The symptom pattern in Tel Aviv startups
You have a signed term sheet from a top-tier Israeli venture fund, but now comes the technical due diligence. Your engineering team is nervous. The codebase is a mix of brilliant innovation and terrifying hacks. There's no formal security policy, the cloud bill is inexplicably high, and the architecture diagrams are either non-existent or two years out of date. The fear of a failed or delayed round due to technical red flags is palpable.
Five technical patterns that cause this
1. The MVP that scaled too fast
You built the product to get traction, not to scale. Now, the monolithic architecture that served you well for the first 100 customers is struggling to support 10,000. Due diligence will uncover these architectural bottlenecks.
2. Security as an afterthought
In the rush to ship, basic security practices were skipped. Hardcoded secrets, unpatched dependencies, and lack of RBAC (Role-Based Access Control) are common in early-stage Tel Aviv startups, but they are immediate red flags for institutional investors.
3. The 'Bus Factor' of one
Only one or two key engineers understand how the entire system works. There is no documentation, runbooks, or disaster recovery plan. VCs see this as a massive operational risk.
4. Open-source licensing nightmares
Developers often pull in open-source libraries without checking the licenses. Copyleft licenses (like GPL) buried in your commercial SaaS product can derail an investment or acquisition instantly.
5. Unpredictable infrastructure costs
Your AWS or GCP bill is growing faster than your revenue, and no one knows exactly why. Investors want to see that your unit economics make sense and that your cloud architecture is optimized for cost-efficiency.
The 90-day playbook
If you have 90 days before the audit, we start with a mock due diligence process. I act as the ruthless VC auditor, finding every skeleton in your codebase. We document the architecture, run automated security and dependency scans, and clean up the licensing. Next, we build a clear, confident narrative around your technical debt—acknowledging it and presenting a roadmap to fix it. Finally, I prep your technical leaders to answer difficult questions from investors with authority and transparency.
What's specific about Tel Aviv
Tel Aviv investors, especially those with deep roots in cybersecurity and enterprise SaaS, conduct incredibly rigorous technical audits. They will dig deep into your CI/CD pipelines, your security posture, and your architecture's scalability. Having an experienced operator who has sat on both sides of the table in Israel means you get prepared for the specific standards demanded by local and global funds investing here.
What "done" looks like
Done means you have a comprehensive, polished data room containing up-to-date architecture diagrams, security policies, and an open-source compliance report. Your team is rehearsed and confident. When the VC's technical auditor starts asking hard questions, your answers are precise, documented, and proactive.
When NOT to hire a fractional CTO for this
If you are raising a pre-seed round from friends and family, formal technical due diligence is rare, and my services might be overkill. However, for a Series A or beyond, or any significant M&A event, going in blind is a massive financial risk.