European founders can de-risk US expansion by proving they can sell to and serve top-tier American enterprise clients from abroad. Legora's CEO set a goal to sign two 'AMLA 200' law firms from Europe first. Achieving this validated their GTM strategy and gave them the confidence to invest in a physical US presence.

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Excel Data exemplifies a modern global startup structure. With three of four co-founders based in India, they built their core tech team there to leverage the big data talent pool. Meanwhile, the CEO relocated to the Bay Area to establish the go-to-market and sales functions, capitalizing on both regions' strengths.

A European founder targeting the US market shouldn't dismiss European VCs. You might be the top priority in a European firm's portfolio, receiving more attention and support than you would as a lower-priority deal for a top-tier, oversubscribed Silicon Valley firm.

The world of Fortune 500 executives is a small, interconnected community. Rather than casting a wide marketing net, focus all energy on securing one key 'lighthouse' customer. Over-deliver value for them, even if the deal isn't profitable. Their endorsement and introductions to peers are more effective than any marketing channel.

A VC advises Korean entrepreneurs to abandon gradual US entry strategies. The effective model is to "parachute" in—relocating solo to a hub like Boston and immersing oneself in the network. This radical, face-time-centric approach is deemed essential for building the momentum needed for US investment and partnerships.

Instead of concentrating its sales force in one region, Deel hired individual salespeople in various countries early in its journey. This counterintuitive move, often criticized as defocusing, allowed the company to quickly test and understand multiple markets in parallel. This strategy was key to rapidly ramping up a global go-to-market motion with localized insights.

The CEO of Korean startup Apollon, who moved his family to Cambridge, argues that sending a representative is insufficient for US expansion. He advises that the CEO must be physically present "on the ground" to build trust, navigate the ecosystem, and demonstrate commitment—a crucial lesson for any international startup targeting the US.

Faced with complex U.S. regulations, Sure's founder went to South Africa. He leveraged its single-regulator system and his personal roots to land his first insurance partner. This validation then served as crucial social proof to sign the same company's U.S. division, de-risking a much larger market entry.

European firm Permira successfully entered the US not by just opening an office, but by relocating its top talent, empowering local decision-making, and accepting years of minimal activity to build relationships and market knowledge before scaling.

When expanding his law firm, John Morgan uses a 'bullets before bombs' strategy. He first enters a new city with a small, low-cost team and ad budget (the 'bullets') to test viability. Only after seeing positive traction does he commit significant capital and resources (the 'bombs'), de-risking growth.

Europe has vibrant startup scenes, but its core challenge is the "scale-up" phase. Promising companies often relocate to the U.S. to access deeper venture capital markets and a larger, more unified customer base for international expansion.