Can Your Seed Stage Investors Go the Distance?

Madrona is approaching our 25th Anniversary as a firm committed to seed stage investing in Seattle and the Pacific Northwest. Over the past 25 years we have made 155 seed stage investments (on average 6 per year), from Amazon in 1995 to OctoML in late 2019. In the early days, Madrona was a “super angel” group, and today we continue our passion for seed stage entrepreneurs and their companies. We are active in the ecosystem as long term supporters of seed groups including Techstars, Madrona Venture Labs, other labs, Create33, UW’s Startup Hall and many more.

By definition, seed stage investments are “Day One” opportunities. We believe that rolling up our sleeves with great entrepreneurs from the earliest days creates a material advantage for company success. We also believe having an investor partner with the capital, commitment, and expertise for the long run (often 10 years or more) provides the greatest opportunity for entrepreneurs to realize their highest aspirations. Madrona was recognized last year for exceptional outcomes for our seed investments by The Information. Eighteen Madrona-backed companies have gone public and over 60 have been acquired for positive outcomes over the past couple decades and we were the seed or Series A lead investor for most of those companies. We also keep learning from the over 75 current Madrona portfolio companies across all stages of growth. Based on our experiences, here are some thoughts entrepreneurs may find helpful about partnering with investors from Day One for the long run.

Finding Long-Term Partners Upfront

We often get asked by entrepreneurs what partnering from seed stage onward with Madrona looks like. We encourage entrepreneurs to talk with the founders and CEOs who have experienced this partnership, including companies that were big successes and those that did not achieve their goals. In addition, founders should ask any potential seed stage investors their perspectives on how they will add value near term and help build the company over the full journey.

Seed stage investors are generally looking for alignment with an exceptional team that is passionate about a customer problem and has a vision for novel solutions. Investors want to work with founders who have an insatiable curiosity and humility around what they know and the questions they are trying to answer. And, these founders have the market understanding and technological capabilities to build a compelling solution while attracting other team members to help build the company. Finally, the founding team and the seed investors need to share general core beliefs about the timing and nature of big market forces that can enable the company to succeed.

As a founder, you hope to find investors with big picture views similar to your own and relevant experiences that will directly help you succeed. It is especially useful to get beyond “pitch mode” and have a conversation about themes and real-world learnings. A good example here is how we have partnered with entrepreneurs around one of our major technology investment themes –the rise of “Intelligent Applications”. For the past decade we have been investing in seed and first venture rounds of companies that fit this broad theme. Horizontally focused companies we seeded in this area include Turi, Algorithmia, Xnor.ai and OctoML. Vertically focused companies have included Amperity, Highspot, Tesorio, Suplari and most recently Clari. The intelligent applications investment theme is just one of our key areas of focus and experience. The main point here, though, is for founders to seek strong alignment even at the seed stage with investors who understand their market and how a company in an emerging sector can be built over time.

Going the Distance with Capital and Value-add

Companies built to last take a long time to build! Entrepreneurs take the greatest risk because they are highly concentrated on one big bet with their company. They deserve investing partners who think and act like owners, show respect and appreciation, and have the resources to support the company over a long period of time. Founders can get the best of both worlds from a venture capital firm that has proven seed stage investing and multi-stage company building capabilities. They should expect investors that will combine their capital, time, experience, and value-add to help a company materially increase the probability of long-term success. Every company has its own journey. But experience has taught us some common lessons and patterns around navigating the entrepreneur’s journey.

  • EVERY company has one or more “near death” experiences. There are just too many things you can’t directly control (macro forces, market timing, regulations) and too many times you make sub-optimal choices (hiring, product priorities, go-to-market strategies) to always get it right. Having both macro awareness and self-awareness helps the most successful entrepreneurs navigate and grow from their “near death” situations. Isilon Systems had hardware reliability issues that forced a product “stop ship” in the Spring of 2003. Smartsheet had to rewrite its front-end in 2009. Amazon may have run out of cash in 2000 if they had not raised a substantial amount of debt before the market crashed. Having investors who have been through these experiences can be grounding and also provide valuable guidance in challenging times .
  • Establishing your own style of a “Learning Loop” culture and process can significantly improve the potential for success. A learning loop culture combines curiosity, triangulation and rapid decision making to help a company learn better and faster than others. It is important to establish this culture early, at seed stage, so that you can absorb and grow from “experiential learning”, quickly dial-in initial product-market fit and create a virtuous cycle of customer and market understanding. This “formula” can help a company achieve early market leadership and establish a foundation for greater success. Your investors will be on this road with you as well so finding curious and thoughtful partners is key to navigating this continuous cycle of learning together.
  • Look around corners and make hard choices at every stage. Circumstances are always changing and scale breaks people, processes and sometimes strategies. For example, finding and starting to scale product-market fit is an exhilarating phase of the company building journey. Having found that initial fit usually means your company will at least have a positive outcome someday. But there are many challenges to scaling and sustaining early market leadership. Initial products often meet a minimum threshold for bleeding edge customers, but the next set of customers expects more. Early employees who are great at running small teams or being individual contributors aren’t necessarily interested in or capable of running larger teams. In addition, established competitors start to mimic your messaging (even if they don’t have a product) and other startups observe your success and “pivot” to your market. At each stage of scaling, you want investors, board members and management teams who you have built a trust-based relationship over years of working together. And, you want them to keep looking around the corner to anticipate emerging risks and respectfully raise valid concerns. This type of trust-based relationship takes time and shared experience to establish.
  • Financial transactions, especially M&A and IPOs, are usually the most intense and potentially misaligned periods in a company’s journey. During these times, trust and transparency are put to the test and are crucial to navigating these waters successfully. Most companies go through several rounds of financings. And, whether it is a Series A, Series F or an IPO financing round, they are always intense. In fact, the process of selling a company in one form or another (acquisition, recapitalization, merger) is the only time that is more anxiety-inducing than a financing round. This is especially understandable for founders and key executives who may be experiencing that process for the first time and are “all in” on the company.

Further complicating the intensity is the potential for misalignment between management and investors, and sometimes between the major investors. Investors can have different time horizons for when they hope to sell. Other times investors have different levels of capital to invest in follow-in rounds leading to different views on financing strategy. Investors also made their investments at different valuations, terms and ownership levels. Often investors can have varying views on strategy, capital requirements and operating plans. And, that is just differences you may encounter amongst your investors! Founders and senior executives might have differing views on all the above topics as well. And, they can feel misaligned with one or more of their major investors/board members as a result.

For example, a broadly held view amongst Silicon Valley investors the past few years was to delay going public for as long as possible. Comparatively “cheap” capital for later-stage private companies was available and the temptation to raise private capital was strong. In some situations where a business didn’t yet have sufficient scale or predictability, staying private was advisable. But, in many cases the combination of cheaper capital and less business scrutiny led private companies to insufficiently focus on unit economics and value creation. Regardless of the specifics for any one company, the IPO timing debate highlights how financing decisions can lead to misalignment between and across management team members and investors. Having investors who have been long term trusted partners accustomed to transparent communication with the entrepreneur gives the company a clear advantage in getting through transactional times.

Some Questions to Consider

While it is hard at the seed stage to be thinking around the corner to future financing rounds, potential IPOs or eventual M&A scenarios, it is critical to understand the experience and perspective of your seed investors. Are they committed to building a trust-based relationship with you over the long-term? Do they roll up their sleeves and continually add value at each stage of the company? Have they shown good judgement and sought alignment during financings and sales of prior companies? And, do they appear energized and culturally aligned with you and your team to build a great company over the long run? If you are answering yes to these questions, you and your investors are likely on an aligned and positive path to success. If you are just starting to evaluate outside capital and investors, I hope these thoughts and questions help you and your company achieve your goals!

Welcoming Polly to the Madrona Family

Today, we are thrilled to announce our Series A investment in Polly, a company we believe is going to significantly impact how enterprises get work done and measure success. We led this $7 million round and were joined with the existing seed investors Amplify Partners, Fathom Capital, and the Slack Fund.

We have known Samir and Bilal, the co-founders of Polly, since the 2016 Seattle TechStars class, when we had them into our offices to give a practice demo run. We were excited about them then and have followed the progress as the company has graduated from delivering chatbots into the rich world of enterprise collaboration. Samir and Bilal have built a great team here in Seattle and they are passionate about delivering a quality experience to their customers – these customers, from individual developers to large enterprises are focused on being more successful and understanding their workflows better. Polly’s success over the last year has been impressive and we are excited that they have decided to partner with us for the journey ahead.

Our investment in Polly follows from our core thesis that, enterprise workflows, for the most part, will move away from legacy systems and email to modern online collaborations platforms like Slack, Teams and Mattermost. While these platforms started their lives as messaging tools, they now have the opportunity to become the “operating system” for modern enterprise workflows. That is already happening. Forward-looking organizations are creating Slack teams whose mandate is to adopt and/or build applications to enable enterprise workflows on Slack.

This is driven by the following.

First, due to technology and societal changes, the nature of engagement between an enterprise and its key constituents (customers, employees and other stakeholders) is becoming more open, bi-directional and frequent.

Second, decision-making in a modern enterprise is becoming far more decentralized. Employees at every level are empowered to directly collect and analyze data in order to make decisions and be far more responsive than it was ever possible before.

Third, as a result, the collaboration tools are where enterprise work happens. We are already seeing early evidence of that with workflows such as IT support, employee on-boarding, site reliability engineering, cyber security operations, etc. moving to Slack/Teams and multiple startups building specific products for each.

As enterprise workflows move to collaboration tools, measuring the effectiveness of those workflows — so that those could be analyzed and further improved — becomes critically important. That is exactly what Polly enables. Polly enables organizations to collect and understand feedback from key constituents so that enterprises can measure and optimize their workflows and thereby, deliver a much better experience.

The early signs have been extremely encouraging! The adoption of the free Polly product, which enables simple surveys within Slack and Teams, has grown consistently over the last couple of years and Polly tripled their user base in 2018. More interestingly, the team has seen incredible ramps in use at large enterprises and the adoption of Polly’s Enterprise product just since launch in in the fall of 2018 has been very strong. The company already has hundreds of paying enterprise customers with many others in the pipeline. The combination of the rapid organic adoption of the free product, strong inbound demand of its enterprise product and a team passionate about helping their customers, fuels our belief that Polly is poised to become the go to product for modern enterprises.

We are excited and buckled up for the fun ride ahead!

Why We Are Doubling Down On Shyft

We are excited to announce today our Series A investment in Shyft.

Since investing in Shyft’s seed round nearly two years ago, we have watched Brett Patrontasch (CEO) and team continue to make impressive progress against their goal of reinventing the way hourly workers manage their shifts and the way national employers both manage and support their workforce.

We originally met Brett through our involvement and support of the TechStars program. Shyft taps into our love of supporting scrappy entrepreneurs using technology to change people’s lives for the better. Through a mobile cloud connected application, Shyft enables a workforce that has little control over their schedule to take control by easily swapping shifts. Shyft started as a ground up platform that appealed to workers at Starbucks and many other retail chains, and, over the past two years, managers have taken note.

Shyft has responded by creating an enterprise software solution that enables retail outlets to manage their workforce while providing the flexibility that employees value.

This all comes at a crucial time in how the expectations of the modern workforce are changing and along with that, the move to create rules that protect this growing workforce. Cities and legislatures around the country are taking a close look via Secure Scheduling (also known as Predictive Scheduling) at how these hourly workers are scheduled – and creating protections that require some stability of schedule. This is a great thing, and as companies are required to support these regulations they need solutions like Shyft.

The proof is in the customers – and Gap has adopted the Shyft platform as their workforce management platform for all of their brands – Old Navy, Banana Republic, Althleta. Companies such as the Gap are adopting Shyft because the app creates real collaboration amongst employees which helps with productivity and general satisfaction.

We are investing alongside Ignition Partners for this round and it is great to work with them again.

The team’s relentless focus on product and end user experience is inspiring and is winning them new customers every day. Brett and his team are extremely passionate about the market and their product and we believe that they’ve created a game changing company poised for continued success.

Our Investment in Shyft – Transforming the Lives of Hourly Shift Workers

It is exciting and super fun for me to announce our seed investment in Shyft and to welcome the team to our Madrona family.

Shyft serves the huge market of shift workers worldwide – from retail to food service and beyond. They make it very easy for these hourly workers to find someone to cover a shift. It is a real time communication system that has been broadly embraced by users. Workers at 1/3 of Starbucks’ U.S. locations are already on the platform – all driven bottoms up rather than top down.

I first had the opportunity to meet Brett Patrontasch (CEO) and Daniel Chen (CTO) as a part of the most recent TechStars Seattle class. Right from my first interaction, Brett and Daniel were very impressive. Their first company approached this market from a different angle and they learned a lot. They were brave enough to shut it down and take what they learned to build something better. Brett has a strong conviction about this market and is eager to leverage the expertise of his advisors.

Madrona is investing in this seed round because we like the team, see the massive market opportunity and are impressed by their early growth. Shyft’s viral adoption and growth is impressive. For example, Starbucks has hourly workers in their stores on Shyft actively trading shifts each day. One person from McDonald’s tried the app and a day later 70 of her co-workers were on the platform. And though Shyft is primarily focused on workers, store managers are already starting to use the product as having a full staff is crucial for them.

I fundamentally believe that Shyft can build a massive platform and community for hourly shift workers. The app is a game-changing way for hourly workers and managers to coordinate with one another and manage their busy schedules. The mobile first approach speaks directly to the majority of this hourly smartphone-wielding audience.

This is the 5th company we have backed from the Seattle TechStars program. TechStars and all the people who run and support it are an incredibly important part of the Seattle ecosystem that brings together great founders, angel and VC investors and experienced operators. We are glad it is here and love participating.

I am looking forward to working with Brett, Daniel and the Shyft team as they build their team and business.