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StartEngine’s $30M Surge — Own a Piece Before June 26

Private markets are having a moment, thanks to companies like StartEngine.

The leading alternative investing platform is helping everyday investors like you access deals once reserved for VCs and insiders, including exposure to private market titans like OpenAI, Databricks, and Perplexity.¹

How’s it going? In Q1 2025, StartEngine pulled off $30M in revenue, its biggest quarter ever (based on unaudited financials).²

But StartEngine isn’t just a middleman. The company earns 20% carried interest on select pre-IPO offerings, unlocking value for shareholders when these deals succeed.³

How can you tap into this diversification play? By investing in StartEngine.

StartEngine has crowdfunded $85M+ to date, and you can join 45K+ shareholders before the company’s current round closes on June 26.

Reg A+ via StartEngine Crowdfunding, Inc. No BD/intermediary involved. Investment is speculative, illiquid & high risk. See OC and Risks on page.

Power Laws and Why Market Size Is Critical

The startup ecosystem is a harsh landscape. Most ventures fail for countless reasons—product-market fit never materializes, competitors outpace execution, or go-to-market strategies falter. For VCs, the stakes are even higher due to the power law of venture returns.

In venture capital, a handful of investments generate the overwhelming majority of returns. According to Correlation Ventures’ study of over 21,000 VC deals, nearly 90% of investments fail to yield significant returns. For VCs, it’s not just about “good” companies—it’s about the outliers. A fund to deliver strong returns (e.g., 3x the fund size) typically needs at least one investment that exits for 50x or more.

This is why markets matter.

The math is simple:

• If a VC fund invests $1M at a $10M valuation, they might own 10%.

• Dilution over rounds could reduce ownership to ~5%.

• For a VC to achieve a 50x return on their initial investment, the company needs to exit for $1B or more.

If the market a startup is addressing can’t support a multi-billion-dollar outcome, no amount of execution, product quality, or team strength will bridge that gap.

Beware of Misinterpreting Your Market

One common mistake founders make is framing their “starting market” (or beachhead market) as the total addressable market (TAM). A beachhead market is where you gain initial traction, but it is rarely the market that fuels exponential growth.

Beachhead Market vs. Scaling Market

In the early days of a startup, it’s natural to focus on a specific niche:

• It allows for focus, clear execution, and strong early adoption.

• It builds a foundation for product-market fit.

However, many startups—particularly in the B2B SaaS or consumer tech space—expand into adjacent markets or redefine their value proposition over time.

Case in Point:

Shopify: Began as an e-commerce solution for small businesses but scaled to become the dominant infrastructure powering large-scale online commerce.

When pitching to VCs, founders need to:

1. Clearly define their beachhead market.

2. Paint a picture of their scaling market—the bigger opportunity they can address after gaining traction.

3. Be credible about how they’ll expand from one to the other.

VCs want to know the company's long-term potential, not just the short-term wins.

Markets That Don’t Exist Yet: The Uber and Airbnb Effect

Another challenge founders face is presenting a market opportunity that doesn’t yet exist—or at least doesn’t appear to be substantial based on historical data. Some of the biggest successes in venture capital history were overlooked because VCs failed to see how accessibility and innovation could expand the market exponentially.

Uber: Growing the Taxi Market

Before Uber, the U.S. taxi and limousine market was valued at around $4.5B. For many VCs, this seemed too small to justify a venture-scale return. However, Uber didn’t just compete for existing market share—it unlocked latent demand by making rides affordable, convenient, and accessible.

Outcome: Uber expanded the global ride-hailing market to over $200B and became a multi-billion-dollar company in the process.

Airbnb: Redefining Travel Stays

Airbnb faced similar skepticism. When investors evaluated the market for short-term rentals, it seemed niche compared to the hotel industry. However, Airbnb created a new behavior—allowing homeowners to monetize unused space—expanding the total market opportunity beyond traditional limits.

Outcome: Airbnb tapped into a $100B+ market, becoming one of the largest hospitality companies without owning a single hotel.

Key Takeaway for Founders:

If you’re addressing a market that appears small, demonstrate how your solution can grow the market:

• Will you unlock latent demand (like Uber)?

• Will you create entirely new customer behaviors (like Airbnb)?

• Will you expand access to previously underserved segments?

VCs need to see your vision for expanding the market when barriers—like affordability, friction, or access—are removed.

Framing Your Market Correctly

To capture a VC’s attention, founders must accurately and persuasively frame their market:

1. Define the Total Addressable Market (TAM):

Estimate the maximum potential revenue opportunity if your solution captures 100% of the market.

2. Show the Serviceable Addressable Market (SAM):

Highlight the portion of the market you can realistically address in the short to mid-term.

3. Present the Serviceable Obtainable Market (SOM):

Given current competition, product capabilities, and resources, focus on the piece of the SAM you can actually capture.

Pro Tip: Calculate TAM using a bottom-up analysis (e.g., price x number of potential users), as it is often more credible than a broad, top-down approach based on industry reports.

Why VCs Prioritize Markets Over Products

Markets drive venture-scale outcomes. Marc Andreessen summarized this brilliantly:

“In a terrible market, you can have the best product in the world and an absolutely killer team, and it doesn’t matter.”

Why? Because if the market isn’t big enough—or can’t be expanded—there’s no room for the kind of outsized returns that VC funds rely on.

When VCs analyze a startup, they’re not just looking at your current traction or product. They’re asking:

Is the market big enough to support a multi-billion-dollar outcome?

Can this startup expand or redefine the market to create new opportunities?

If the answer is “no,” even the best team and product won’t be enough to justify an investment.

Final Thoughts: Make Your Market Matter

To attract VC investment, founders need to:

1. Articulate the long-term potential of their market.

2. Show how they can scale beyond their beachhead market.

3. Provide a clear vision for how their solution expands or redefines the market, especially if the market appears small today.

A great team and an excellent product are table stakes, but if the market isn’t compelling, VCs won’t bite.

Because in venture capital, market matters most.

Learn More

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