I'm a co-founder at a small NYC startup and, as is usual, sometimes random VCs reach out to chat or ask questions. Most of the time I either ignore or have a short conversation.<p>A few months ago, a relatively well known (though not huge) west coast firm reached out and based on their brand I answered and had a short and cordial chat. They seemed pretty helpful and at the end asked if there were any types of customers we were interested in connecting with. They followed up with an introduction to a (real, well known) company that fit our profile and I had a decent, though, in retrospect somewhat peculiar, conversation with someone who worked there (verified through LinkedIn and company email address) and was looking to address a problem that our product solves. Nothing came out of that lead and I quickly forgot about it.<p>A few days ago I realized that the potential customer I was speaking with was actually a buddy of someone at the VC firm and left their job to start a company that's pretty much doing the same thing we are. Not only that, but in retrospect, their questions now seem clearly designed to try and understand some of the unique propositions of our product.<p>Now I know that VCs will often take meetings just to ask lots of probing questions for their portfolio companies.<p>My question is, how widespread is this extreme tactic of going as far as offering a fake customer intro just to get deeper information on your product? Do other folks have even worse stories than that?
Yeah, been experiencing the shady VC behavior more and more these days. Being upfront about not needing capital doesn't help as they continue to want to chat and contact you on every channel. Once you agree, it quickly turns into uncomfortable probing questions about financials and validation methods.<p>The reason becomes quite clear if you look at their portfolio. If there are companies like yours there, it makes a lot of sense as to why they want to know what's working with yours. They haven't invested in you, but they have in these other companies.<p>Almost every founder I've talked to has a story like this and warns against taking investor meetings/chats unless you're actively looking for funding and have done your research. Better yet, only follow through on warm introductions from other founders/people you know.
Shenanigans happen all the time. This is just one of many stories.<p>However, your ability to execute is the only thing that matters. This thing, whatever it was, isn't going to make or break your business. More importantly, it validates your space.<p>Move on and be a little more discerning and specific about what speculate meetings you take; maybe by filtering by who the person asking for the favor is - though it's shitty that it's positioned as a potential customer.
In my anecdotal experience this is relatively common in SEA too. Not as convoluted as your case, but basic things like (a) collecting information to pass back to a portfolio company they have forgot to disclose or (b) digging for information on competitors on behalf of a founder-friend.<p>Note its not as if secrets make or break startups in general, so its not a very smart move considering the VC risks reputation damage. And reputational damage is real. The founders doing the best have the most amount of choice and will discount a VC another founder warns them against.<p>So Id imagine a lot of cases are either junior guys who dont know the ropes, or "semi-honest" things like inadvertently giving hints as to what areas a competitor should look at. They do meet with a lot of companies and learn from them, all that info wont be locked in a vault.
I wonder what they would say if you asked:<p>"Why do you want to put me in contact with customers?"<p>It doesn't seem like a VC would cold call just to connect some rando startup with a customer for no apparent reason.<p>Granted a more casual meeting about something else it might make sense "Hey I know a guy who wants a thing you have." but a cold call like that seems strange.
Unlikely, and it sounds like a misunderstanding.<p>1. There's little tactical advantage from doing something like this. Startups live and die often by lack of demand, not from competitors. Industrial espionage exists, sure, but it makes little sense to spy on a competitor instead of just investing in them.<p>2. It's harder for VCs to find good companies to invest in than for good companies to find VCs. Word spreads fast (this thread is an example). Shady VCs will get figured out. Since VC is usually a long game, it's counter-productive, unless it's some kind of social engineering in the first place.<p>3. There's a lot of overlap with new ideas. One of my consulting clients was an experienced entrepreneur, mentor, startup judge. On one of his mentoring sessions, a startup came up with the same idea. We had been building it for a while, so no idea was stolen, and he even poked fun at the team that seemed to be worse at implementing the idea, but he didn't disclose that he was working on the same thing.<p>4. The goal of a VC meeting would be trying to understand the unique proposition of your product (as well as team and market size).