Startup Funding: 100 Investor Meetings to Close $2.2M episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 27, 2018 · 47 MIN

Startup Funding: 100 Investor Meetings to Close $2.2M

from The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders · host Omer Khan

Kelsey Recht had to pitch over 100 investors before she could close $2.2M in startup funding for VenueBook. Those SaaS fundraising lessons shaped everything that followed. She went from planning events for friends to building a booking platform that connects event planners with venue managers. Startup funding was just one piece of the puzzle. Kelsey spent her first year talking to venues instead of building software - discovering pain points, finding first customers, and recruiting her first developer from those conversations. That customer-first approach shaped everything VenueBook became. VenueBook has raised over $9 million in venture capital SaaS funding. The $2.2M seed round required 100+ meetings, but the $6M Series A was faster because investors made quick decisions based on real revenue. Kelsey learned that leading with conviction instead of asking for advice transformed her startup funding success. 🔑 Key Lessons 💰 Startup funding requires volume, not just quality: Kelsey pitched over 100 investors for VenueBook's $2.2M seed round, proving that raising a seed round is a numbers game where persistence matters more than a perfect deck. 🧠 Lead with conviction during startup funding meetings: Kelsey initially asked investors for advice, which diluted her pitch. Once she led with unwavering vision, investors responded better because they wanted to back conviction. 🎯 Talk to customers before building any software: Kelsey spent her first year planning events for friends to learn venue pain points. That hands-on discovery revealed venues needed to go digital before any marketplace could work. 📉 Listening too closely to customer requests can hurt growth: VenueBook built features venues asked for, but complexity hurt adoption. Reframing the need into ExpressBook cut booking time by 80%. 🚀 Seed and Series A require different startup funding strategies: Smaller seed investors dragged their feet, while Series A investors decided quickly based on real numbers - making the process far more efficient. Chapters Introduction Kelsey's motivation and background What VenueBook does Business model and revenue streams How the idea for VenueBook started Customer discovery before building software Building software for a paper-based industry Structured data and analytics for venues Start small, think big philosophy First version of the product Objections from venue managers Building critical mass of 100 venues Solving the marketplace chicken-and-egg problem How AdWords drove both buyers and sellers Raising over $9 million in startup funding Lessons from pitching 100 investors Series A fundraising experience Growth experiments that did not work How ExpressBook transformed conversion rates Biggest hiring lessons Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/171 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

Kelsey Recht had to pitch over 100 investors before she could close $2.2M in startup funding for VenueBook. Those SaaS fundraising lessons shaped everything that followed. She went from planning events for friends to building a booking platform that connects event planners with venue managers. Startup funding was just one piece of the puzzle. Kelsey spent her first year talking to venues instead of building software - discovering pain points, finding first customers, and recruiting her first developer from those conversations. That customer-first approach shaped everything VenueBook became. VenueBook has raised over $9 million in venture capital SaaS funding. The $2.2M seed round required 100+ meetings, but the $6M Series A was faster because investors made quick decisions based on real revenue. Kelsey learned that leading with conviction instead of asking for advice transformed her startup funding success. 🔑 Key Lessons 💰 Startup funding requires volume, not just quality: Kelsey pitched over 100 investors for VenueBook's $2.2M seed round, proving that raising a seed round is a numbers game where persistence matters more than a perfect deck. 🧠 Lead with conviction during startup funding meetings: Kelsey initially asked investors for advice, which diluted her pitch. Once she led with unwavering vision, investors responded better because they wanted to back conviction. 🎯 Talk to customers before building any software: Kelsey spent her first year planning events for friends to learn venue pain points. That hands-on discovery revealed venues needed to go digital before any marketplace could work. 📉 Listening too closely to customer requests can hurt growth: VenueBook built features venues asked for, but complexity hurt adoption. Reframing the need into ExpressBook cut booking time by 80%. 🚀 Seed and Series A require different startup funding strategies: Smaller seed investors dragged their feet, while Series A investors decided quickly based on real numbers - making the process far more efficient. Chapters Introduction Kelsey's motivation and background What VenueBook does Business model and revenue streams How the idea for VenueBook started Customer discovery before building software Building software for a paper-based industry Structured data and analytics for venues Start small, think big philosophy First version of the product Objections from venue managers Building critical mass of 100 venues Solving the marketplace chicken-and-egg problem How AdWords drove both buyers and sellers Raising over $9 million in startup funding Lessons from pitching 100 investors Series A fundraising experience Growth experiments that did not work How ExpressBook transformed conversion rates Biggest hiring lessons Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/171 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

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Startup Funding: 100 Investor Meetings to Close $2.2M

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This episode was published on April 27, 2018.

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Kelsey Recht had to pitch over 100 investors before she could close $2.2M in startup funding for VenueBook. Those SaaS fundraising lessons shaped everything that followed. She went from planning events for friends to building a booking platform that...

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