Investment committee
The body inside a fund that approves or kills a deal. The partner you meet must sell your company to it, often without you in the room.
The investment committee (IC) is the decision-making body inside a fund that must approve a new investment before it closes. Even when a partner is enthusiastic, the deal usually has to clear the IC, which may include the fund’s senior partners and sometimes LP representatives. The partner becomes the deal’s champion, presenting a memo and defending the case; the founder is frequently not in the room. This is why fundraising is partly a process of equipping your champion to win an argument you cannot attend.
The IC exists to impose discipline and consistency, to make sure each deal fits the thesis, to pressure-test the optimism of the sponsoring partner, and to weigh the deal against the rest of the portfolio. For a deep tech company the IC is also where the technical story meets non-technical scrutiny: the committee may have no domain expert, so it will lean on external diligence and on whether the claims are independently verifiable, and it will ask the blunt questions, who buys this, when, against whom, and what does this round actually prove.
The practical implication shapes how a founder runs a raise. Give your champion the artifacts that survive the room without you: a milestone defined so it can be verified by a third party, a clean data room, an honest competitive and market read, a crisp use of proceeds tied to the next value-creating proof, and references that will hold up. Understand that a “yes” from the partner is a “maybe” until the IC clears it, that conditions and reduced terms can appear at this stage, and that a deal can die in committee for reasons that have nothing to do with the meeting that went well. Designing the pitch for the people who were not at the meeting is what separates founders who close from founders who get enthusiastic first calls.
The partner who loves your quantum company does not write the cheque alone: they must defend it to an investment committee that may have no physicist and will probe the technical claim, the market and the timeline. So your job is to arm your champion with what survives that room, an independently verifiable milestone, an honest competitive read, a clear use of proceeds, rather than a story that only works with you presenting it.
From definition to decision
Model this in your own round, scenarios, dilution and runway, in the founder workspace.