I consider that it is a startup when it hasn't found a product-market fit, i.e. it is not profitable.

As soon as it is profitable, it is a normal company. Small or big.

An established company has established products and keep building/improving them. A startup does not have that: they just have ideas and try them until one works, or they run out of money. VCs consider it's worth fueling that "trial-and-error" with investments because they believe it is a competent team in a promising field. Nothing more, nothing less, it's just a lottery after that point. Just one where VCs and founders like to believe they are enlightened.

Because the first idea you try is successful does not mean you know more than the (numerous) others, but rather that you were lucky at the first try.