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VC Lab Timeline Explained: 14 Weeks vs. 4-6 Months

VC Lab Timeline Explained: 14 Weeks vs. 4-6 Months

If you have researched VC Lab and landed on two different numbers for how long it takes, you are not misreading anything. The program is 14 weeks long. Launching a fund through VC Lab typically takes 4 to 6 months. Both statements are accurate. They just describe two different things: the structured curriculum on one hand, and the full fund launch process on the other. This article breaks down exactly what each number covers so there is no confusion going forward.

The 14-Week Curriculum

The 14-week curriculum is the scheduled, mentor-led core of VC Lab. It is what goes on your calendar. Every week has a live session, a sprint milestone, peer feedback, and a deliverable. By the end of week 14, you have built the foundational infrastructure of a real fund. Here is how the weeks break down.

Weeks 1 to 4: Foundation

The first four weeks establish the core elements of your fund. You define your investment thesis, identify your team structure, and begin building your deal warehouse, a curated pipeline of potential portfolio companies that demonstrates to LPs that you have real deal flow and a clear point of view. This phase answers the question every LP will eventually ask: why you, why this strategy, why now.

Weeks 5 to 8: Materials

Weeks five through eight shift to positioning and presentation. You develop your fund pitch deck, refine your narrative, and build the core materials you will use in every LP conversation. This is not theoretical. You are producing assets that go in front of real investors. By the end of week eight, you have a polished pitch deck and a clear articulation of your fund's differentiation.

Weeks 9 to 12: Fundraising Execution

This is where the curriculum meets live fundraising. You finalize fund economics, build out your deal room, and begin working an active LP pipeline. The sessions in this phase focus on closing mechanics, LP communication, and the operational details that turn a pitch into a commitment. This is also when the hours-per-week demand increases significantly.

Weeks 13 to 14: Closing Preparation

The final two weeks focus on closing preparation. Legal documents, fund administration setup, banking relationships, and the operational steps required to actually receive capital. Some managers close their first round during this window. Many are in active conversations that carry forward beyond week 14.

The 4-6 Month Full Timeline

The 14-week curriculum runs in parallel with real fundraising work, and that fundraising work does not stop when the curriculum ends. From Sprint 0 (the onboarding sprint before week one officially begins) to a first close, most managers take 4 to 6 months in total. There are a few reasons for this.

  • Building a real LP pipeline takes time. You are not pitching a hypothetical fund to a hypothetical list. You are identifying, qualifying, and nurturing actual investors. That process extends well outside any 14-week window.
  • Iterating on materials takes time. Your pitch deck from week eight will improve after real LP conversations. Those conversations happen throughout the curriculum and continue after it ends. The materials evolve.
  • Closing a fund involves legal, banking, and operational steps. Fund formation documents, subscription agreements, bank accounts, and fund administrator onboarding all have lead times. These steps can begin during the curriculum but often extend beyond week 14.
  • Most managers need a few additional weeks after week 14. Some managers close within the curriculum window. That happens. More commonly, the first close lands 6 to 12 weeks after week 14, which puts the full timeline squarely in the 4-to-6-month range.

How the Two Numbers Stack

Put simply: 14 weeks is the curriculum. It has live sessions, milestone deadlines, mentor reviews, and a defined end date. 4 to 6 months is the full fund launch timeline. It is when your fund actually closes and you have capital in the bank. The curriculum is contained inside that larger timeline. They are not competing answers to the same question. They are answers to two different questions.

If someone asks how long the VC Lab program is, the answer is 14 weeks. If someone asks how long it takes to launch a fund through VC Lab, the answer is 4 to 6 months from start to first close.

How Many Hours Per Week Will VC Lab Take?

The time commitment varies depending on where you are in the process.

  • Weeks 1 to 8: Expect 10 to 15 hours per week. Live sessions, sprint work, and deliverable prep make up the bulk of this time.
  • Weeks 9 to 14: If you are actively raising (and you should be), expect 20 to 25 hours per week. LP outreach, follow-up, deal room maintenance, and legal coordination layer on top of the curriculum work.
  • After week 14: Hours vary based on where you are in your close. Some managers are wrapping up a final close and putting in a heavy push. Others are in a steadier follow-up rhythm. The curriculum cadence is gone, but the fundraising work continues until you close.

Why This Still Beats the Traditional Path

Four to six months sounds like a long time until you compare it to the alternative. Traditional first-time fund managers who raise without a structured program typically spend 18 to 24 months or more getting to a first close. Many never get there at all.

VC Lab compresses that timeline in a few concrete ways. You start with pre-built materials frameworks instead of a blank page. You get access to a pre-vetted LP network that is already oriented toward emerging managers. Fund administration partners are ready on day one, which eliminates weeks of vendor sourcing. And the weekly sprint cadence keeps you moving when independent fundraising often stalls due to lack of structure or accountability.

The 4-to-6-month timeline is not a slow path. It is a dramatically compressed version of what fund formation actually requires.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a break between week 14 and the first close?

There is no formal break. The cadence shifts from curriculum-driven to execution-driven. The live sessions and milestone deadlines end, but the work continues. Most managers use the post-curriculum period to intensify LP follow-up and push toward a close date they have already been building toward since week nine.

What happens if I do not close in 4 to 6 months?

Many funds take longer, and that is not a failure condition. Decile Partners and the broader VC Lab community continue to support managers beyond the curriculum window. You are not cut off at week 14. The support structure remains in place as you work toward your close, however long that takes.

Can I extend the curriculum if I am not ready to move forward?

If you feel you need to restart with a fresh cohort, that option exists. In practice, most managers find it more effective to continue building from where they left off rather than repeating earlier sprints. The materials, relationships, and momentum you have built do not reset, and neither does your LP pipeline.

The Two Numbers Are One Timeline

The 14-week curriculum and the 4-to-6-month fund launch are not contradictory. They are two views of the same compressed process. One describes the structured program. The other describes the full arc from first sprint to first close. Understanding both gives you a realistic picture of what fund formation through VC Lab actually looks like, and why it is a faster, more supported path than anything else available to emerging managers today.

If you are ready to start, apply to the next cohort or review the cohort calendar to find your start date.

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