Our mission at Slush is to help founders change the world. To that end, we need to understand the key challenges that founders face. This is what we set out to investigate earlier in the year when we launched our Startup Struggle Survey—a grassroots level research into the most pressing challenges that founders face on their founding journey. With the participation of 1000+ founders and 250+ investors across Europe and the US, this research is one of the largest of its kind.
Our survey focused on breadth over depth. We were interested in the mundane, everyday difficulties that hinder growth, irrespective of stage, industry, business model, product, or region. This is both the strength and weakness of our report. While we believe that there are certain universal principles that underlie the practice of building generational technology companies, every startup is different—the challenges that become pressing at each moment in time vary according to the profile of the individual company and the surrounding environment.
This is also the first time we have conducted this research, which means that we have no historical data. We are unable to comment on whether our findings are tied to this specific historical moment, or whether there is something more lasting to our results. We do not know whether fundraising would have been as pressing a challenge for European companies a couple of years ago as it appears to be now, but there is reason to believe so. We do not know whether investors would be less focused on revenue growth if money was not scarce, but it is likely to be the case. We do not know whether regulation is a more prominent concern for founders now that the EU is racing to become the forerunner in tech regulation, but this is likely to have an influence.
From fundraising and revenue growth to AI and regulation, our survey uncovered beliefs and biases, as well as hidden synergies and misalignments between founders’ and investors’ perspectives on company-building truths and prominent industry trends. Our research is a snapshot of the present, but as such, it can help us focus on what matters to founders at this moment. What became clear is that startups struggle with existential problems. The primary challenges founders identified related to their ability to finance their operations. Each year, Slush brings together thousands of founders and investors, attracting over $3 trillion in assets under management to Helsinki. It’s the largest gathering of venture capital globally, providing the perfect platform for startups looking to secure funding and scale.