From pre-seed to Series C: what each round actually means
Round names are marketing, but the milestones behind them are not. What investors actually expect at each stage, from a deck and a demo to a repeatable go-to-market machine.
Nothing in corporate law defines a "Series A." The letters are convention, and the convention keeps drifting — today’s seed round looks like 2015’s Series A. What stays constant is the underlying question each round answers.
#Pre-seed: the team bet
Pre-seed capital — typically a few hundred thousand to a couple of million — is a bet on people and a thesis. There may be a prototype; there is rarely revenue. Checks come from angels, micro-funds, and accelerators, usually on SAFEs rather than priced equity.
#Seed: the search for product-market fit
Seed rounds fund the search: shipping a real product, finding the first paying users, and figuring out whether anyone would miss the product if it disappeared. Investors look for early signal — retention, organic pull, founder velocity — rather than polished metrics.
#Series A: something works, now scale it
The Series A is the first institutional judgment that the machine works. The bar is evidence of repeatability: cohorts that retain, a sales motion that closes without founder heroics, unit economics that improve with scale rather than degrade.
#Series B and C: pour fuel
By Series B the question is no longer "does it work" but "how big can it get, how fast, and at what cost." Growth-stage investors underwrite market size and execution risk, not existence risk. Metrics get institutional: net revenue retention, burn multiple, payback period.
A round is not a milestone. It is permission to chase the next one.
The practical takeaway for founders: raise against the proof you have, not the letter you want. The name of the round matters to nobody but the press release.