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Investment Climate

Alex Shandrovsky
Investment Climate
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  • ClearLeaf: Lawrence Pratt shares how to get funded in 2025
    ClearLeaf: Lawrence Pratt shares how to get funded in 2025Investment Climate Podcast: Fundraising Playbooks From Food Tech CEOs and VCs In this podcast series, Alex Shandrovsky interviews investors about benchmarks for funding Alt Proteins in 2025 and uncovers the investment playbooks of successful Climate Tech CEOs and Leading VCs.Podcast Host Alex Shandrovksy is a strategic advisor to numerous global food tech accelerators and companies, including alternative proteins and cellular agriculture leaders. His focus is on investor relations and post-raise scale for agrifood tech companies. This podcast is syndicated through our media partners, Foodtech Weekly and Vegconomist.Episode 38: ClearLeaf: Lawrence Pratt shares how to get funded in 2025In this episode, I speak with Lawrence Pratt, co-founder and president of Clear Leaf, a Costa Rica–based agtech startup developing non-toxic, broad-spectrum fungicides and bactericides. Lawrence walks us through the long and methodical journey to closing their seed round, led by Hawthorne Food Ventures, and shares why Clear Leaf focused exclusively on agtech VCs who understand the slower scaling realities of agriculture. We explore how accelerator competitions like MassChallenge and Grow-NY built investor trust, how a strategic licensing deal in Japan helped overcome objections about global traction, and why their product—effective, shelf-stable, and climate-friendly—offers a rare alternative to both synthetic chemicals and fragile biologicals.Key Facts ClearLeaf:Goal: To create sustainable crop protection strategies that manage the impacts of harmful pests while maintaining natural balances on the farm, protecting farmers and consumers.Recently  closed a seed series round with lead investors, Hawthorne Food Ventures, a fund run by a family office out of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.Alex’s Top Findings:Fundraising Duration: 18 Months of Persistent Process. The fundraising round took 18 months from start to close. The team planned for 12 months but hit delays due to market cycles and fit. "  We were definitely not planning for 18 months, but we were planning for 12, and we had realistic expectations. We were at the time a kind of interesting spot. Our market product was getting decent market acceptance in a couple of different markets. Still, our experience has been this strange, squishy middle when you're very early stage and you don't have any sales people who get all excited about your technology."Fundraising Methodology: Global Mapping + Relentless Follow-Up. The team built a broad investor universe across the US and Europe, tracked progress in spreadsheets, and stayed in touch even with non-deploying funds. " We got a lot of advice and a lot of input, and we were able to fine-tune how we were approaching some of these funds. It was just basically a lot of Excel spreadsheets, tracking who we had talked to and when we last spoke to them. Is it time to go back to them again? A year ago, they said they were bringing in a new $50 million group of LPs as a time to go back to them, and we just kept coming back. Everybody who didn't slam the door in our face would rather say, ‘Hey, you're interesting. Let's talk more when we're in a better position. We just kept following up and following up."Lead Investor Origin: Warmed-Up Cold Intro via Biz Dev. Hawthorne Food Ventures initially met Clear Leaf at World AgriTech in 2023. A London-based BD partner rekindled the connection via a referral from another fund. “ That was in 2023. We then re-met them in a more meaningful way, through a strategic connection that was brought to us by our business development arm, which is based in London. We work with a group in London on a variety of different issues, including biz dev, and we triangulated back onto Hawthorne Food Ventures. Then, we got i
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  • Bovotica: Andrew Leech shares how to get funded in 2025
    Bovotica: Andrew Leech shares how to get funded in 2025Investment Climate Podcast: Fundraising Playbooks From Food Tech CEOs and VCs In this podcast series, Alex Shandrovsky interviews investors about benchmarks for funding Alt Proteins in 2025 and uncovers the investment playbooks of successful Climate Tech CEOs and Leading VCs.Podcast Host Alex Shandrovksy is a strategic advisor to numerous global food tech accelerators and companies, including alternative proteins and cellular agriculture leaders. His focus is on investor relations and post-raise scale for agrifood tech companies. This podcast is syndicated through our media partners, Foodtech Weekly and Vegconomist.Episode 37: Bovotica: Andrew Leech shares how to get funded in 2025In this episode, I talk with Andrew Leech, co-founder and CEO of Bovotica, an Australian startup developing probiotic and prebiotic technologies that reduce methane and improve cattle productivity. Andrew walks us through the journey of closing a $3.4M seed round—highlighting the power of warm intros, the realities of raising over 14 months, and the personal sacrifices it took (including selling his house). We dive into valuation strategy using PitchBook, structuring university spinouts, equity-based advisory deals, and how team credibility can overcome early-stage scientific risk. It’s a raw, insightful look at what it truly takes to fund and lead a deep-tech ag startup.Key Facts Bovotica:Goal: To reduce methane emissions from cattle while simultaneously delivering production efficiency.Recently closed a $3.4 million seed round led by AgriZeroNZ.Alex’s Top Findings:Founder Sacrifices: Sold His House to Stay Afloat. Andrew quit his day job and funded himself through savings — ultimately selling his home to commit full-time and keep the company alive. " I made the decision to quit my day job and go in this full-time. You have to have at least one person in the company going full time. If you're trying to raise a seed round and hold down even a part-time job, it gets very tricky. It got tough towards the end for me. I had to sell and ended up selling my house to keep myself going while we raised the seed round. But look, in the end, that was a risk that was really worth taking for me."IP Deal with University: Exclusive License, Then Assignment. Bovotica initially licensed the IP from QUT with a clause for assignment post-raise — creating a win-win for both university and investors. " I think one of the reasons our seed round took a bit longer is there was a bit of back and forth between Bovotica and QUT to make sure we had the right structure to get that investment. We've got a really good relationship with QUT and our process was we wanted to license the IP initially and then once we'd completed the seed round, get the university to assign that IP into the company. So that de-risked it for the university that if we can't raise the money, then it's only an exclusive license. But it also gives something to the investor as well that if we close the seed round, the IP is assigned to Bovotica, and Bovotica actually physically owns all the IP that it needs to put the deal forward. So obviously in these sorts of situations. The university is looking to get a fair deal or what it believes the IP is worth."$9.4M Post-Money Valuation Grounded in PitchBook Comps. Bovotica used PitchBook data to benchmark valuations of comparable methane-reduction startups globally, arriving at a $6M pre-money valuation. “I was lucky enough to have access to a PitchBook subscription, so I did I pulled hundreds of reports out a PitchBook.The first thing the investors ask you, once they're interested is, okay, what's the premoney you pull this number out and if you've got data behind you from PitchBook to back that up, it makes the conversations go so mu
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  • Hylio: Arthur Erickson shares how to get funded in 2025
    Hylio: Arthur Erickson shares how to get funded in 2025Investment Climate Podcast: Fundraising Playbooks From Food Tech CEOs and VCs In this podcast series, Alex Shandrovsky interviews investors about benchmarks for funding Alt Proteins in 2025 and uncovers the investment playbooks of successful Climate Tech CEOs and Leading VCs.Podcast Host Alex Shandrovksy is a strategic advisor to numerous global food tech accelerators and companies, including alternative proteins and cellular agriculture leaders. His focus is on investor relations and post-raise scale for agrifood tech companies. This podcast is syndicated through our media partners; Foodtech Weekly and Vegconomist.Episode 34: Hylio: Arthur Erickson shares how to get funded in 2025In this episode, I talk with Arthur Erickson, CEO and co-founder of Hylio, a Texas-based company developing precision drone systems for agriculture. Arthur shares why they chose equity crowdfunding on StartEngine over traditional venture capital, citing the importance of control and understanding the ag industry’s unique economics. We discuss how to craft a compelling video pitch, build early momentum, and navigate the platform’s algorithm-driven visibility. Arthur also reflects on building community-driven support and explains why the future of agriculture appears to be a robot revolution.Key Facts Hylio:Goal: To deliver the ultimate performance in aerial crop spraying.Recently raised about $2.5 million from the equity crowdfunding platform called StartEngine.Alex’s Top Findings:Choosing Equity Crowdfunding Over Traditional VC. Hylio chose StartEngine for its flexibility, independence, and better alignment with its hardware and agricultural focus — areas VCs often misunderstand or undervalue. " We started looking at other options, and equity crowdfunding was very attractive. It was important for us to maintain control because we don't think a lot of the VCs understand our industry, but we do. We have our finger on the pulse, and so we wanted capital to grow and expand, but we wanted to be able to call all the shots and not be restricted by a square peg in a round hole type of tracking system for our progress. Ag is cyclical. There are ups and downs, and you have to roll with the punches and really understand the farmer and the end market to be successful here. And none of the institutional investors we talked to really got it up, so that's why we did it."Preparation is Key: Financials and a Launch Plan. StartEngine requires two years of audited financials. A war chest (at least 10% of the raise) is needed for marketing. Building early investor momentum is critical. " You have to get audited financials, and this is an SEC requirement. StartEngine is the broker; they act as the middleman between you and retail investors, serving as the watchdog and enforcing SEC regulations. To maintain their certification as a broker, they require you to have at least two years of audited financials."Early Bird Discounts: Creating Urgency. Offering early investment perks is a strategic lever — sometimes offering up to 40% share price discounts for early investors.“ When the campaign first launches, there are a number of StartEngine early bird perks. StartEngine decides what perks you wanna offer, like percentages. In our case, you could stack perks as different percent categories and if you invested, reserved on our starter engine page before it launched, and invested within the first two weeks and over certain amounts, so there's different volume tiers as well, then you could get as much as 40% discount is what it was on the share price.”
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