High Stakes

episode artwork

Paige Soya

09 July 2026

34m 42s

How VCs Evaluate Pre-Revenue Startups | Paige Soya, Nick Duafala & Charles Hudson (Precursor Ventures)

00:00

34:42

What makes a pre-revenue startup worth investing in?

Before there's revenue, traction, or a long list of customers, venture investors have to make decisions with limited data. So what signals matter most? How do VCs build conviction around a founder and an idea when so much is still uncertain?

In this episode of High Stakes, Paige Soya and Nick Duafala sit down with Charles Hudson, Managing Partner at Precursor Ventures, to explore how investors evaluate startups at the earliest stages of venture.

Charles shares his framework for pre-seed investing, including how he assesses founder insight, market timing, perseverance, resourcefulness, and a founder's ability to turn an early hypothesis into a scalable company.

The conversation explores what separates exceptional founders from the rest—and why, at the pre-seed stage, investing is often as much about the founder as it is about the business.

In this episode, we discuss:

  • Why pre-revenue investing requires a different approach than later-stage venture investing
  • The two founder archetypes Charles sees most often: industry insiders and "naive outsiders"
  • How investors determine whether a founder has a unique and durable insight
  • Why proximity to a problem can be one of a founder's greatest advantages
  • The difference between product innovation and business model innovation
  • Why distribution strategy can matter just as much as the product itself
  • How VCs evaluate founders when there is little customer or revenue data
  • Why resourcefulness and perseverance are two of the strongest predictors of founder success
  • How market timing influences pre-seed investment decisions
  • Why being slightly late can sometimes be better than being too early
  • What Charles learned from founders who succeeded inside large companies but struggled as startup CEOs
  • How resilience and life experiences shape a founder's ability to navigate uncertainty

Key Takeaways

Great founders don't always have the most experience—they have the strongest insight.

At the pre-seed stage, investors look for evidence that founders understand a problem deeply and have uncovered insights that others have missed.

Resourcefulness is a leading indicator of startup success: Before founders have capital, customers, or large teams, investors can learn a great deal by observing how they create opportunities and solve problems with limited resources.

Timing can be just as important as the idea itself: Even great companies can struggle if the market isn't ready. Successful founders often launch when customer behavior, technology, and market conditions align.

At the earliest stages, investing is ultimately a bet on people: With limited financial or customer data, investors are evaluating a founder's ability to adapt, persevere, and execute through uncertainty.