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Why Kate Kendall wants to shift the focus from funding as she launches new pre-accelerator Atto

CloudPeeps founder Kate Kendall has launched a remote pre-accelerator program to help Aussie founders approach their startup ventures with a bit more chill.
Kate Kendall
Atto founder and CloudPeeps co-founder Kate Kendall. Source: Supplied.

CloudPeeps founder Kate Kendall has launched a new remote pre-accelerator program designed to help Aussie women founders approach their early-stage startup ventures with a bit more chill.

The Atto Accelerator is based out of the One Roof women-led co-working space, where Kendall has taken up the mantle of entrepreneur-in-residence, with funding from LaunchVic.

The 12-week program covers accounting, pricing models, building and audience and planning out an MVP,ย helping first-time entrepreneurs to dip their toes into the ecosystem.

Speaking to StartupSmart, Kendall says accelerators can tend to encourage startups to get as much done as possible in a short space of time, with a view to pitching for investment at a final demo day.

Kendall is more interested in an โ€œindieโ€ approach, focused on profitability, rather than on rapid growth.

โ€œWe get obsessed with raising money, we get obsessed with networking with VCs,โ€ she says.

Atto will focus on the basics, giving women entrepreneurs โ€œthe tools so they can be quite independent in the way they build the companyโ€, she adds.

If founders give away significant equity early on in their journey, they may become too diluted to be attractive for later-stage investments.

โ€œThe more independent you are, and the better position you can get in, the more power you have when you then go to scale,โ€ Kendall says.

The growth obsession

Having spent time in Silicon Valley, Kendall is all too aware of the growth-at-all-costs mentality that reigns in the global tech capital.

Uber, for example, โ€œstarted to operate outside the boundaries of the lawโ€ and saw a high turnover of staff.

โ€œYou can still have a very profitable business that grows without having to raise as much money as possible and churn through as many people as possible,โ€ Kendall says.

Equally, she points to startups that have raised a lot but still not succeeded. You can raise a lot of money, and shoulder the pressure that comes with that, โ€œbut if you donโ€™t have the right unit economics, the right customers and product-market fit, itโ€™s not going to helpโ€, she adds.

On the other hand, Atlassian โ€” Australiaโ€™s favourite startup success story โ€” was bootstrapped for its first eight years, Kendall notes.

โ€œI think we have to swing the pendulum back a bit,โ€ she says.

โ€œYouโ€™re not a loser if you havenโ€™t raised money and if you want to bootstrap for a while,โ€ she adds.

No one-size-fits-all

While she advocates for a more relaxed approach to growth, Kendall isnโ€™t against VC funding altogether. She simply suggests it shouldnโ€™t be the first and only thing on a founderโ€™s mind.

โ€œThere isnโ€™t a one-size-fits-all for success in startup land, and the more that we celebrate different versions, the better it is.โ€

A startup creating an autonomous vehicle, for example, may need a lot of money to get off the ground. But a lot of companies such as marketplaces of Software-as-a-Service businesses can be self-sufficient, Kendall says.

โ€œA lot of these companies arenโ€™t capital intensive anymore โ€” you can actually do a lot with a little,โ€ she adds.

โ€œVC is the right pathway for some, and it is needed and vital, but itโ€™s not for everyone.โ€

Itโ€™s time for a new mindset, and to get back to focusing on what really matters, she says, which is โ€œhaving a product that really satisfies a needโ€.

The startup ecosystem across the world is ready for a new mindset, Kendall saysย โ€” and Australia is the place for it to start.

โ€œWeโ€™re used to being outliers and bootstrappers and making do with what we have,โ€ she says.

โ€œIf we celebrate this indie path and show more indie options and get away from being obsessed with raising money and trying to replicate Silicon Valleyโ€™s version of success, weโ€™ll have a lot more growth in the ecosystem.โ€

NOW READ:ย Cloudpeeps founder Kate Kendall calls for more action from companies releasing data on funding for female entrepreneurs

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