652 - If Investors Can't Find You, They Can't Trust You episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 6, 2026 · 1 MIN

652 - If Investors Can't Find You, They Can't Trust You

from The Daily Hint with Jens Heitland · host Jens Heitland

Why We Built Our Thought Leadership Strategy Backward From a Funding RoundWhen a company prepares to raise capital, most of the visible work happens in the numbers, sharpening revenue models and stress testing projections until the legal structures behind them hold up under scrutiny. That is the part everyone anticipates, and the part everyone spends months preparing for.What gets less attention is the second layer of due diligence, the one that looks at people rather than spreadsheets. Investors do not only ask whether the business case holds. They ask whether the people standing behind it are truly operating at the level the investment depends on, and whether that can be confirmed from the outside, without a single internal conversation.In one pretest we ran ahead of a funding round, this question exposed a gap. The team members who were meant to represent the company, the ones whose credibility the raise partly rested on, had real expertise inside the business, but almost none of it was visible from outside its walls. An investor searching for proof of their standing would have come up short, unable to find the confirmation their own diligence process required.That gap changes how a raise is perceived before a single meeting takes place. Due diligence increasingly begins online, quietly, before any data room is opened. If the people representing a company cannot be found or verified in early search, doubt enters before trust has a chance to form, and the strongest financial model in the world still sits next to a question mark about the humans responsible for executing it.The response was to reverse the usual order of operations. Instead of treating thought leadership as a separate marketing initiative running alongside the fundraising strategy, we looked at the strategic pipeline first and asked which team members needed to be externally credible for this specific raise, and in which field of expertise that credibility needed to show up. From there, a thought leadership approach was built backward from that requirement, aligning the visible presence of each person with the exact competence an investor would be trying to verify.That reversal changes what thought leadership is for. It stops being a general brand exercise and becomes part of the due diligence infrastructure itself. When the right expert is visible in the right field, an investor doing background research finds confirmation instead of a void, and the trust that would otherwise need to be built during the meeting has already been partially established before it starts.There is a broader pattern underneath this specific case. Organizations often separate their communication strategy from their operational strategy, treating one as support material for the other rather than as a structural part of the same system. But when the goal is significant enough, raising capital, closing a partnership, entering a new market, that separation becomes a liability. The people who need to be trusted have to be visible in a way that matches the trust being asked for.What this pretest made clear went beyond marketing into how the whole system was structured. Sometimes the most useful move is to step back from the immediate task and look at the totality of what is required, then work out which people, which experts, and which visible proof points actually connect to that outcome. The capital raise did not need louder marketing. It needed the right people to already be seen as who they were.This holds true well beyond fundraising. Any process where trust is assessed from the outside, a partnership, a board appointment, a key hire, runs on the same quiet mechanism. Visibility either confirms what is true internally or leaves a gap for doubt to fill.Highlights:00:00 Align Raise and Leadership00:13 Investor Due Diligence Basics00:32 Team Credibility Gap01:08 Activating Team Thought Leaders01:29 Step Back and IntegrateLinks:https://www.jensheitland.com/links

Why We Built Our Thought Leadership Strategy Backward From a Funding RoundWhen a company prepares to raise capital, most of the visible work happens in the numbers, sharpening revenue models and stress testing projections until the legal structures behind them hold up under scrutiny. That is the part everyone anticipates, and the part everyone spends months preparing for.What gets less attention is the second layer of due diligence, the one that looks at people rather than spreadsheets. Investors do not only ask whether the business case holds. They ask whether the people standing behind it are truly operating at the level the investment depends on, and whether that can be confirmed from the outside, without a single internal conversation.In one pretest we ran ahead of a funding round, this question exposed a gap. The team members who were meant to represent the company, the ones whose credibility the raise partly rested on, had real expertise inside the business, but almost none of it was visible from outside its walls. An investor searching for proof of their standing would have come up short, unable to find the confirmation their own diligence process required.That gap changes how a raise is perceived before a single meeting takes place. Due diligence increasingly begins online, quietly, before any data room is opened. If the people representing a company cannot be found or verified in early search, doubt enters before trust has a chance to form, and the strongest financial model in the world still sits next to a question mark about the humans responsible for executing it.The response was to reverse the usual order of operations. Instead of treating thought leadership as a separate marketing initiative running alongside the fundraising strategy, we looked at the strategic pipeline first and asked which team members needed to be externally credible for this specific raise, and in which field of expertise that credibility needed to show up. From there, a thought leadership approach was built backward from that requirement, aligning the visible presence of each person with the exact competence an investor would be trying to verify.That reversal changes what thought leadership is for. It stops being a general brand exercise and becomes part of the due diligence infrastructure itself. When the right expert is visible in the right field, an investor doing background research finds confirmation instead of a void, and the trust that would otherwise need to be built during the meeting has already been partially established before it starts.There is a broader pattern underneath this specific case. Organizations often separate their communication strategy from their operational strategy, treating one as support material for the other rather than as a structural part of the same system. But when the goal is significant enough, raising capital, closing a partnership, entering a new market, that separation becomes a liability. The people who need to be trusted have to be visible in a way that matches the trust being asked for.What this pretest made clear went beyond marketing into how the whole system was structured. Sometimes the most useful move is to step back from the immediate task and look at the totality of what is required, then work out which people, which experts, and which visible proof points actually connect to that outcome. The capital raise did not need louder marketing. It needed the right people to already be seen as who they were.This holds true well beyond fundraising. Any process where trust is assessed from the outside, a partnership, a board appointment, a key hire, runs on the same quiet mechanism. Visibility either confirms what is true internally or leaves a gap for doubt to fill.Highlights:00:00 Align Raise and Leadership00:13 Investor Due Diligence Basics00:32 Team Credibility Gap01:08 Activating Team Thought Leaders01:29 Step Back and IntegrateLinks:https://www.jensheitland.com/links

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652 - If Investors Can't Find You, They Can't Trust You

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Why We Built Our Thought Leadership Strategy Backward From a Funding RoundWhen a company prepares to raise capital, most of the visible work happens in the numbers, sharpening revenue models and stress testing projections until the legal structures...

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