All Collections
Getting Started
Investors
Submitting interest in a company
Submitting interest in a company
Updated over a week ago

Expressing interest in a company: Step-by-step guide

Submitting interest helps us gauge how much demand there is for a company, and it will let us know which companies you want to be notified about moving forward

For "Preview" companies where we have access to shares, once we have collected enough demand, we'll start work on a live offering. For companies where we don't have shares, the demand helps us prioritize sourcing.

Entering pricing information is helpful but is not required. We only take into account recent demand, so it's important that you confirm your interest periodically to keep it up to date.

I submitted an interest in a company, and now it's missing from My Watchlist. Where did it go?

If you had previously submitted interest in a company and it no longer appears in your My Watchlist view, it is because your interest has expired. We provide rolling reminders to encourage you to keep your interest fresh, enabling our team to bring the deals you care most about to market. After a certain period of time—typically 180 days—if you have not updated your interest, we will mark the interest expired. This ensures our order book is kept up to date.

Please note: if your interest has expired, you will not receive an alert when a deal goes live in that company. Therefore, it is crucial to keep your interests as updated as possible. If you want to create an interest in a company after your old interest has expired, you can easily do so by searching for the company on our Listings page and clicking the Submit Interest button once on that company's page.

As a reminder, submitting interest helps us gauge how much demand there is for a company. For "Preview" companies where we have access to shares, once we have collected enough demand, we'll start work on a live offering. For companies where we don't have shares, the demand helps us prioritize sourcing.

Did this answer your question?