Startup funding is one of the most misunderstood skills a founder can learn — and understanding it could mean the difference between your idea dying in a spreadsheet and it becoming the next company everyone talks about. Here's a story. A friend of mine had built a B2B SaaS tool that her early customers loved. Churn was low. NPS was through the roof. She went to raise a seed round and got rejected by 22 investors in a row. Not because the product was bad. Because she was telling the story all wrong — pitching features when investors wanted to hear about market size and traction. She learned how startup funding actually works. She rewrote her pitch. She raised $1.2 million six weeks later from an angel who had passed on her the first time. The money didn't change because the company changed. The understanding changed. Key Takeaways Startup funding comes in distinct stages — pre-seed, seed, Series A, B, C — and each requires a different story and different metr...
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