Red flags in startups: what makes investors say “no”

Not every pitch ends with investment — sometimes it is clear from the very first meeting that a deal won’t happen. We asked investors from DOMiNO Ventures, SABAH.angels, and AloqaVentures about the red flags they notice in startups and what can instantly cool their interest in a project.

Yagiz Karadeniz, Istanbul city, Managing Partner at DOMiNO Ventures, LinkedIn

When evaluating a startup, one of the most significant red flags is the absence of a global mindset. At DOMiNO Ventures, we pay close attention to whether the team is capable of thinking and operating beyond its local market. A limited understanding of international scalability, user behavior, and global competition often indicates weaknesses in strategic vision and long-term growth potential.

Another major red flag is an imbalanced or misaligned founding team. Lack of transparency, poor communication, or resistance to constructive feedback raises concerns about the team’s ability to execute effectively and sustain progress under pressure.

We prioritize teams that demonstrate adaptability, strategic thinking, and the ability to collaborate with global partners and investors. In today’s investment landscape, local success alone is not enough. The absence of a global vision and execution capacity remains one of the clearest red flags for any potential investment.

Aliya Abbaszade, Baku city, Managing Director at SABAH.angels, LinkedIn

Before investing in a startup, we naturally prioritise learning more about the team. However, what truly matters to us is the precision and quality with which the work is executed. Sometimes, even if the team is strong, the roadmap may not unfold as expected. In such cases, we either support the team to help adjust the roadmap or decide not to invest at all.

As for the second question, a “red flag” for us is when a startup lacks the potential to expand. In other words, if the project is designed solely for a single market and has no scalability prospects, that would be a serious concern for us.

Mirolim Abdullaev, Tashkent city, Operating Partner at AloqaVentures, LinkedIn

When we consider a startup for investment, we understand that early-stage ventures inherently involve risk. Mistakes in numbers, a raw product, or an immature go-to-market strategy are normal. But there are factors we consider not just risks, but red flags. These are issues that go beyond refinement — most likely, the deal will not happen.

At the early stage, several clear red flags for us include:

  1. Inaccuracy: when sales, customer, or revenue figures do not reflect reality.
  2. Inconsistent team: conflicts among co-founders, unclear roles, or power struggles.
  3. Lack of focus: a startup “tries to do everything at once” and cannot clearly identify a primary customer pain point or why the customer would pay.
  4. Overvaluation without justification or traction.
  5. Poor financial management: the founder does not understand the cost of acquiring a customer or how revenue is generated. If we see such signals, we usually avoid the deal, because the issue is no longer the product but trust and manageability.

For me, a real red flag is when a team has a polished presentation but lacks honesty and transparency. If founders exaggerate metrics, hide critical conditions with key partners, or cannot explain the basic business logic — for example, who pays and for what — we do not continue the conversation. At the early stage, trust in the team is more important than product perfection. No trust equals a stop.

A red flag is when a startup survives not on paying customers, but on a compelling story. If founders present aggressive growth projections but have neither paying customers, a validated business model, nor a clear sales channel, this is a stop signal for us. We invest not in a presentation, but in the real ability to generate revenue.