What Is a Lead Investor — And Why You Can't Close Without One
What leads actually do, why followers won't move without one, and how to find your lead investor.
Every first-time founder hears the same advice early in their fundraise: "You need a lead investor." But what does that actually mean, and why does it matter so much?
What a Lead Investor Is
A lead investor is the fund or individual that:
- Sets the terms — negotiates and signs the term sheet that all other investors follow
- Writes the largest check — typically 30–60% of the round
- Takes the board seat (at Series A and beyond)
- Does the most diligence — their investment signals to other investors that serious evaluation has been done
In a $5M Series A, a lead investor might write $2.5M–$3M and set the pre-money valuation. The remaining $2M–2.5M comes from other funds and angels who co-invest on the same terms.
Why You Need One
Other investors won't move without a lead. This is the most important thing to understand about fundraising dynamics. Smaller funds, angels, and strategic investors are waiting for someone with conviction and diligence capability to go first. They rely on the lead's diligence and terms-setting instead of doing their own. "We're in once you have a lead" is the most common response you'll hear until you find one.
A lead creates momentum. Once a term sheet is signed, rounds typically close in 2–4 weeks. Before a lead, rounds can drag indefinitely with everyone "still thinking about it."
A lead provides credibility. When you tell other investors "Sequoia is leading our round," it removes a significant amount of uncertainty. Tier-1 leads unlock tier-2 and tier-3 co-investors.
A lead negotiates your terms. This is important: whoever leads sets the terms every other investor in the round will be on. Choosing your lead is not just choosing an investor — it's choosing who has the leverage in your term sheet negotiation.
What Leads Actually Do vs. What Followers Do
| Activity | Lead Investor | Follower |
|---|---|---|
| Term sheet | Issues | Follows existing terms |
| Diligence | Full (6–12 weeks) | Light or none |
| Board seat | Yes (at Series A+) | Rarely |
| Check size | 30–60% of round | 5–20% of round |
| Reference calls | Conducts | Relies on lead's |
| Pro-rata in future rounds | Yes | Sometimes |
How to Find a Lead
Finding a lead is your primary fundraising job. The process:
- Identify funds that lead at your stage and sector (Article 17 covers this in detail)
- Get warm intros to the relevant partner (Article 21)
- Run a parallel process — get 10–15 funds into first meetings simultaneously; leads emerge from this process
- Create urgency — once multiple funds are in diligence, communicate that clearly. "We're in diligence with several funds and expect to close in X weeks" accelerates decisions.
What to Do Before You Have a Lead
Build your follower list in parallel. Even before you have a lead, identify 10–15 funds and angels who've expressed interest or who are likely to follow once you have a term sheet. When the lead signs, you can close the rest of the round in days.
Don't close followers early. Don't take individual checks from interested parties before you have a lead and a term sheet. Early ad-hoc checks complicate your cap table and can create awkward dynamics with your lead.
Be transparent about your status. "We're still looking for a lead" is fine to say. "We're almost closed" when you're not creates trust problems when the timeline extends.
What If You Can't Find a Lead?
This is the most common fundraising impasse. Options:
Reassess your stage. If you're raising a $5M Series A without a lead, sometimes the answer is to raise a smaller bridge round ($500K–1M) from existing investors or angels, hit more milestones, and reprice the Series A attempt in 6–9 months.
Expand your lead definition. At seed, a lead can be a well-known angel or scout fund, not just an institutional fund. Elad Gil, Lachy Groom, or a respected operator angel leading a seed round is legitimate.
Use PitchProtocol. Getting your application in front of more thesis-matched funds increases the pool of potential leads.
A Faster Path
PitchProtocol routes your application to thesis-matched funds — every one of which is a potential lead investor for your round. Apply to the First 100 Founders Cohort →
Frequently Asked Questions
Can an angel investor lead a round?
Yes, at seed. Experienced angels with established reputations (Elad Gil, Naval Ravikant, Lachy Groom) can lead seed rounds and set terms. At Series A, an institutional fund is typically required.
What's a co-lead?
Two funds that jointly negotiate terms and split the lead check. Less common, but happens when two funds both have strong conviction and neither is willing to follow.
How do I know when I have a lead?
A signed term sheet. "Strong interest," "we're excited," and "we want to be your lead" without a term sheet are not a lead. The term sheet is the commitment.
PitchProtocol routes your application to every thesis-matched fund simultaneously — maximizing the pool of potential leads in your raise. More funds seeing your application at once means faster lead emergence and genuine competitive pressure. Apply to the First 100 Founders Cohort →