As employee #1 of the Bay Area Host Committee with no initial funding, Zayleen Jemuhamed's first move wasn't fundraising. It was securing partners to provide essential services like PR and comms. This strategy builds operational capacity and momentum before a formal seed round.

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To win highly sought-after deals, growth investors must build relationships years in advance. This involves providing tangible help with hiring, customer introductions, and strategic advice, effectively acting as an investor long before deploying capital.

To maximize value creation, young private equity firm Teopo Capital made a strategic decision to hire a full-time operating partner dedicated to portfolio companies before building out a fundraising team. This signals a deep commitment to hands-on operational improvement as their core strategy.

The initial capital for a new fund-of-funds doesn't come from cold outreach to institutions. The process mirrors an emerging VC's first fundraise, relying on a personal network of operators, VCs, and high-net-worth individuals who already believe in the founder. The strategy is to work the existing network outward, not pitch institutions from day one.

Raising venture capital is often a network-driven game. If you don't already have a network of VCs or a clear path through an accelerator, your focus should not be on fundraising. Instead, dedicate your effort to building a product people want and gaining traction. VCs will find you once you have something compelling to show.

A clever strategy for first-time fund managers is to raise smaller checks from a large number of operators and domain experts. While harder to execute, this turns the LP base into a powerful, built-in expert network for diligence and support, converting a fundraising challenge into a strategic asset.

Prepared's founder rejected running a formal fundraising process. Instead, he had infrequent 'coffee chats' with investors to share progress. This built relationships and momentum, leading to preemptive term sheets and much faster closes without the distraction of a full-time fundraise.

In a market where capital is a commodity, early-stage founders prioritize VCs who provide an immediate, tangible edge. The most valuable contributions are warm introductions to land first customers, network access to secure the next round of funding, and unfiltered feedback from experienced operators.

Instead of a formal roadshow, founders should let future lead investors invest small amounts months in advance. Providing them with regular updates and hitting stated milestones builds immense trust, making the actual fundraise a quick, targeted process that optimizes for partner over price.

Instead of immediately hiring after validating his idea, the founder of Sure worked alone for a year. He used this time to secure the company's first critical insurance partner, ensuring the business was on stable footing before asking anyone else to leave their job and join the venture.

Instead of immediately chasing large grants or major donors, MedShadow focuses on building a base of small-dollar donors. This strategy acts as a "proof of concept," demonstrating grassroots support for their mission and building a sustainable foundation for future growth.