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These are the top 3 reasons startups failed in 2022, according to founders


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Photo by Pepi Stojanovski on Unsplash

Despite all of the economic doom and gloom around a potential recession and investor tightening, 2022 was the second-biggest year ever for venture deals across the U.S. 

The pace of investments did decline quarter to quarter, though, and capital definitely became harder to get. The new year is off to a slow start, too.

So it's not surprising that a lack of access to fresh capital is one of the top three reasons startups failed last year, according to CNBC. The site looked at a report that analyzed data from a survey of nearly 500 founders and research firm CB Insights.

The top reason for failure was no funding or access to investors. Nearly half of all startups that failed in 2022 fell into this camp, twice as many as in 2021.

Similarly, the No. 2 reason was simply running out of cash.

The third reason was lingering pandemic-related issues, which affected 33% of startups, though fewer companies cited this as a factor.

What were founders' biggest pieces of advice for others? Do more market research, make a stronger business plan, be adaptable and be able to pivot quickly.

Despite the all-around tough year, some Bay Area startups had big wins last year. Dozens of companies reached unicorn status with $1 billion-plus valuations, though about half as many startups joined that club compared with 2021.

And several local startups had blockbuster funding rounds. Altos Labs clocked the top raise with $3 billion, followed by Cruise with $1.35 billion, and Verily and TeraWatt Infrastructure, which both raised a solid $1 billion. 


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