12 ‘flexible VCs’ who operate where equity meets revenue share

Founders seeking non-dilutive funding: start here

Previously, we introduced the concept of flexible VC: structures that allow founders to access immediate risk capital while preserving exit and ownership optionality. We list here all the active flexible VCs we have identified, broken into these categories:

  • Revenue-based
  • Compensation-based
  • Blended-return streams

Revenue-based flexible VCs

These investors are paid back primarily based on a percentage of revenues.

Capacity Capital

Chattanooga, TN-based Capacity Capital was launched in 2020 with a primary focus on the southeastern U.S. Jonathan Bragdon, its CEO, describes Capacity as “a team of founders-turned-funders making non-dilutive, founder-aligned investments of $50,000-$300,000 in post-startup, post-revenue businesses planning to 2x revenues in 12-24 months. Investments are typically in exchange for a capped, single-digit revenue share and a right to equity under certain circumstances.

If the company sells or raises enough capital, the investment converts into an agreed-upon percentage of equity. If the company grows without raising additional equity funding, founders redeem most of the equity right, based on a pre-agreed return amount. With a portfolio that includes food, tech and services, the fund is industry-agnostic and focused on the overlooked and underrepresented with high-margin business models.”

Jonathan sometimes refers to their investments as “micro-mezzanine” because “mezz is typically structured as a contractual periodic payment, with some equity-like upside, but subordinate to other debt … so most lenders look at it like equity. But, it is typically shorter term with fewer control mechanisms than equity (i.e., not VC). I wanted [a term for] something similar (between debt and equity) but on an extremely small scale.”

In addition to a fund, the overall Capacity organization provides direct mentorship, consulting and connects founders to a broad network of talent, diverse forms of capital and existing resources focused on the post-startup stage of growth. The founders, LPs and venture partners have a long history in local startup ecosystems in the Southeast including LaunchTN, The Company Lab, CO.STARTERS and several other regional funds and resources.

Greater Colorado Venture Fund

Greater Colorado Venture Fund (GCVF) is a $17 million seed fund that invests in high-growth startups in rural Colorado using equity and flexible VC structuring.

A typical GCVF flexible VC investment is $100,000-$250,000 for up to 10% ownership, of which 9% is redeemable, with a sub-10% revenue share and 12-month-plus holiday period. GCVF specializes in providing critical support to founders based in small communities, while connecting them to an unfair network well-beyond their small-town headquarters.

GCVF is pioneering the future of venture capital and high-growth startups for all small communities. With Colorado as an ideal pilot community, the GCVF team (which includes Jamie Finney, a co-author of this article) has helped grow multiple staple initiatives in the rural Colorado startup ecosystem, including West Slope Startup Week, Telluride Venture Accelerator, Startup Colorado, Energize Colorado Gap Fund and the Greater Colorado Pitch Series.

Recognizing the need for creative investment structures in their Colorado market, they co-founded the Alternative Capital Summit, creating the first community of flexible VCs and alternative startup investors.

They share their learnings on flexible VC and pioneering rural startup ecosystems on the GCVF blog.

Indie.vc

Indie.vc is one of the early and most well-known flexible VCs, based out of Salt Lake City, Utah. They have open-sourced their investment structure, now on version 3.0, which functions similar to a convertible note and revenue share.

In 2015, they invested $1 million (out of OATV Fund III) in eight companies as a pilot. According to Indie.VC collateral, all eight are still in business, with two follow-on investments, three “breakout” companies and one returned 5x initial investment. By comparison, traditional VC has a bankruptcy rate of 30%-40%. Their 2016 fund was the first and largest fund so far using this structure, with $25 million AUM.

Bryce Roberts, Indie.vc founder, has stated, “On average, the companies we’ve backed have increased revenues over 100% in the first 12 months of the program and around 300% after 24 months post-investment. Most of the companies we invest in are not (yet) profitable [at point of entry].”

Of Indie.vc’s portfolio, 60% of investments are not in NY, CA or MA. 50% are women-led companies and 20% are Black and/or Latinx founders.

Starting in January 2021, Indie.vc is standardizing its terms. For companies doing $1,000-$10,000 in monthly revenue, they offer a $250,000 check, and $500,000 for companies doing $10,000-$100,000 per month, both for a 10%-12% equity ownership option.

Founders can repurchase up to 90% of this ownership via monthly redemption payments starting 12-36 months after investment, determined based on gross revenues and lasting up to a 3x repayment. In addition, beginning in 2021, in the event their ownership converts into common equity in a later equity venture capital round, Indie.vc will assign their voting rights to founders.

Indie.vc has also created the INTRO product that automatically matches companies with a vetted network of nondilutive funding options based on the financial data provided. The INTRO tool is available to nonportfolio companies as well. Other comparable marketplaces for identifying nondilutive investors include: BitX, Capx, Capital Source Group, Cerebro Capital, Corl Marketplace, Fundera, GUD Capital, LenCred, Lendio, NerdWallet Small Business Loans, QuickBooks Capital and SmartBizLoans.

Reformation Partners

Reformation Partners is a new VC fund made up of former First Mark Capital colleagues, based in New York City. According to a recent interview with founding partner Andrew Oved, they invest in mostly SaaS and consumer companies doing $1 million-$5 million in annualized revenues with high margins and cash efficiency. Reformation will be a $20 million fund with checks of $500,000-$1 illion for 10% of initial company ownership.

They aim to provide an alternative to forced “venture-sized” exits, instead aligning around M&A between $50 million and $500 million or profitability and liquidity through a partially redeemable equity stake. More on Reformation and their insights can be found on their Medium blog.

UP Fund

UP Fund is a rolling venture fund launched in Q4 2020, part of global SaaS accelerator Upekkha, based in Bangalore and Delaware.

“We are the first fund that combines an Angel List rolling fund structure for making LP access widely available, while using the variable VC model of giving founders the option to buy back their equity at a later stage, ensuring founder optionality,” said Prasanna Krishnamoorthy, managing partner of Upekkha Value SaaS Accelerator. “We plan to raise $2.5 million per year and we plan to invest about $100,000 in 20 startups per year. We have a total of four partners and six other team members.”

“Upekkha works with SaaS founders of Indian origin that use the India advantage for creating capital efficient growth. We created this as we witnessed hundreds of SaaS founders from India being shoved into the unicorn path as default, and over 95% being robbed of meaningful outcomes as they are pushed to build vanity SaaS businesses.

The accelerator, along with the fund, gives a network mindset and resources to founders to build a capital efficient business that grows and creates wealth for founders and investors.

This way of building the business we call ‘value SaaS’ and the funding itself as optionality funding. In three years since founding the accelerator, we have worked with 61 startups. One-third of them are growing over 50% year over year. Four from our first year cohort of 10 crossed $1 million ARR with less than 15% equity dilution while growing 2x; all are operationally profitable. We have built a network of over 150 Indian SaaS founders that plays a crucial part in the growth of founder mindset and startups. We are a tightknit tribe and measure our founder experiences through NPS; it averages above +85.”

Versatile Venture Capital

Versatile Venture Capital is a new venture capital fund specializing in companies targeting early profitability, based in New York City. Versatile believes that flexible VC is just one of multiple tools that should be in an investor’s toolkit. The firm uses whichever structure best fits a given investment opportunity, including flexible VC. Versatile VC typically invests using a structure similar to a convertible note. Founders have the discretion to buy out almost all of Versatile VC’s stake by paying an agreed-upon percentage of revenues. Details here.

Versatile has built out a suite of no-cost portfolio acceleration services to help its companies succeed. They’re also launching a selective, complimentary community for entrepreneurs called “Founders’ Next Move.” Versatile is particularly interested in fintech and sales tech companies and its team has a history of investing in diverse and underrepresented founders. Versatile is an aggressive user of technology internally to manage the firm and make better investments.

David Teten, Versatile’s founder and a co-author of this article, was previously a partner with HOF Capital and ff Venture Capital, two early-stage New York VC firms. He is also a serial fintech entrepreneur with two exits; founder of HBS Alumni Angels of NY, the largest angel group on the East Coast; and founder of PEVCTech.com, an online community for investors in private companies who use technology to do their jobs more effectively. He writes periodically at teten.com.

Tech Tour/Results Junkies

Tech Tour/Results Junkies is led by the married duo of Dana Duncan and Paul Singh. They have spent multiple summers putting on the “Tech Tour,” traveling around North America investing and speaking in tier II and III cities (excluding 2020). As of summer 2017, about one-third of their investments were with the Indie.vc V2 structure.

Compensation-based flexible VCs

These investors are paid back using a formula driven by the founding team’s income.

Chisos

Based in Santa Monica, CA, founder Will Stringer reports that Chisos “invests across the U.S. in idea-stage and side-hustle founders using a Convertible Income Share Agreement, or CISA. Check sizes range from $15,000-$50,000. A Chisos investment typically augments or replaces friends and family capital, but can also be utilized as early-stage growth capital for certain types of companies. The income-share agreement is a personal obligation of the founder, with income-share payments continuing regardless of business outcome.

This characteristic enables investment at the riskiest stage of business formation and growth. Chisos made a number of investments during a Spring 2020 pilot program and is currently raising a fund under Reg D 506(c) to make 400-500 investments over the next 2-3 years.

Standard terms on a $30,000 investment include a 10% founder income share with a 2x repayment cap and ~3% equity. As income share payments are made, founders will claw back up to two-thirds of the Chisos equity. Founders repay Chisos with a percentage of personal income ONLY when that income is above $40,000. The repayment cap can also be reduced through accelerated payback or a successful equity fundraise. An early Chisos portfolio company, Re-Nuble, Inc. recently raised $1.1 million to transform food waste into hydroponic nutrients for soil-less farms. More details on the mechanics of the CISA can be found here and here.

Blended-return flexible VCs

These companies are paid back based on a formula driven by multiple factors, typically revenues, profit and/or compensation.

Collab Capital

According to managing partner Justin Dawkins, Atlanta’s Collab Capital is “setting out to disrupt the wealth gap by investing in Black founders building innovative, high-growth companies.” With partners Barry Givens and Jewel Burks Solomon, the team plans to “fill a gap in access to capital and access to networks for Black entrepreneurs.”

“We identify great innovative companies with solid business models and help them determine the right growth path for their businesses. In our model, we initially invest $350,000-$500,000, which gives enough runway to understand if the business should pursue a venture scale path or if they should focus on the profitability path. If we determine the business has venture scale potential, we will help them raise subsequent funding and we will convert into that subsequent round at a predetermined equity target.

If we determine the business can grow profitability without raising subsequent rounds, we will employ our profit-sharing agreement. Our profit-share agreement allows founders to redeem their equity (every multiple returned redeems one percentage point of equity up to 10x the investment amount). Providing this type of flexibility allows us to increase the number and types of successful outcomes in the fund and allows us to return capital back to our LPs sooner.”

Earnest Capital

Earnest Capital invests in bootstrapped companies to help them unlock more growth. All investments are made using the Shared Earnings Agreement (SEAL) — a custom salary/profit-share structure, aligned with how most bootstrapped founders are compensated. The fund specializes in “micro-SAAS,” often investing to help the founder go from part-time to full-time on their business or make a key hire.

In addition to its unique funding structure, Earnest employs a custom tool called “Trailhead” to connect and communicate with companies over time, as opposed to a traditional VC pitch. The fund’s network of mentors are all invested LPs, ensuring they have “skin in the game.” After a small pilot Fund I, Fund II is a rolling fund, allowing Earnest to grow LP capital to scale its investment activity over time.

TinySeed

According to co-founder Rob Walling, based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, “TinySeed is the first startup accelerator designed for founders who don’t want to raise traditional venture capital. We are designed for SaaS founders who want to maintain control of their companies and who would traditionally bootstrap since venture is not a path they want to travel.

“We are a year-long, remote accelerator for early-stage SaaS companies. One of our unique aspects is that we fund LLCs and C-Corps in all 50 states, not solely Delaware C-corps. And while our terms allow companies to raise future rounds, that is not the goal for many. Our founders can run their companies profitably and pull out dividends, they can raise additional rounds or they can decide to exit. TinySeed money doesn’t come with the typical ‘strings attached’ you might see with venture capital.

“In addition to a year of remote guidance, mentorship and community via our batch model, we invest $120,000-$240,000 depending on the number of founders. Our mentor list includes folks like Jason Fried, DHH, Hiten Shah, Laura Roeder and others. As of late 2020, we’ve deployed approximately $4 million across 23 investments.

“We determine a salary cap with the founder based on a software engineer in the closest major city. As the business generates profit, the founder can choose to increase his/her salary up to the cap. Any additional funds they take out of the business are considered dividends. This allows the founder to reinvest profit in the company as long as they like. In this scenario, TinySeed does not take revenue or profit from your company, only dividends that you decide to pull out at timing that works for the business. Dividends are split pro-rata based on percentage ownership.” Details on TinySeed’s investment terms here.

Other flexible VCs

Purpose Ventures

Achim Hensen, co-founder of Purpose Ventures, an $18 million investment company based in Bremen, Germany, said, “Purpose Ventures only invests in companies that are committed to the principles of ‘steward-ownership,’ a legal framework designed to harness the entrepreneurial power of for-profit enterprise while preserving a company’s essential purpose. Steward-owned companies do not exist in a conventional way; instead, they are set up to stay independent and mission-driven for the long run.

“Purpose Ventures’ deal structures are bespoke to each company. We have invested using demand dividends (such as here), redeemable shares (such as here/here), revenue-share investing and conventional debt/mezzanine structures,” said Hensen. “Investors and founders are fairly compensated with capped returns/dividends, without investors taking voting power. The terms are designed to fit the individual needs of the company and preserve its mission and independence. Purpose Ventures’s goal is to enable founders to align their values and mission with their ownership and financing structures and be responsive to the specific needs of the start-up.

“In addition, Purpose provides consulting (such as here) and education to help others take advantage of their creative structuring and steward-ownership expertise. We are committed to open-sourcing our learnings and materials.

Typical terms include close partnership with nonvoting shares/board seats; capped return multiples (2-5x depending on risk profile) with a structured exit for the investors; long-term investment horizon (10+ years in some cases) and a holiday period lasting a couple of years at the beginning before repayments.

“By ‘structured exit,’ we mean that investors can achieve liquidity without necessitating the sale of a company,” Hensen said. “Liquidity is achieved through a predefined mechanism (e.g., redemption, revenue share, etc.) and typically at a negotiated multiple.

Purpose Ventures’ investment profile:

  • Ticket sizes: $50,000-$1 million.
  • Region: global with focus on Europe and U.S.
  • Industries: sector-agnostic.
  • Stage: stage-agnostic with focus on early-stage and Series A.
  • Prerequisite: commitment to steward-ownership and clear path or strategy toward profitability.

If you are deploying capital using this strategy, please contact us.