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How long will it take to exit

How many years will it take you to exit? 10 years is the generic answer, but that’s wrong.  The data says depending on what industry you’re in, it might take as long as 11 years (hardware) or as few as 4 years (payments).  We looked at 156 tech companies in various industries that have IPO’d to determine the answer.  The list has been updated for recent IPOs.

Software is a long road. SaaS businesses take a long time to get to a critical mass to exit/IPO, taking on median 9 years.  Software takes a long time because the customers are mostly enterprises with longer sales cycles – long sales cycles naturally means you’ll acquire customers at a slower pace.  IPO’s in 2019 and 2020 so far were founded 11 years ago on average.

Hardware is the longest but it varies.  Roku which just exited took 14 years since founding, but Fitbit and Apple took only 7 years and 4 years respectively.  Sonos took 16 years, but Peloton only took 7.  The data on hardware is pretty wide ranging so while the median may be 11 years, one third of the companies in the data set exited much faster.

Consumer focused startups are generally faster exits.  Payments and ecommerce startups exited quickly, with median exit timing of 4 years and 6 years, respectively.  Consumer oriented businesses like these are naturally viral when they’re successful, hence they acquire customers quickly and somewhat easily compared to other industries.  Word of mouth is a powerful thing.

Marketplaces, gaming, and social media took 6 to 8 years since founding to exit.  Similar to payments and ecommerce, there is a naturally viral effect to these consumer businesses which allows for faster scaling.

In conclusion, the typical mantra that it’ll take 10 years to exit is wrong.  Depending on your industry, you might have a meaningful exit much sooner.

 

Visit us at blossomstreetventures.com and email us directly with Series A or B opportunities at .  Find Sammy Abdullah on LI.  We invest $1mm to $1.5mm in growth rounds, inside rounds, small rounds, cap table restructurings, note clean outs, and other ‘special situations’ all over the US & Canada.