One of the most potent carrots dangled by accelerators, designed to lure in hopeful founders, is the implicit (and often explicit) promise of “follow-on funding.”
The narrative is compelling: graduate from our program, and a seamless path to your next multi-million dollar round awaits. Venture capitalists will be knocking down your door, eager to invest in a company that has proven its mettle within our esteemed walls.
But let’s expose this for the fantasy it largely is.
For the vast majority of accelerator graduates, securing follow-on funding is anything but guaranteed.
While some top-tier programs (especially YCombinator) do have a better track record, the overall statistics are sobering.
Many startups emerge from the three-month sprint with a polished pitch deck and some superficial metrics, but lacking the deep, sustainable traction and robust business fundamentals that truly attract serious investors.
The “warm introduction” from an accelerator often means little more than getting your email opened. It certainly doesn’t bypass the rigorous due diligence process that every credible investor conducts.
Furthermore, the very act of seeking follow-on funding becomes an all-consuming distraction.
Instead of focusing on customers, revenue, and product development, founders are pushed back into the fundraising hamster wheel, spending critical months pitching, networking, and refining their narrative for investors, rather than building their business.
The promise of “future rounds” can be a powerful motivator, but it’s often a mirage, a powerful tool to draw you into the initial equity exchange, rather than a genuine outcome for the majority.
Don’t fall for the illusion that completing a program automatically unlocks the next stage of capital.
Real funding follows real results, not just a graduation certificate from a 3-month accelerator.
Photo Credit: Nattanan Kanchanaprat from Pixabay
This segment is a part in the series : The Accelerator Conundrum