Comparison
Quick answer
Venture capital (VC) funds early-stage and growth-stage startups in exchange for equity — betting on high-risk, high-reward outcomes across a portfolio of companies. Private equity (PE) acquires majority stakes in mature, established businesses — using leverage, operational improvements, and financial engineering to generate returns. VC is about funding innovation and scaling new businesses; PE is about buying and optimizing existing ones. The two serve very different types of companies at very different stages.
PE and VC are not competing options for the same company — they serve fundamentally different stages and types of business. Startups need VCs; mature businesses considering exits or buyouts need PE. Understanding which type of capital is appropriate depends entirely on your company's maturity, profitability, and the kind of partner relationship you want. For most founders, VC is the relevant path; for most business owners contemplating succession or scale, PE is worth exploring.
Hourly rate
$150–$400/hr
Most common for financial modeling, analysis, and strategy sessions
Per session
$200–$600
Typical for a 60–90 minute advisory or review session
Monthly retainer
$2,000–$8,000/month
For fractional CFO engagements (typically 1–3 days/week)