Scale with intention
Funding supports market expansion, hiring, product build, and operational scale.

The global economy has been showing resilience through all the economic and political swings during the last several years. And despite potential risks of geopolitical shocks or unexpected policy moves in 2026, experts are still cautiously optimistic about this year. More than 80% of US CEOs expect the US economy to continue expanding, and 63% of them even expect higher margins. So there might be room for founders who seek investments.
However, the bar is rising. Deal makers and founders looking for ways to raise capital are going to face challenges: from AI-accelerated competition to persistent volatility.
“The strongest founders aren’t just showing what they’ve built so far — they’re helping investors understand where the business is going next,” says Allen Taylor, Managing Partner at Endeavor Catalyst.
While industry professionals expect positive shifts in the economic environment, let’s get to the basics and explore how capital raising works so that you’ll be ready to grab the opportunity.
So, what does raising capital mean? This article defines a capital raising process, its types, and basics, and explains how to raise capital with the help of a virtual data room (VDR).
When a business needs money to grow or keep things running, it goes through a process called capital raising.
Capital raising is about finding money from outside sources, rather than just what the company earns itself. The funds can be used for everyday needs, creating new products, expanding into new areas, or for big, long-term projects.
Capital can come from different funding sources, such as financial institutions, venture capital funds, private equity firms, and individual equity investors. Depending on the size and stage of the company, founders may also work with institutional investors or accredited investors.
Raising capital is not only about getting cash into the company. It is a financial strategy that might affect ownership, control, and risk. The decisions made during capital raising influence how the company grows, who is involved in decision-making, and how well the business is positioned for long-term success.
Here are the main reasons why a business might want to initiate a capital raising process:
Funding supports market expansion, hiring, product build, and operational scale.
Capital enables projects that take time to pay off and strengthen sustainability.
Additional funds can smooth gaps and protect operations during slower periods.
Capital supports acquisitions, partnerships, and major technology upgrades.
External funding reduces reliance on retained earnings and internal cash.
While sounding like an excellent option for business growth, capital raising sometimes might not bring the expected results. Here’s why:
There are two primary methods of capital raising: equity financing and debt financing. But sometimes there’s also hybrid or alternative funding. Let’s briefly review how each of these types works.
| Category | What to verify | Owner | Weight | Score | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Access controls | Folder/file permissions, role groups, view-only mode, expiry dates, IP restrictions | Legal + IT | 15% | /5 | Demo: two bidder groups with different access rights |
| Audit trail & reporting | Exportable logs (views/downloads/permission changes), filters by user/group, real-time reports | Legal + IT | 15% | /5 | Confirm log retention and export formats (CSV/PDF) |
| Secure viewing & watermarking | Dynamic watermarking, print controls, secure viewer, download restrictions | Legal | 10% | /5 | Verify watermark shows user identity on-screen |
| Verification & SSO | MFA enforcement, SSO (SAML/OIDC), session timeouts, optional conditional access | IT | 10% | /5 | Require MFA for all external users by policy |
| Q&A workflow | Role-based Q&A, approvals, routing, exportable Q&A history | Finance + Legal | 10% | /5 | Validate bidder-side experience and admin oversight |
| Onboarding & usability | Setup speed, permission templates, bulk upload, navigation clarity, mobile access | Finance | 10% | /5 | Time a full “room setup” using a real folder tree |
| Data residency & compliance | Hosting regions, subprocessor transparency, security documentation, incident response process | IT + Legal | 10% | /5 | Confirm cross-border access controls and admin visibility |
| Pricing predictability | Pricing model, overage triggers, guest rules, admin seats, export/archiving fees | Procurement + Finance | 10% | /5 | Request a written price schedule with overage examples |
| Support & SLAs | Availability, response times, escalation paths, live-deal support options | Procurement | 10% | /5 | Align support hours with HK deal timelines and global bidders |
Equity financing means raising money by selling a share of the company in the form of equity investments. In return for equity capital, investors expect returns tied to the company’s future profits, not fixed payments.
This approach is common among startups and growing teams that might benefit from equity funding without taking on debt. For example, founders may bring in venture capitalists who provide funding in exchange for ownership and a long-term upside.
Debt financing involves borrowing money that will require repayment over time, usually with added costs based on interest rates.
Businesses often access loans, bonds, or credit facilities through banks or other lenders.
This option is popular with established companies and mature companies that have predictable revenue and strong financial records. For instance, a firm may use debt to expand operations while keeping full ownership intact.
Hybrid and alternative funding combine elements of debt and equity or use less traditional structures.
Examples include convertible notes, revenue-based financing, or funding tied to performance milestones.
These models allow investors to start by providing capital as debt and later convert it into equity under agreed terms. Some public companies also use structured instruments that must follow rules set by the governing bodies, such as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Now, let’s briefly review the main stages of the capital raising process and what happens during them.
This stage is about getting the business ready before talking to investors. To overcome this stage successfully, founders need a clear picture of where the company stands and where it is going.
Key preparation steps usually include:
Good preparation increases credibility and sets a strong base for investor conversations.
Once the business is ready, founders begin reaching out to investors and presenting the opportunity. This step is about the pitch deck, and the story should be told clearly.
Effective outreach often focuses on:
Strong communication is essential at this stage. It helps move interested investors into deeper discussions.
After initial interest, investors review the business in detail during the due diligence phase.
At this stage, companies looking for funding usually:
Now, let’s focus on what investors look at during due diligence. We define the three main areas of business operations and documentation that a potential investor is especially interested in.
Investors want a clear and honest view of the company’s financial health. They look at whether the numbers tell a consistent story and support the growth plans presented earlier.
Common areas of review include:
This area focuses on whether the business is legally structured and compliant with relevant laws and regulations. Gaps here can delay or stop deals.
Investors often review:
Investors also examine how the business operates and how exposed it is to external risks. This helps them understand whether the company can handle growth and market changes.
Key points of interest usually include:
A virtual data room for investors (or an investor data room) is a secure cloud-based repository where all the documentation an investor needs to review during due diligence is saved.
While being a cloud file sharing solution by its nature, a virtual data room offers more than that, especially in terms of security. And this is something that business owners appreciate, considering that the global average cost of a data breach reaches $4.4 million.
Let’s see what an investor data room brings to the capital raising process and how to set one up.
Also read: The best virtual data rooms for IPO
Follow these recommendations to set up an investor data room:
Also read: Learn how investment banking teams use VDRs to accelerate deal execution
Even strong businesses can struggle with capital raising if basic issues are overlooked. Here are some of the most common mistakes and practical ways to avoid them.
Most founders don’t start raising money until they’re almost out of cash. This puts a ton of pressure on them, limits their choices, and, inevitably, makes them rush into decisions. On the other hand, investors can feel desperate as well, which means founders lose much of their negotiating power.
Unclear answers, missing documents, or inconsistent numbers quickly damage credibility. Investors expect founders to know their business in detail and explain it with confidence. If you can’t explain why investing in your business is beneficial for an investor, why would an investor want to fund it? Gaps in preparation often slow the process or even stop it entirely.
Reaching out to investors who do not match the company’s stage or model wastes your time and energy. Even a strong business can be rejected if it does not fit an investor’s focus.
Holding back information or sharing it in pieces usually raises concerns during due diligence. Investors may assume there are some hidden issues, even when there are none. And trust is hard to rebuild once it is lost.
To maximize your chances of getting funded, also follow these investor recommendations:
If you want to make the due diligence during capital raising efficient and secure, explore the selection of the top investor data rooms on our main page and choose the one that fits your needs the best.