Ready for investment
getty
As investors navigate a landscape shaped by economic uncertainty, rising scrutiny, and tough competition for standout startups, decoding what ‘investment-readiness’ truly means has become as critical as the funding itself for founders hoping to raise capital.
The changing definition of investment-readiness
In truth, investment readiness has also evolved since the frenzied years of 2021 and 2022, with the market becoming more selective and fewer themes attracting investment. While effective pitching remains crucial to a successful outcome, the bar for investment has risen in terms of investor expectations, creating a more competitive and challenging environment for startup founders.
Founders often overestimate the power of their story and personal conviction, particularly the idea that investors primarily invest based on an intangible ‘feel’ for the team. While energy, integrity, speed, and ambition matter, they rarely compensate for weak underlying evidence.
“What’s commonly missing is robust proof that the chosen business model, product and market combination can scale beyond the earliest stage,” says Damien Routely, COO at Founders Factory. “As companies move out of the initial, fragile phase of customer acquisition, these weaknesses tend to surface quickly.”
After more than 20 years raising funding as a founder, Andreas Adamides, CEO of Helm, a community for scaleup founders in the U.K., now sits on the other side of the table. “I come across over 200 investment applications every year, and one thing I have learned is that investment readiness has very little to do with pitch decks,” he says. “It is about whether a founder is truly ready to be trusted with other people’s money. One of my favorite investors taught me early on that ‘people invest in people’.”
The core traits of investment-ready founders
Adamides identifies four essential traits:
- Clarity – founders must explain the problem they are solving in one or two sentences. The focus is on immediate pain points, not the long-term vision.
- Evidence – even imperfect proof moves conversations forward.
- Business logic – founders should understand how money flows through the business. Capital does not fix broken economics. It only scales them.
- Capital strategy – founders must know why they are raising, how much they need, and what milestones the round will unlock.
He says, “Investment readiness comes down to trust. If I were to trust this founder with my own money, the pitch usually takes care of itself.”
All about the team
What was a seller’s market has shifted into a buyers’ market in recent years, and so for the U.K. market, being investment-ready can mean having a solution that is more marketable, mainstream and able to meet the criteria of having a large market, few competitors, and a good team.
According to Anthony Lyall, director of startup investment at Digital Catapult, which helps businesses and startups turn advanced digital technologies into real-world innovation and growth, the latter is crucial to early-stage investment readiness.
He says: “Many investors want to see traction as a sign of progress, but in reality, this is related to the team assessment and trying to quantify execution risk. When it comes to velocity, investors typically want to see relentless execution and making quick progress, given the advantages speed of execution can bring. This also relates back to team and whether members have founded successful startups previously.”
A steep learning curve
Last year, Digital Catapult announced a £550,000 investment into Camera Intelligence, an AI company behind Caira, the world’s first AI-native professional camera that bridges the gap between smartphone convenience and traditional camera performance.
CEO and cofounder Vishal Kumar says the road to investment readiness was a steep learning curve. “To become investment-ready, Camera Intelligence had to prove repeatable revenue and demonstrate real market demand, not just technological potential,” he says. “Building a strong community was key, while growing an online following from 10,000 to 100,000 helped prove a genuine ‘market pull.’”
The team also refined its business model to combine hardware sales with software subscription elements, and here, support from Digital Catapult was crucial.
“Specifically, the convertible note funding via Innovate UK allowed us to scale our manufacturing capabilities and hire the specialist engineers needed to execute this shift in business model,” adds Kumar. “That support bridged the gap between shipping a version one hardware product and having a more scalable business model for our version two product, Caira.”
Different funding paths, different readiness
Startups have multiple funding paths, i.e., VCs, angels, or crowdfunding; however, investment readiness looks different for each. Investa, the U.K.’s first zero-commission options trading app, has taken a non-traditional route to raising £3.5 million. Instead of VCs, the company looked towards crowdfunding and adding value-add strategic angels.
As cofounder and CEO Alec Beasley explains, angel investing demands careful preparation: pitch decks, financial models, and anticipating tough questions, but decisions are often swift, relying on a call and occasional follow-ups rather than a full data room. These investors, seasoned leaders from top banks and hedge funds, make fast yet well-informed choices.
By contrast, crowdfunding, he says, requires far more upfront work: detailed campaign pages, supporting assets, rigorous evidence for every claim, multiple revisions, approvals, and coordinated press and social activity, before the pitching phase even begins. “Just because you’re ready for angel doesn’t make you ready for crowdfunding, and vice versa, and being prepared for both might not make you VC-ready,” he says.
A speedy decision
One major advantage of investment readiness is speed. Lucius Cary, founder of Oxford Technology, says: “We have often met a founder in the morning, agreed to invest by midday, and completed the deal shortly after. This ability to move quickly is hugely beneficial to founders. Spending six months in discussion with investors who delay decisions or funding can be deeply damaging to a young company.
“Because we make small initial investments, we can act decisively. Once invested, we become actively involved, meeting regularly and helping to bring in additional investors or provide further funding where appropriate.”
Red flags that investors watch
Founders need to be aware of the operational red flags that immediately make investors hesitate. According to Damien Routely, these include messy ownership of decisions and no reliable view of cash or delivery cadence, which indicate a weak and unclear leadership structure; the inability to properly articulate what the business actually is, and a refusal to listen and assimilate feedback.
“Your investors may be the people with the money, but they are also there to be the mentor, cheerleader and strategic advisor,” he says. “No point taking the money if a founder won’t take the advice that comes with it.”
The bottom line
Investment-readiness is not just a checklist; it’s about honesty, clarity, and operational maturity. Founders who understand these dynamics and prepare accordingly can navigate fundraising more effectively.
“Most founders want to believe that their business is different, that they will beat the odds, and that fundraising will be a breeze,” adds Routely. “We have to be optimists to go into private capital fundraising in the first place. But by tackling the investment-readiness process with an informed perspective and assessing if you’re truly ready to run the fundraising gauntlet, you’ll succeed more quickly and more easily than you otherwise would have.”

