Avoid "Death by Accelerator"
4 Steps to Maximize Your One and Only Startup Accelerator Experience
Hey there,
You are familiar with the term, “Death by Pilot”, but perhaps just as relevant these days is “Death by Accelerator”.
For some cleantech startups and founding teams, accelerators can help you do as the name suggests: accelerate your fundraising, product development, customer acquisition, pilot, or pivot. However, for some, these programs do not drive the type of results the company and its leaders seek. There are numerous reasons that I have observed for this, which will be addressed in this post.
But first, let’s define what an accelerator is and should do for your cleantech company. Accelerators are short, time-bound programs aimed at helping a fast-growing company navigate one and at most two key business problems through a combination of focused mentorship, curriculum, and networking interventions. They are problem-solving interventions; a vast majority of which focus on the ever present challenge of fundraising and help innovators to refine their investor pitch, but there are others that offer bespoke support with sales, pilot acquisition, prototype development, early operations or pivot strategy.
Today, we're diving in and sharing insights that should help cleantech startup leaders make the right decisions around:
The time to enter accelerator
Specialist vs. generalist programs
Making the most of massive mentor pools
Ensuring value delivery in the long run
Before we dig in, let’s focus in on the next-generation battery space, a sector where Georgia has some unique expertise and some early success.
Fresh Links, Tools, and Resources:
Winning the “battery race” has been a topic of much discussion. While not something that one state can win by itself, Georgia punches above its weight in its contributions to next-generation battery technology, and with the states’ massive push into manufacturing, it is a space where GA’s asset provide competitive advantage. Here are few links on next gen technology and resources with Georgia ties.
Weekly Resource List:
A Solid State Battery Primer (5 mins) - The revolution is coming, but the technical and financial hurdles are very real. Get up to speed with this space and the companies, labs that are leading the way to lower cost batteries.
Lonnie Johnson’s $75M Battery Bet: EVs That Go Twice As Far (10 mins) - Southern innovators are gritty and authentic, none more so than Lonnie Johnson. Learn about Lonnie’s path to energy storage and a company that is building in Atlanta and raising capital in the South.
Georgia Tech Advanced Battery Center (ABC) (10 min exploration) – Few technologies are as interdisciplinary are battery tech. A battery company needs almost every flavor of engineer. Georgia Tech’s ABC provides the tools for interdisciplinary collaboration and innovation to researchers and developers of next gen battery solutions.
The EV Battery Innovation That Could Usurp Solid-State Technology (5 mins) The best innovations are pushed by competing technologies, and materials innovation from Sila Nanotechnologies, started in the Georgia Tech lab of Gleb Yushin, is pushing traditional Li ion forward with nanoengineered silicon anodes.
4 Tips to Maximize Your Accelerator Experience
Selecting the right accelerator isn't just about getting funding—it's about positioning yourself on the right launchpad; one that is setup for your unique problem and is able to deliver the problem-solving you need.
1) Time Your Application Strategically
Realistically you, as a founder, have at most one shot (in your career) to take advantage of the tools a startup accelerator offers, so it is important to know when to fire that shot. Experienced founders probably don’t need them, and some companies run past the stage when accelerators are most helpful before they ever apply. Importantly, an accelerator is not a required stop on the path to cleantech startup success.
Accelerators are hyperfocused problem-solving interventions for your startup and most solve the problems surrounding fundraising the best. While accelerators may tell you otherwise, experience shows that an accelerator’s impact increases around the time that equity fundraising becomes critical for your company. Case in point, most accelerators crescendo with hype-filled “demo day” event that focuses on the pitch to investors. These are great opportunities for founders that are raising, but unnecessary for those that are not. The best accelerators have deep relationships with investors, but also have strong networks of problem-solvers, facilitators and practitioners that can help you structure your problem and develop a plan to solve it. If you are not raising funds, but have a clear, well-defined business problem that is in the sweet spot of the accelerators expertise go for it.
It follows then that there are a lot of “not” right times to join an accelerator, so how do you catch yourself before joining an accelerator at the wrong time. First, don’t join an accelerator simply for the investment (usually on the order of $20-150K). You will regret the investment of your time, which you should value at $1,000+ per hour, and it will not pay back. Second, don’t join an accelerator because you as a founder need coaching. There are a many other ways to upskill yourself as a founder that come with a much higher rate of success and with lower time investment. Lastly, don’t join an accelerator because you believe that it is a necessary step to startup success. While there are studies that find startup accelerators can raise the probability success, think first about how best to solve the problem your business is facing, and then determine if an accelerator is the tool best suited to fix that problem.
2) Choose a Specialist, Unless It is YC
If accelerators are at their core hyperfocused problem-solving interventions for your startup, then it holds that you want to be in a program that brings deep experience solving that problem. Cleantech startups face the same general problems that all startups face, however, solving those problems in the market context of highly regulated, long sales cycle, and capital intensive industry sectors that make up Cleantech is best accomplished by a specialist. For instance, one of the hardest calls for a cleantech founder to make is when and how fast to make the transition from technology development (TRL improvement) to commercial development. By overestimating technical readiness, companies can make commercial commitments that are impossible to live up to, and by underestimating it, they can never reach commercial development stages necessary to receive funding. Similarly, misreading the overall market’s readiness to adopt a technology because of unexpected early success in pilots leads to issues. Specialist advisors who have lived this experience are critical and are the types of mentors that specialist accelerators bring in.
So why the qualifier, “unless it is YC”? Y Combinator and its fast gaining set of peers, e.g., AngelPad, 500 Global offer brand recognition and validation is hard to match and will put a significant boost behind your fundraising efforts, albeit at a considerable cost as well. Being an alum of one of these highly-recognized accelerators opens doors with investors, customers, press and talent, much like having a degree from a Top 10 ranked college or university. Does that mean you will learn something different, or that you will meet the perfect mentor for your company, probably not. Startup accelerator curriculum is relatively standard and some (like YC’s Startup School) freely available, and the best mentors are the ones that fit the categories that we highlighted in our previous post. Because recognition and validation are so difficult to build, these generalist accelerator programs can be valuable to your cleantech startup, especially if solving the funding challenge is your most acute need and you navigate the application process.
3) Simplify Your Mentor Approach
Mentor matching is central to the majority of startup accelerators, whether they be specialist or generalist in nature. Some programs toss 50+ mentors in front of their startups during the first few weeks of the program, some support matching startups and mentors based on best-fit or mutual interest, others allow the process to play out organically. The highly concentrated, mentor connection processes can be exhausting, especially for more introverted founders, and certainly takes an investment of a founders time. The time investment (and exhaustion), however, appear to be worth it, as studies have found that bouts of intense mentorship lead to better results for startups.
To make the most of this time investment, a little preparation is needed. First, know what you are looking for in a mentor before you enter the program. We wrote a newsletter a few weeks back on the types of mentors that cleantech startups need (and don’t need), which is a good starting point. With this in mind you can build a short question list to help you evaluate the fit of each mentor you meet to your needs. Second, hone your elevator pitch (1 min max), noting that it will improve as you deliver it 50+ times in rapid succession to different audiences. These “shots on goal” are a hidden value of the mentorship phase of a program because you can run many experiments in a short amount of time. The honed pitch also helps you get to the Q&A part of the discussion faster. It also helps to be able to articulate the problem statement that led you to the accelerator. Lastly, automate your follow up to those mentors that you appreciated meeting but are not a fit, and respond via phone call (if possible) to those that are a fit. There are numerous tools out there to do this, just be ready for the volume because the minutes responding add up.
4) Think Long and Leverage Your MD’s Support
When choosing a Cleantech Accelerator, you should strongly value and test the strength of its post program offering, and all accelerators will have some kind of offering. Usually this consists of a combination of continued access to some or all of the following:
its network of alumni companies,
its mentor/investor networks through targeted introductions,
alumni-investor pitch events, and
its spaces or other resources (e.g., software credits, discounts)
They are invested (literally) in your success, so all of this makes sense. When performing diligence, make sure to ask all the accelerator’s alumni companies that you speak with about their post program experience. It is likely the experience that is most fresh in their mind; and will give you a picture of what to expect during the program as well.
While all of this is important, there is probably no more important relationship for your company than that with the program’s MD. No one in the program will know you personally and your business better than the MD. The MD will be the person most likely to pick up a phone call or respond to an e-mail same day. In some investment accelerators, the MDs even receive compensation (carried interest) that is based on your long term success. When performing your diligence, all of the “points” that an accelerator program scores in your evaluation of its post-program support should be heavily discounted if you don’t believe in the quality, responsiveness, and fit with your business of the program’s MD. If you cannot see the accelerator’s MD as a future mentor for you and your company, you should reconsider applying to that accelerator.
We have found that so much of a company’s success after an accelerator is based on their preparation for the accelerator to ensure that the business purpose for entering the program is sound. The tips above focus heavily things that you can do beforehand to ensure that a cleantech accelerator is right for you and your company.
Upcoming Events and Opportunities
April is showering the area with big events. Make sure you have these on your calendar so that you can engage fully.
Cleantech Hustle Hour @ Super South — Apr 16 — The same start-up only monthly meetup, but on a bigger stage at Super South.
The Battery Show: South — April 16 - 17 — The two-day educational event brings together battery and H/EV manufacturers, energy storage professionals, industry experts, thought leaders, and academics to discuss and help solve your manufacturing, supply chain and production challenges
Super South — Apr 15 - 17 — The South does not yet have a nationally recognized climate week. However, SuperSouth aims to change that over the coming years. Engage your peers and experts from around the country at the inaugural event this spring.
Georgia Tech Energy Day — Apr 23 — Hosted by the Strategic Energy Institute, the Institute for Matter and Systems, and the Advanced Battery Center, an opportunity to interact with Georgia Tech researchers who are pioneering work at the edge in Energy Storage, Solar Energy Conversion, and E-Fuels and Chemicals.
Georgia Logistics Summit — Apr 23 — GLS brings together speakers from prominent shippers in the industry, leaders in the state’s infrastructure and economic development community, as well as keynote speakers from some of the world’s most prominent supply chain-focused companies
ATL Cleantech Connect — Apr 30 — A quarterly social to engage members of the Greater Atlanta cleantech community, focusing on topics with strong local and national impact. This month focusing on the intersection of Cleantech and Resilience.
Advancing Smarter Infrastructure with AI — Apr 30 — The outputs and inputs of artificial intelligence (AI) will transform sustainability in urban infrastructure, energy management, and smart mobility. This informative panel conversation will delve deep into both topics.
Did we miss an event? Do you have an upcoming event that you want included? Please let us know!
LAST CHANCE! Super South: An Opportunity for BCFG Readers
Every movement has its moments, and Super South is one of those movements for Climate Innovation and Impact in the South.
The Georgia Cleantech Innovation Hub is co-sponsoring Super South | Summit for Climate Innovation and Impact scheduled for April 15, 16 and 17 at CNN Omni Hotel at Centennial Park. With 12+ keynotes, 40+ breakout sessions, an innovation expo, capstone project exhibition and documentary films, Super South will explore six program themes—Clean Energy, Smart Communities, The Land, H2O, Industry & Infrastructure, and Smart Lifestyle—in our path to a circular future.
We'd love to have you join us in the Innovation Expo. As a reader of GACIH’s Build Cleantech Faster In Georgia Newsletter, you would receive a 10% discount on the display costs. If you have an interest, please reach out to Dorothy Vollmer (dorothy@supersouth.org) at Super South to learn more and plan your presence. You can also receive a 20% off registration by using the "SS_Greenhouse", just go to Purchase Tickets
Wrap up
That's it.
Here's what you learned today:
Think strategically about when you enter any startup accelerator; you only get one chance to do it, so make the most of it for your business.
Counter to NFL draft strategy, you want to pick a kicker vs. an all around athlete in the first round. Specialists will get you farther, faster… unless perhaps you have the opportunity to join YC.
Think ahead about what your are looking for in a mentor from the program, and make sure that you see the program’s MD as a long term mentor, if you don’t reconsider applying to the program.
If you are interested in discussing and debating the topics in this newsletter, please engage us in the comments, on social, or contact us directly. The conversation is what the ecosystem needs to progress.
And as always...If you enjoyed Build Cleantech Faster in Georgia, please consider subscribing or referring this edition to a friend or colleague.