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Series B Fundraise Timeline: What to Build and When

A Series B raise doesn't start when you send the first deck. It starts 16–20 weeks before your target close. Here's the backward-looking timeline and what to build at each stage.

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A Series B raise does not start when you send the first deck. It starts sixteen to twenty weeks before your target close date – when the financial model rebuild, board reporting infrastructure, and narrative architecture work begins. Here is the backward-looking timeline and what to build at each stage.

The twenty-week backward-looking timeline

The most useful way to plan a Series B raise is to start from your target close date and work backward. If you want to close by week twenty, you need a signed term sheet by week fourteen or fifteen. To have a term sheet, you need four to six weeks of active investor process. To start an active investor process with institutional investors, you need the financial infrastructure complete – model, data room, board reporting history, and materials. That infrastructure typically takes eight to twelve weeks to build if it does not yet exist.

Weeks 20–16 (Foundation): Financial model rebuild or architecture review. If your model was built for Series A and has not been maintained with operating data, it needs to be rebuilt from the ground up for Series B diligence. Unit economics refinement with at least twelve months of cohort history. Board reporting cadence established if it does not yet exist – you need at least two monthly packages delivered before the raise starts to demonstrate reporting capability to investors.

Weeks 16–12 (Infrastructure): Data room initiation. The data room should be built before the raise starts, not during it – building a data room under investor pressure produces a data room that reflects what you can find quickly rather than what investors need to see. Legal document organization (cap table, corporate records, existing investor agreements). Narrative architecture: the Series B story is different from the Series A story because you have operating data to support it, and the narrative needs to be built around that data rather than around the vision.

Weeks 12–8 (Preparation): Investor materials completion: deck, one-pager, and financial summary. Reference preparation – the CEOs, investors, and customers who will be called during diligence should be briefed before the raise starts, not after the first term sheet is signed. Partner and board alignment – your existing investors should know the raise timeline, the target investors, and the narrative before any external conversations begin.

Weeks 8–4 (Active Process): First investor meetings. The initial meetings are narrative meetings, not diligence meetings – your goal is to generate enough conviction for a partner meeting, not to answer every diligence question in the first conversation. Target twenty to thirty first meetings across a range of firms to ensure sufficient process to create competitive dynamics.

Weeks 4–2 (Closing): Partner meetings and term sheet generation. This phase is where competitive dynamics matter most – term sheets generate more term sheets. Post-term-sheet diligence: the data room is fully populated, reference calls are coordinated, and the legal process begins.

What investors actually look at: model, cohorts, references, data room, narrative

Series B investors evaluate five things, roughly in order of the weight they carry in the decision: cohort analysis (the historical performance of customer cohorts is the highest-signal financial data in a Series B – it shows whether the business model actually works at scale and whether unit economics improve or degrade over time), financial model (the three-year model with scenario analysis demonstrates whether the leadership team understands the business and can project it credibly), narrative (the Series B story – why this market, why now, why this team, and why this is a durable business model – is the frame that makes the financial data meaningful), references (the CEOs, executives, and customers who confirm the team's capability and the company's operating character), and the data room (the organized evidence that supports everything in the narrative and the model).

The ranking matters for resource allocation: founders who spend proportional effort on all five are underinvesting in cohort analysis relative to its impact. A data room that is organized and complete but sits behind weak cohort data will not save a process struggling because the unit economics are not compelling. Conversely, strong cohort data with a weak narrative often produces high investor interest and low conviction.

How to build a data room that survives diligence

A data room that survives diligence is built for the skeptic, not the believer. Building for the skeptic means: anticipating the questions that due diligence will surface and having the documentation to answer them before they are asked, organizing the data room so that the answer to each category of investor question has a clear location, and including the materials that surface and contextualize the challenges as well as the materials that highlight the strengths.

The categories every Series B data room should include: historical financials (monthly, for at least eighteen months, with clear accounting), cohort analysis (customer cohorts by acquisition month, with retention curves and LTV development), the financial model (with scenario analysis and clearly labeled assumptions), legal and corporate documents (cap table, corporate structure, material contracts, IP documentation), team (bios, org chart, and optionally employment agreements for key hires), and market (competitive landscape, market size analysis, and any third-party market research).

The most common data room gaps that stall diligence: missing historical financials for a period of time, cohort analysis that starts at the wrong date or uses inconsistent cohort definitions, a cap table not reconciled with legal records, and material contracts that are not organized or are missing. Resolving these gaps under diligence pressure takes longer than resolving them in advance – and the impression left by a data room requiring investor prompting is negative regardless of what the underlying data shows.

What kills a raise after a term sheet

The most common post-term-sheet kill: reference calls that contradict the narrative. The investor's reference conversations are with people who were not pre-briefed by the company – former employees, past customers, and executives who worked with the CEO in prior roles. If what those references say is materially inconsistent with the narrative built during the raise, the deal dies or re-prices. The prevention: the CEO should know what every important reference will say before the raise starts, including the references the investor might find independently.

Legal diligence failures: undisclosed material issues in the corporate records, cap table discrepancies, or IP claims not addressed before the raise. These are preventable with a legal hygiene audit before the raise starts – typically a four-to-six-week process that surfaces and addresses the issues before they appear in investor diligence rather than during it.

Founder mistakes that extend timelines by six to eight weeks

The most common founder mistakes that extend Series B timelines: starting the financial infrastructure build after the first investor meetings rather than before (this produces a situation where investors are waiting for materials being built under pressure), running a non-competitive process (talking to investors sequentially rather than in parallel eliminates the term-sheet-generates-term-sheets dynamic that compresses timelines), under-preparing references (discovering mid-process that a key reference is not positive or is unavailable causes rescheduling and delay), and narrative drift (the story the CEO tells in the first meetings drifts from the story told in partner meetings because there is no written narrative document to maintain consistency).

The mistake that extends timelines most reliably: the first investor meetings reveal that the model or narrative needs material revision, requiring a pause to rebuild before the process can continue. This is avoidable with a pre-process investor test – one or two investor conversations treated explicitly as feedback sessions, not as live raise conversations, before the formal process begins.

Frequently asked questions

How much ARR do you need before starting a Series B process?

There is no universal ARR threshold for Series B – the more relevant variables are growth rate, net revenue retention, and unit economics quality. Series B closes in the current market have happened at ARR ranging from $5M to $30M+, depending on sector and growth rate. The investor's question is not "how much ARR do you have?" but "is this business growing fast enough, with good enough unit economics, to be a compelling institutional venture investment?" A company at $8M ARR growing 200% year-over-year with strong net revenue retention will have an easier Series B process than a company at $15M ARR growing 40% year-over-year with deteriorating gross margin, regardless of absolute ARR.

How do you create competitive dynamics in a Series B process?

Competitive dynamics come from running a parallel process with genuine conviction from multiple firms at the same stage simultaneously. The mechanics: start first meetings across twenty to thirty firms in a compressed window (two to three weeks), advance the most interested firms to partner meetings in parallel rather than sequentially, and be transparent with interested investors about the timeline and that other firms are in the process. The competitive dynamic is driven by reality, not by manufacturing urgency – if your business is genuinely strong, firms will move at your timeline rather than lose the deal. Manufactured urgency with weak underlying business metrics produces skepticism, not competition.

What should a Series B deck include?

A Series B deck is fundamentally different from a Series A deck because it is evidence-based rather than vision-based. The Series B deck should include: a business model summary with the key operating metrics (not a feature list), the growth story with the actual data (ARR growth, new customer acquisition, existing customer expansion), the unit economics with cohort analysis summary (this is where the Series B deck earns or loses conviction – strong cohort data here is the highest-value content in the deck), the market opportunity grounded in actual customer acquisition data, the team with relevant experience and key hires planned, and the use of funds with specific initiatives and expected outcomes. The deck should be thirty slides or fewer and should not attempt to substitute for the model and data room.

How do you handle bridge financing versus going straight to Series B?

The bridge-versus-Series B decision is a timeline and metrics question. A bridge is warranted when: you have six to nine months of runway but need twelve to eighteen months to reach the metrics that make a Series B compelling, existing investors are willing to bridge at reasonable terms, and the metric gap between now and Series B metrics is credibly closable in the bridge period. A direct Series B is the right call when your current metrics are Series B-ready and the bridge would introduce cap table complexity and investor fatigue without meaningfully improving the raise outcome. The mistake to avoid: taking a bridge to delay a Series B conversation when the underlying metrics challenge will not be resolved by the bridge timeline.

How do existing Series A investors affect the Series B process?

Existing Series A investor behavior is one of the highest-signal inputs for Series B investors – they will ask your existing investors directly whether they are participating in the round. An existing investor who is enthusiastically leading or co-leading the Series B sends a strong signal; an existing investor who is not participating sends a strong negative signal that requires explicit explanation. Before launching the Series B process, have direct conversations with every Series A investor about their participation intent. If an existing investor will not participate, understand the specific reason and be prepared to address it when Series B investors ask – which they will. The worst outcome is learning mid-process that an existing investor is not participating and not understanding why.

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