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Scott Kelly: What actually gets a yes from investors?


Season 9 Episode 119


Scott Kelly is a veteran venture investor and advisor, and we spoke about what it really takes to raise capital after decades on both sides of the table. With 35 years in venture, multiple exits, and billions raised, Scott has seen where founders consistently get it wrong—and what actually moves investors to say yes.

At the center of his approach is preparation and relationship-building. He explains why “running your startup is a full time job and raising capital is a full time job,” and why shortcuts don’t work. Instead of blasting pitch decks, Scott stresses building a vetted network—“a minimum of 100 to 200 people”—who invest in your industry and stage, then earning the right to pitch through real engagement.

We also break down what investors expect when you finally get the meeting: a clear problem, a differentiated solution, a capable team, real competition awareness, a credible exit path, and a precise plan for how the money will be spent. Scott is blunt about resilience, reminding founders that rejection is part of the process, and that sometimes “the best raise, the way to raise capital is go sell something” before chasing investors.

This conversation gives founders a grounded, no-nonsense roadmap for raising capital without wasting time, burning relationships, or fooling themselves about what investors actually look for.

Key takeaways

  • Build investor relationships long before you ask for money
  • Target investors by industry and company stage
  • Maintain a network of at least 100–200 qualified investors
  • Pitch decks must answer problem, solution, market, team, and exit
  • Expect many no’s and keep updating investors with traction


Published on 3 days, 5 hours ago






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