Strategic investors don’t matter

Sammy Abdullah
2 min readFeb 1, 2023

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Entrepreneurs are always looking for “Strategic Investors” — corporate VC such as Intel, Verizon, SAP, Microsoft, Salesforce, Cisco, InQTel, etc. The view is that these investors provide not only capital, but also guidance on the product roadmap, engineering/dev resources, critical introductions, and they’re often customers themselves. Demand for strategic investors lead us to ask: how important are Strategic Investors and are they critical to success? The answer in our view is ‘no’.

To arrive at that conclusion, we looked at the major investors in 199 tech companies prior to going public. We found that only 31 had a strategic investor. The remaining 167 companies had only traditional VC or financial institutions as investors, but no strategics. In other words, having a strategic investor was not critical to making it to IPO for 84% of the companies we looked at. The data is below.

While there is certainly value in having strategic investors, based on the low density of strategics invested in tech companies that have gone public, they’re not critical to success. What’s more important is to find investors that help when they can, are supportive (both financially and emotionally), and know when to step out of the way and let you do your thing.

Sammy is the Managing Partner and Co-Founder of Blossom Street Ventures. Visit us at blossomstreetventures.com and email directly at sammy@blossomstreetventures.com. We invest in companies with run rate revenue of $3mm to $30mm, with year over year growth of 20% to 100%+ depending on revenue. We lead or follow in growth rounds and special situations like inside rounds, small rounds, rushed rounds, corralling investors with our term sheet, cap table clean up, and extensions. We can commit in 3 weeks and our check is $1mm to $4mm. Also visit https://blossomstreetventures.com/metrics/ for always up-to-date SaaS metrics.

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Sammy Abdullah
Sammy Abdullah

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