
This Is for Founders Who Already Built Something —
And Are Now Stuck in Fundraising Limbo.
You have an MVP. Some traction. Real conversations.
But no clear plan for who to talk to, what to prioritize, or what actually moves the round forward.
Not because you’re doing nothing.
But because you’re doing everything at once, without a clear system.

You’re speaking with investors, but feedback doesn’t turn into momentum
You’re iterating the pitch deck without knowing what truly matters at your stage
You don’t know which conversations are real signals and which are noise
Outreach feels random instead of structured
Fundraising keeps leaking into your product, team, and focus
Most importantly:
You’re running fundraising alone, without anyone temporarily co-owning the process with you.
That’s why it feels mentally draining and directionless.
Fundraising is about process, not inspiration
It requires clear priorities for this week, not endless iteration
Most founders raise too early, too late, or in the wrong way
Momentum comes from structure, not more conversations
You don’t need more information — you need execution pressure and feedback
Without a system, fundraising will keep stealing focus from running the company

I’m the co-founder and former COO of the fintech startup Swipelux, which I helped build from idea to successful.
With over 7 years of experience in fintech, crypto, and payments, I combine strategy, execution, and product expertise to help startups grow quickly and efficiently.
Key achievements:
Raised $2.5M from Silicon Valley VCs
Built Swipelux into a B2B payment gateway with 180+ clients and $500K ARR
Led a startup from MVP through scaling and exit
Listen to podcasts with me:

Swipelux
Started from $0 with no warm VC network. Built the fundraising engine from scratch, ran hundreds of meetings, iterated the deck relentlessly, and pushed through over 1,000 rejections. Result: Pre-seed, Seed with leading UK VCs, and a Bridge / pre-Series A round from top Silicon Valley investors.
Coingarage - EU Web3 startup
Redesigned the pitch deck based on real investor feedback and built a structured outreach process. Worked closely with the CEO before and after meetings. Result: 50+ investor meetings and consistent, high-quality investor conversations.
BitDCA
Designed the full fundraising process end-to-end, including outreach, data room, and investor communication. Actively participated in negotiations and meetings. Result: 40+ investor meetings and a structured, credible fundraising pipeline within weeks.
Showdown - Game
Helped re-craft the pitch deck and prepared the founder for Tier-1 Web3 VC meetings. Focused on clarity, positioning, and answering hard investor questions. Result: founders walking into top-tier meetings confident and prepared.

A clear fundraising plan tailored to your stage.
What to do now. What to ignore. What to prepare next.
You’ll stop guessing and start executing with intent.

Every two weeks:
live pitch sessions (small group)
direct, concrete feedback
written follow-ups with what to fix and why
No vague encouragement. No “sounds interesting.”

You’ll understand:
which fundraising paths make sense for you
angels vs pre-seed vs seed vs strategic
SAFE, convertible notes, equity rounds
red flags that quietly kill future rounds
Enough to make decisions. Not enough to play lawyer.

Regular sessions focused on:
investor outreach
call preparation
reading investor signals
turning “not now” into future momentum
This is where edge cases get solved.

You get:
pitch deck structure
outreach copy (LinkedIn + email)
data room checklist
investor sourcing workflows
OKR-style reporting during the program
Everything designed to reduce mental load.
You’re working full-time on your startup
You have a live MVP with early traction
(users, pilots, revenue, or a very clear use case)
You’re at pre-seed or seed stage
not an idea, not Series A
You’re actively thinking about fundraising
or already talking to investors
You feel that fundraising is scattered, mentally heavy, and unclear
You’re open to hearing
“don’t do this right now”
You can realistically dedicate at least 2 hours a day to execution
You want a system, pressure, and feedback
not motivation or theory

You’re still at the idea stage or building a side project at night
You’re looking for a guaranteed investment or a shortcut to funding
You want templates and inspiration but don’t want feedback or accountability
You’re not willing to change direction when the data or feedback says so
You expect fundraising to work without focused execution

