Axilor Ventures New $100M Fund to Accelerate Startups Seed Funding

Axilor Ventures New $100M Fund to Accelerate Startups Seed Funding

Axilor Ventures, an active seed fund has announced its second fund with a $100 Million corpus to benefit startups who seek early stage investment support. The Category-I Axilor Technology Fund II (ATF-II) will continue to support early stage entrepreneurs in a variety of industries, including agritech, consumer technology, fintech, healthtech, and enterprise SaaS (Software-as-a-Service).

The VC invest in 15-20 startups each year. We invest between $200k-$500k in each startup through our pre-seed and seed funding programs.

With cheque sizes averaging $500,000 to $750,000, ATF-II has also set aside 30 percent of its corpus to back 10-12 winners from its first fund, according to Ganapathy Venugopal.

“We have been deliberate in setting aside a separate corpus for being able to do bridge rounds, because early-stage funding is highly uncertain. Sometimes, companies are unable to raise funding due to the timing and the market sentiment. The median first cheque is likely to be in the $500,000-750,000 range, but we are setting aside a separate corpus when the company is doing well and fundraising is getting delayed,” said Ganapathy Venugopal, Co-founder and CEO of Axilor Ventures.

Ganapathy added that ATF-II has been set up as a 15 year fund to ensure higher follow-on ratio as well as the flexibility to recycle capital.

“Our exit horizon will be between eight to ten years, so that it does not put pressure on the founders. We are looking at a three year deployment cycle with 30 companies in each cycle,” he said. The fund will continue to lead or co-lead investments rather than being a passive investor.

Axilor Ventures, which started out as a technology incubator programme in 2014, moved to early-stage investing in 2018 with the launch of its Rs 200 crore first fund, ATF-I.

“In 2014, there was hardly any market network that made it easy for startup founders to access talent, investors, go-to-market partners, or service providers. The idea of starting Axilor was to solve these problems,” said Venugopal.

“We ran the largest cohort as part of the accelerator programme in the country and it was ranked number one programme for two years in a row. As things progressed, we saw two things–founder quality had improved and we also got the feedback from our founders saying that their outcome could be even better with access to capital.”

Axilor Ventures has an active community of 400+ Founders

With these inputs, ATF-I was launched to target pre-seed stage companies, and has backed 54 companies to date. Of these, Axilor Ventures claims a follow-on funding rate of 77 percent for its portfolio companies from the first fund. The fund has also registered five partial exits from its portfolio driven by founder’s request, he added.

“Nearly 21 startups have crossed Series A and moved on to next stages,” said Ganapathy Venugopal, adding that the portfolio mortality rate at the fund is less than 10 percent. He attributed these metrics to the fund-founder fit, which Axilor banks on, calling it among the top-three decisions a founder takes in their entrepreneurial journey. ATF-I has backed companies including Enkash, UrbanPiper, and Niramai.

“The seed fund a founder selects is among the top-three decisions they are making, after which they choose a startup idea to pursue and who are going to be the co-founders,” said Ganapathy Venugopal. He added that the ideal founder for the fund comes with a deep proprietary knowledge of the problem they are solving, with an operator mindset and execution-focused in their journey.

The announcement of the new fund also comes at a time when big-ticket investors in the Indian startup ecosystem have tightened their investment deployments.

The Axilor Ventures fund, which has registered with the SEBI, will continue to be backed by its founders Kris Gopalakrishnan, SD Shibulal, Professor Tarun Khanna, Srinath Batni, and Ganapathy Venugopal.