McClure’s Five “Million Dollar Points” For Startup Valuaton

Mg Siegler

MG Siegler is a general partner at Google Ventures and a columnist for TechCrunch, where he has been writing since 2009. Previously, MG was a general partner at CrunchFund. And before TechCrunch, MG covered various technology beats for VentureBeat. Originally from Ohio, MG attended the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI. He’s previously lived in Los Angeles where he worked... → Learn More

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011
Luniz - I Got 5 On it

Today during TechCrunch Disrupt, Michael Arrington led a discussion between a panel of angel investors. There was a ton of good content, but one thing that sticks out as particularly interesting is the way 500 Startups’ Dave McClure thinks about valuations. He has what he calls “million dollar points” — and there are five of them.

McClure brought them up when a question from the audience asked how the investors set valuations for early stage startups. Other panelists had less concrete answers, and Mike himself said worrying about valuation is not something that’s good to hear from an entrepreneur’s mouth. But McClure is practical, and realizes there needs to be a concrete way to think about valuations at any stage.

Here are his five key points:

1. Market

2. Product

3. Team

4. Customers

5. Revenue

Each of those is worth around a million dollars in McClure’s mind in early stage investing — assuming each of them are nailed, of course.

This will undoubtedly be a somewhat controversial way of thinking. Though there’s no question that it’s better than the alternative Mike suggested: “pulling a number out of your ass”.


Dave McClure is a venture capitalist & the founding general partner at 500 Startups, an internet seed fund and startup accelerator program in Mountain View, CA. Dave has been geeking out in Silicon Valley for over twenty years, and has worked with companies such as PayPal, Mint, Founders Fund, Facebook, LinkedIn, SlideShare, Twilio, Simply Hired, O’Reilly Media, Intel, & Microsoft. He also likes to play ultimate frisbee when his knees don’t hurt. Dave has been an investor in over 100...

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