K-Zen
A slide from K-Zen's deck touting the opportunity in the cannabis market.
For cannabis startups, particularly ones that deal with THC directly, raising money from mainstream investors can be a challenge.
While cannabis legalization is increasingly sweeping the US, THC is still considered an illegal drug by the federal government. That means that most mainstream venture funds are reticent to invest in companies that directly sell or cultivate THC-containing products, despite the attractive growth prospects.
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Courtesy of K-Zen
K-Zen co-CEO Judy Yee.
DCM, for its part, has been one of the few prestigious venture funds willing to invest in cannabis. The firm, which manages more than $4 billion, also invested in cannabis delivery startup Eaze's $65 million Series C round last November.
K-Zen co-CEO Judy Yee told Business Insider in an interview that she and her co-founder, Soon Yu, did "lots of homework" to figure out which investors to pitch.
Yee said her team looked primarily at investors like DCM that have previously worked on deals in the cannabis space or had signaled they were open to the right opportunity.
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"I think by targeting those types of investors, we haven't had to run into a lot of folks saying, 'no, that isn't part of my investment thesis," Yee said. "We did that homework upfront."
Most mainstream venture firms are locked out of investing in cannabis because their investors, known as limited partners, often don't want to invest in the substance.
K-Zen was also helped by the network of cofounder Yu, Yee said. Yu attended Stanford's business school with DCM co-founder and general partner David Chao in the early 1990s, and Chao, through DCM, had previously invested in a few startups Yu founded.
When Yu - who previously held senior positions at Earthbound Farms, Safeway, and Crystal Geyser before taking time off to raise a family - and Yee were discussing how to build a cannabis brand in K-Zen's very early days, Yu set up a meeting with DCM's Chao to figure out a strategy.
Courtesy of K-Zen
K-Zen co-CEO Soon Yu.
"So that's how everything got started," said Yee. She added that DCM was aligned with her view that beverages were going to be the "form factor" or consumption method that pushed cannabis into the mainstream.
K-Zen recently released a line of THC and CBD-infused "shots" that can be mixed in with beverages. The startup's near-term goals are to "round out" its portfolio with new products, look at new state markets, and ramp up its direct-to-consumer sales, Yee said.
Right now, K-Zen only sells products in California where cannabis is legal.
"We're looking at this not just as a launching one big brand, but really creating a category," said Yee.
K-Zen is also gearing up to raise a new round of funding.
Yee said the company is starting to gauge investor interest, and estimated she's had conversations with around seven or eight investors outside of DCM.
"We're taking our time," said Yee. "We're getting a sense of the market and where people are at."
Check out the pitch deck that helped K-Zen raise $5 million here, exclusive to Business Insider: