tuned your offering into an opportunity no prospective investor will want to miss, having a co-founder isn’t necessary to convince investors.

Having a co-founder to help persuade an investor to give you the benefit of the doubt if your pitch isn’t a hundred percent perfect won’t help either. In our experience, you should only invite a co-founder on board when their talent and enthusiasm match your own and they show strengths that will benefit your business and make you a more formidable team. If not, it’s advisable to keep developing your business alone.

What you need to know about bootstrapping in business

--

--

James Church
James Church

Written by James Church

Author of the best-selling book Investable Entrepreneur and COO of leading pitch agency Robot Mascot: www.robotmascot.co.uk

No responses yet