Two months ago, we thought we'd found the perfect Series A. Strong technology. Real customers. ARR growing triple-digits. Everything checked out in diligence.
It had all the signals we look for in a high-conviction deal.
Three weeks later, we walked away from leading a $15M Series A round.
Not because the business was broken—but because the founders weren't ready for what institutional capital actually requires: accountability to their own numbers.
This is a case study about the hidden gap between strong metrics and successful institutional fundraising—and how to close it.
By the book, this company was investable:
Most firms would have wired. We almost did.
But Plus Ultra Capital Partners is different. We’re former GTM operators who became investors—so we evaluate pipelines like salespeople, not spreadsheet analysts.
In this case, we acted as diagnosticians: we identified the forecast-fidelity problem and prescribed two treatment options—build a track record or bring in sales leadership.
The patient declined both treatments. That’s when we knew we couldn’t proceed.
As diligence deepened, we transitioned from financial validation into what we call forecast fidelity: the ability to predict near-term revenue within ±10–15% variance, and—more importantly—to diagnose and fix the process when you miss.
When we pressure-tested the quarter's forecast:
At Seed, this optimism is normal. At Series A, it becomes disqualifying if leadership won't own the variance.
"Forecasts don't need to be perfect. They need to be owned.
That's the difference between prediction and control."
We framed the operational risk plainly: two slips could swing quarterly revenue 25–50%. We offered two paths:
Option 1 — Wait and Prove It
Pause fundraising for 2–3 quarters; demonstrate consistent forecast accuracy (±10–15%) over multiple quarters; return with credibility.
Option 2 — Professionalize Now
Hire a fractional CRO (1–2 days/week) to pressure-test pipeline and install forecasting discipline; add a sales leader to own cadence; resume raise in 30–45 days.
It was a narrow, fixable gap. The cost (~$25–30K/month) was rational relative to the capital requested.
But the final message made the stance clear: "We'll keep doing it our way."
No Option 1. No Option 2.
We didn't issue an ultimatum; we offered a roadmap. They chose not to walk it.
That was the moment the deal died.
We exited respectfully, left the door open, and offered a 12-month restart credit if they delivered two consecutive quarters inside the variance band. The technology still impressed us. The market was still real.
But institutional capital requires institutional accountability.
At Plus Ultra, we have a simple rule:
"Capital follows control—not charisma, not potential, not pipeline slides."
For PUCP, walking away was the fiduciary move. We couldn't market a high-conviction SPV to LPs while simultaneously denying confidence in the company's revenue trajectory.
Some will say, "Forecasts are guesses. Things change."
They're half right — but only half. Forecasts do change—but only if you have a system to diagnose why and fix it.
Without that system, we face three unacceptable risks:
For PUCP, walking away wasn't optional—it was the only fiduciary path forward.
This story repeats in the $1–5M ARR "Series A death valley":
The painful irony: companies with real technology and customers stall—not for lack of demand, but for lack of operating systems that make revenue predictable.
Execution is a system. Institutional GTM replaces heroics with cadence.
Every founder knows product-market fit (PMF)—proving customers will pay for what you built.
Fewer understand forecast-market fit (FMF)—proving you can hit your revenue targets within a 10–15% band quarter after quarter, and explain deviations with systematic process improvements.
FMF requires operational infrastructure most founders haven't built yet:
Institutional capital underwrites FMF, whether it names it or not.
At Seed, FMF doesn't matter. At Series A, it's the price of admission.
Institutional capital isn't buying your optimism; it's underwriting your control system. Ask yourself:
Not ready is not failure. It's a sequencing call. Build the track record first.
Add Founder Readiness for Accountability to diligence:
You'll predict outcomes better than with any market map.
Our GTM-operator diligence is designed to catch this before capital deploys. We pressure-test like practitioners, not just financiers. When there's a gap, we don't lecture—we offer a plan. If the team won't walk it, we pass and protect our LPs and brand.
If you're wondering whether you're ready for institutional capital, ask yourself if you can honestly check all four boxes:
If you felt resistance on any of these—great. That's where the work starts.
Before parting, we offered a simple restart condition: two consecutive quarters inside ±10–15% and we'll pick up where we left off, credit intact.
We still believe in the technology and the market. But the operating system has to match the ambition.
Execution isn't advice; it's discipline.
"Strong metrics don't guarantee Series A success.
Founder readiness for institutional accountability does."
At Plus Ultra, we back founders who are ready to be accountable to their own numbers—because that's where execution begins.
If you're preparing for Series A and want an operator-grade forecast review, let's talk. If you're an allocator and want to understand how we underwrite FMF inside SPVs, we're happy to walk you through our process.
Pablo Grodnitzky is Managing Partner of Plus Ultra Capital Partners, an operator-led venture capital firm specializing in SPVs for exceptional Seed and Series A companies. PUCP deploys GTM operators to accelerate revenue in portfolio companies.