Seed Round Strategy: $500K-$2M Fundraising Playbook

Master seed round fundraising (2025): 12-week preparation timeline, target investor identification, multi-tranche SAFE strategy, pitching techniques, closing negotiations, cap table planning, avoiding the Series A crunch with 18+ months runway.


Why Seed Rounds Matter More Than Ever in 2025

The seed round is the most important funding milestone for most founders. It’s not because of the capital (though $500K-$2M moves the needle). It’s because the seed round is your first validation from institutional investors. It’s proof that smart money believes in your idea

But here’s what’s changed: the Series A crunch has returned. In 2025, fewer than 10% of seed-funded startups secure Series A funding. This means your seed round has to provide enough runway to reach true Series A metrics: $3M+ ARR, strong unit economics, product-market fit validation

Timeline reality: The seed-to-Series A timeline has stretched to 2.1 years (up from 18 months in 2023). This means your seed capital needs to last 24 months, not 18. Most founders underestimate this

Why This Changes Your Seed Strategy

  • Raise more, not less: Don’t raise $500K if you need $2M to reach Series A. The difference between a $1M and $2M seed is 3-4 additional months of runway. That’s critical in a crunch
  • Focus on lead investors: Smaller angels won’t give you enough capital. You need 1-2 seed VCs who can write $500K+ checks
  • Plan for Second Seed: Many founders now raise Seed + (or Seed 2) 12-18 months after their initial seed. This is no longer unusual. Plan for it upfront

The Current Seed Landscape: What’s Changed in 2025

2025 is a unique moment for seed fundraising. Unlike later-stage rounds (Series A, B), which are contracting, seed rounds are healthy. VCs are deploying capital at seed stage where valuations are still attractive and risk is manageable

2025 Seed Market Data

Metric 2025 Data Trend vs 2024 Implication
Median Seed Round $2.0M – $2.5M Flat Stable market. Not inflated, not crashed. Equilibrium
% of Seed Using SAFE Notes 68-72% ↑ from 62% Easier, faster closes. Equity rounds declining
Median SAFE Cap (Pre-Money) $7M – $12M ↑ from $5M-$8M Higher valuations. Barbell effect: strong companies at $15M+, weak at $3M
Typical Dilution 10-15% Flat Standard. Anything >20% is high
Average Time to Close 12 weeks (85 days) ↑ from 10 weeks Process takes longer. More due diligence. Plan accordingly
% Seed Rounds Using Lead Investor 78% ↑ from 71% Syndication is norm. Hard to raise without clear lead

The Barbell Effect: The Market Is Splitting

Top tier: Startups with $100K-$500K ARR or strong AI/deep tech teams raising $3-4M at $20-25M post-money valuations. These companies are crushing it

Bottom tier: Pre-product or very early startups raising $250K-$500K at $2-4M caps. Hard to raise. Long timeline

Middle gap: Companies with modest traction ($20-50K ARR) struggling to find investors. Too early for Series A funds. Too late for pure angel rounds. This gap is real

What this means for you: Be realistic about where you sit. If you have early revenue, emphasize it. If you’re pre-revenue, focus on team and market. Don’t pretend to be in a tier you’re not


Seed Round Sizing: $500K-$2M Decision Framework

How much should you raise? This is foundational. Too little and you’ll run out of money before reaching Series A metrics. Too much and you’ll have money longer than needed (waste, lack of urgency). Here’s the framework

Runway Calculation: The Real Constraint

Formula: Runway = Cash In Bank ÷ Monthly Burn Rate

Example: You have $100K. You’re burning $15K/month. Runway = 100 ÷ 15 = 6.7 months. That’s dangerous (typical: 12+ months runway minimum)

Seed Round Sizing by Stage

Stage Current ARR Team Size Typical Raise Why
Pre-Product $0 1-2 founders $250K – $500K Build MVP, hire 1-2 people. 12-18 months runway
Early Revenue $10K-$50K ARR 3-5 people $500K – $1M Prove model, scale to $100K+ ARR. 15-18 months runway
Product-Market Fit (PMF) Signal $50K-$150K ARR 5-8 people $1M – $2M Scale fast. Build org. Reach $500K-$1M ARR before Series A. 18-24 months runway
Strong Traction $150K-$500K ARR 8-12 people $1.5M – $3M (seed or seed+) This is really Seed+. Aiming for $2M-$3M ARR at Series A. 18-24 months runway

The $2M Question: Should You Raise More?

Most founders think: “Let’s raise $1M. That’s good seed round.” Wrong. If you have any traction, raise $1.5M-$2M. Here’s why:

  • Margin for error: You’ll miss timelines. Features take longer. Sales cycles extend. More runway = buffer
  • Hiring flexibility: If you only have 12 months runway, you can’t hire (too risky). 18+ months means you can build team
  • Market window: You might need 6 months to find initial product-market fit. Another 8 months to prove it. 14 months gone before you look good for Series A. If you only raised $1M at $20K/month burn, you’re done. If you raised $1.5M, you’re fine

Pro tip: Raise 18-24 months of runway at seed. This is the most expensive capital you’ll ever raise (highest dilution), so make it count


Valuation Strategy: SAFE Caps and Post-Money Multiples

Your valuation (SAFE cap) determines dilution. Higher cap = less dilution for you. But there’s a cost: investors expect higher metrics at Series A. Set cap too high and Series A becomes impossible. Too low and you over-dilute

SAFE Cap Guidelines by Stage (2025)

Stage/Traction Typical SAFE Cap Post-Money at $2M Raise Expected Series A Valuation Consideration
Pre-Product / Idea Stage $3M – $5M $3M – $6M $15M – $20M needed (difficult) Team and market matter most. No revenue = low cap
MVP / Early Traction ($10-50K ARR) $6M – $10M $8M – $12M $25M – $40M (achievable) Revenue is inflection point. Cap jumps here
Product-Market Fit Signals ($50-150K ARR) $10M – $15M $12M – $17M $35M – $60M (realistic) This is the sweet spot. Growth trajectory evident
Strong PMF ($150K-500K ARR) $15M – $25M $17M – $27M (this is Seed+) $60M – $100M+ (expected) Might already be in Seed+ territory. Price this round

The Valuation Trap

Common mistake: Founder raises seed at $20M cap. Series A investors expect $60M valuation. In 18 months you’ve gone from $0 to $500K ARR. That’s 3x growth but not enough for a 3x valuation jump. You end up taking a down-round (painful) or you can’t raise (worse)

Better approach: Conservative seed cap ($8M-$12M for traction). Nail Series A metrics ($3M+ ARR, strong growth). Series A investors prize consistency over wild early growth

SAFE Mechanics: Multi-Tranche Strategy

Many founders use a strategic multi-tranche approach to create momentum. Instead of asking all investors for the same cap, you raise in 3 tranches with escalating caps. This works because:

  • Early investors get best terms (lower cap)
  • Later investors see momentum (others are committed) and become FOMO-driven
  • You can raise 2-3x capital with same effort

Example tranche structure for $2M raise:

  • Tranche 1 (Weeks 1-4): Angel investors, super angels → $600K at $8M cap. Messaging: “Gathering interest”
  • Tranche 2 (Weeks 5-8): Smaller VCs (seed funds) → $800K at $10M cap. Messaging: “We closed $600K from strong angels. Taking a few more investors”
  • Tranche 3 (Weeks 9-12): Lead VC or larger funds → $600K at $12M cap. Messaging: “We closed $1.4M, but taking one final tranche at higher cap”

Key rule: You MUST honor the cap you promise. If you promise $8M cap to early investors, you can’t later offer $20M cap. That’s unethical and word spreads. But escalating caps (within reason) is standard and expected


Phase 1: Preparation (Weeks 1-8)

Most founders jump straight to pitching. Mistake. The first 8 weeks are about silent preparation: building materials, getting organized, laying groundwork. This phase determines 60% of your success

Week 1-2: Preparation Foundation

Assemble Core Team

Who’s on your fundraising team? Usually: CEO + CFO (or operational cofounder). Some startups add an investor relations person or experienced advisor. One person (CEO) should lead

Divide responsibilities: CEO does pitching. CFO manages financials, cap table, due diligence. Advisor network/outreach (if you have one)

Assemble Materials

You need: Pitch deck (15-20 slides), Executive summary (1 pager), Data room (Google Drive folder with financials/metrics), Metrics dashboard (what are you tracking?)

Be realistic about quality. Your pitch deck doesn’t need to be beautiful (though it helps). It needs to tell a clear story. Many famous founders pitch from terrible decks. Substance > design

Lock Valuation and Round Terms

Before you pitch anyone, decide: What’s my SAFE cap? What’s my round size? Example: “$1.5M seed on $10M SAFE cap.” Know this cold. Investors will ask. Indecision kills momentum

Week 3-4: Warm Introductions Preparation

You need warm intros to 95%+ of investors you’ll pitch. This isn’t negotiable. Cold emails to VCs have 2% response rate. Warm intros have 40%+ response rate

Who gives warm intros? Your advisors, prior investors (if you had angel investors), successful founders you know, current customers, partners. Anyone credible who can say “I know this founder and believe in them”

How to ask: Email intro: “I’d like to introduce [Founder] from [Company]. They’re raising a $1.5M seed. This is right up your alley because [1 sentence on fit]. Happy to jump on call if useful”

Spend weeks 3-4 collecting warm intros. Have every potential advisor or connector you know make 5-10 intros. A founder should have 20+ warm intro requests lined up before pitching

Week 5-8: Soft Conversations

Start taking meetings with investors. These are NOT formal pitches. They’re conversations. Goal: Get feedback on your pitch, refine materials, understand what investors care about, get a sense of interest level

Format: 20-30 minute call. Talk through your idea. Ask investor questions: “What’s your investment thesis? What would make you invest in something like this?” Listen 60%. Talk 40%

Volume: Do 15-20 of these conversations. You’ll get feedback like: “Your market sizing is too aggressive” or “Why are you focused on X when Y is bigger?” Use this to refine


Building Your Target Investor List: 50-75 Investors

You can’t raise a seed round without a systematic target list. Spray and pray doesn’t work. You need 50-75 qualified investors organized by tier

Investor Tiers

Tier Type Check Size Count Target Why
Tier 1 Lead VCs (seed stage focused) $500K – $1.5M 3-5 These will lead or be co-leads. You need 1-2 committed
Tier 2 Smaller VCs + Micro VCs $100K – $400K 10-15 Syndicate partners. Will follow lead or stand alone
Tier 3 Super angels + Angel syndicates $25K – $100K 15-20 Quick to decide, quick to write checks. Fill gaps
Tier 4 Regular angels + Platforms (AngelList, etc.) $5K – $50K 20-30 Scale. Lots of these won’t invest but some will

How to Build Your List

Use data sources:

  • Crunchbase (filter by investors in your sector, stage, region)
  • PitchBook (similar filters, more institutional)
  • LinkedIn (search “Seed investor” or “VC” in your region)
  • AngelList (see who’s investing, what stages, ticket sizes)
  • Investor Twitter accounts (see what they’re interested in)

Research each investor: What have they invested in recently? What’s their stated thesis? What geographic region? Sector focus? Stage focus? A VC that invests only in Series A won’t look at your seed

Organize in spreadsheet: Name, email, firm, Tier, check size history, stage focus, sector, recent investments, warm intro source, email status, meeting status. This becomes your dashboard

Qualification rule: Only include investors who have: (a) Invested in your stage in last 12 months, (b) Can write checks in your target range, (c) Sector/geographic fit


Pitching Strategy: Initial Meetings to Formal Process

You’re not just pitching. You’re running a sales process. Think of it that way. You’re trying to close investors like you’d close customers

The Pitch Meeting Structure (30 Minutes)

Segment Time What You Do Goal
Warm-up 0-3 min Small talk, thank them for time, brief intro Build rapport
Problem & Vision 3-8 min Describe the problem. Show market size. Why this matters. Vision of solution Investor gets why this is important
Solution & Product 8-12 min Show product demo (5 min max). Explain why it’s better than alternatives Tangibility. Investor sees you’ve built something
Traction & Metrics 12-17 min Share your metrics: revenue, customers, growth rate, unit economics Prove this isn’t vaporware. Show momentum
Team & Why You 17-20 min Show team. Why you’re the right people to execute. What’s your unfair advantage? De-risk execution. Show you’re credible
Ask & Use of Capital 20-23 min “We’re raising $1.5M on a $10M SAFE cap. We’ll use it for: product (30%), sales (50%), ops (20%)” Clarity on amount, valuation, use. Remove ambiguity
Questions & Conversation 23-30 min Investor asks tough questions. You answer honestly Investor feels heard. You show conviction and honesty

The Formal Process Launch (Week 9)

After 4-5 weeks of informal meetings, you launch a formal process. This signals seriousness. Email investors: “We’ve been talking to strategic investors. We’re excited about momentum and formally launching our raise on [date]. Here’s our pitch deck and summary. We’ll be taking calls the next 4 weeks”

Why formal matters: Creates time pressure. Investors see you’re “on process.” Others will move faster if they think they might miss out. This is psychology, but it works

Pitch deck quality: By week 8, your deck should be dialed. Clean. Storied. You’ve done 20+ pitches and refined based on feedback. Your 10th pitch should be better than your 1st


SAFE Mechanics: Multi-Tranche Strategy and Caps

SAFEs (Simple Agreements for Future Equity) are the dominant instrument for seed rounds in 2025. They’re faster and simpler than priced equity. Here’s how to structure them strategically

What is a SAFE?

A SAFE is an agreement that says: “You’re investing X dollars now. When the company raises priced equity round (Series A), your SAFE converts to equity at a discount to Series A price or at a valuation cap (whichever is better for you)”

Key terms: Valuation cap (e.g., $10M cap), discount (e.g., 20% discount), investment amount (e.g., $100K)

Cost of SAFE to startup: $500-$1,500 in legal fees (way cheaper than priced equity round which costs $15K-$25K). Time to close: 2-3 weeks vs 8-12 weeks for priced round

Multi-Tranche SAFE Strategy (Detailed Example)

Target: Raise $1.8M over 12 weeks

Tranche 1 (Weeks 3-5): Angels Only – $500K

Message: “We’re in early conversations with investors.” Offer: $500K on $8M cap, 20% discount. Focus: Personal connections, super angels, friends & family who have liquid capital

Why $8M cap? You want to reward these early believers with best terms. Also, $8M is believable with your traction

Target: 8-10 angel investors, $50K-$75K each

Tranche 2 (Weeks 6-9): Micro VCs and Smaller Funds – $800K

Message: “We’ve closed $500K from top angels (list names). Taking a few institutional investors.” Offer: $800K on $10M cap, 15% discount

Why higher cap? You’ve de-risked (angels already invested). Micro VCs are taking less risk. Higher cap is justified

Target: 4-8 micro VC funds, $100K-$200K each

Tranche 3 (Weeks 10-12): Lead VC or Final Close – $500K

Message: “We’re at $1.3M committed. Taking one final investor to round us out.” Offer: $500K on $12M cap, 10% discount

Why highest cap? You’re fully committed. This is polishing. Lead VCs write large checks but expect to see momentum first

Target: 1 lead VC or 2-3 larger micro VCs

Executing the Multi-Tranche

Critical rule: Don’t tell early investors about later tranches at higher caps. Just don’t. If they ask “Can I get in at the next cap?” say: “No, you’re locked at $8M. These terms are only for this round”

Managing SAFEs: Use Carta or Pulley to track all SAFEs. You’ll have 15-30 of them by end of process. Keep spreadsheet: investor name, amount, cap, discount, date signed. Update cap table weekly

SAFE documents: Use Y Combinator’s standard SAFE template. It’s industry standard, well-drafted, takes 2-3 days for investor to review. Most sophisticated investors will accept it. Some will ask for tweaks (small ones, usually acceptable)


Closing Tactics: Creating Momentum and Closing the Round

The last 4 weeks of your fundraising process are all about closing. You have commitments from some investors. Others are on the fence. Your job: Create FOMO and push fence-sitters to commit

Momentum Signals

Every time you close an investor, tell your other open investors: “Great news: we just closed $XXK from [Name/Firm].” This signals momentum. It creates pressure

Example: Week 9: Close $200K from micro VC. Immediately email 8 other open investors: “Update: we just closed from [VC Firm]. Our round is filling up. If you’re interested, now’s the time”

The close date: Tell investors: “We’re closing this round on [specific date, 2 weeks out].” A deadline creates urgency. Without it, investors procrastinate forever

The Final Push

In the last 2 weeks, call every investor who’s expressed interest but not committed. Ask directly: “Are you in or out? Help me understand what you need to decide”

Many investors will say: “I need to talk to my partner” or “Let me review docs.” That’s fine. But get to yes/no. Don’t let people hang in limbo

Closing tools: Use email to keep paper trail. Always follow up phone calls with email: “Appreciate our conversation. Here’s the SAFE docs. Timeline is [date]. Excited to work together”

The Last Investor Trick

Sometimes you’re $100K short of your goal with 1 week left. You have 3 options: (a) extend timeline, (b) do a bridge loan from existing investor, (c) one more person at higher cap

Many founders will email a trusted super angel: “We’re at $1.7M, closing next week. Would you do $100K to round us to $1.8M?” Most will say yes. You want strong relationships for exactly this moment


Cap Table Impact: Dilution and Future Rounds

Every SAFE you sign dilutes you. You need to understand how much and plan for Series A

Dilution Calculation

Example: You have 10M shares. You raise $1.5M on $10M SAFE cap. At Series A, assume $40M post-money valuation

SAFE conversion: $1.5M converts at $10M cap = 1.5M shares (15% ownership at conversion)

Total shares post-Series A: 10M (founders) + 1.5M (SAFE investors) = 11.5M shares. You own 10/11.5 = 87% (down from 100%)

New Series A investor gets 20% = 2.875M shares. Post-money: 11.5M + 2.875M = 14.375M

Your ownership after Series A: 10/14.375 = 69.5% (down from 87%)

Key insight: Multi-SAFE rounds dilute more than single large round. If you do 3 tranches (8M cap, 10M cap, 12M cap), your dilution might be 12-15% from SAFEs alone. Then Series A adds another 15-25%. You end up 50-60% owner after Series A

The Series A Dilution Crunch

Here’s what founders don’t realize: SAFEs compress at Series A. If you raise $1.5M on $10M cap across 20 investors, they all convert at roughly the same time. That creates massive dilution in one event

Better approach: Raise fewer SAFE tranches (combine into 1-2 rounds). Or raise smaller seed ($500K) and plan for Seed+ (additional $1.5M) as priced round when you have more traction

Model your cap table: Before you fundraise, build a financial model showing: Seed dilution, Seed+ dilution, Series A dilution, ownership post-each-round. You’ll be shocked. Most founders realize they’ll own 45-50% after Series A. Not 80%. Plan accordingly


Post-Close: Board Structure and Investor Management

Closing the round is not the finish line. It’s the beginning. Now you have investors to manage and board to structure

Board Setup

For a pure SAFE round (no lead investor seat), your board is typically: Founder/CEO + 1 advisor seat (optional). That’s it. SAFEs don’t guarantee board seats

But if you have a lead VC investing $500K+, they’ll often ask for board observer rights (not a seat, but they attend meetings). This is normal. Say yes

If moving toward Series A: When you take a Series A (priced round), the lead investor will take a board seat. Plan for this. Prep for board governance now

Investor Communication Plan

Send monthly updates to all investors. Even SAFE investors. Even small angels. A one-page email with: Top 3 wins, key metrics, challenges, asks. Takes 1-2 hours. Keeps investors informed and engaged

Many founders disappear after closing. Bad idea. Your investors are network, advisors, and next round catalysts. Treat them that way


Common Mistakes That Slow Seed Rounds

Mistake 1: Pitching to Wrong Investors

Wrong: Pitching Series A VCs when you should pitch angels. Wasting time on VCs who don’t do seed

Better: Know each investor’s stage focus. Research before you pitch. Ask warm intro source: “Is this investor still actively doing seed?”

Mistake 2: Raising Too Little Capital

Wrong: “Let’s raise $500K. That’s enough.” Then 18 months later you’re out of runway before hitting Series A metrics

Better: Model your burn. Plan for Series A timelines (2.1 years now). Raise 18-24 months of runway. This is your only chance to raise capital at this price

Mistake 3: Not Setting Clear Timeline

Wrong: Investors never know when you’re closing. They procrastinate. Process drags 6 months

Better: Set close date 4-6 weeks into process. “We’re closing Sept 30. After that, round is closed.” Deadline drives urgency

Mistake 4: No Lead Investor

Wrong: Trying to raise $1.5M from 15 angels at $100K each. Takes forever. No single person pushing process forward

Better: Get 1 lead investor ($400K-$600K) + syndicate around them. Lead investor champions you. Process moves faster

Mistake 5: Being Dishonest About Metrics

Wrong: “We have 50 customers” (actually 5 pilot customers). “Revenue is $20K/month” (was one large contract, not sustainable). Investors will discover truth. Credibility destroyed

Better: Be honest. “We have 5 customers, 2 are strong pilots, 3 in negotiation. Revenue this month is $15K but run rate is $5K/month.” Honesty builds trust


Key Takeaways: Seed Round Mastery

1. The seed landscape in 2025: $2-2.5M median round, 72% using SAFEs, 12-week typical timeline. Series A crunch means seed-to-A takes 2.1 years now (not 18 months)

2. Raise 18-24 months of runway. Don’t raise $500K if you need $2M. The Series A timeline has extended. You need buffer. This is the cheapest capital you’ll ever raise per day of runway

3. Round sizing by stage: Pre-product $250K-$500K (12-18 mo runway). Early revenue $500K-$1M (15-18 mo runway). PMF signals $1M-$2M (18-24 mo runway)

4. SAFE cap guidelines: Pre-product $3-5M, Early traction $6-10M, PMF signals $10-15M, Strong PMF $15-25M. Conservative caps let you raise Series A without down-round risk

5. Preparation is 50% of success. Weeks 1-8 are silent prep: materials, warm intros, soft meetings, refinement. Don’t pitch until you’re ready. Bad pitch leaves impression. Better to not pitch than to pitch poorly

6. Build target list of 50-75 investors: Tier 1 (3-5 lead VCs), Tier 2 (10-15 micro VCs), Tier 3 (15-20 super angels), Tier 4 (20-30 angels). Qualify each by stage/sector/check size fit

7. Warm intros are critical. 95%+ should be warm. Cold emails have 2% response. Warm intros 40%+. Spend weeks 3-4 building warm intro pipeline before pitching

8. Pitch structure: 30 minutes – Problem/Vision (8 min), Solution/Product (4 min), Traction/Metrics (5 min), Team/Why You (3 min), Ask/Use of Capital (3 min), Questions (7 min). Practice until natural

9. Multi-tranche SAFE strategy creates momentum. Raise in 3 tranches: Angels ($500K at $8M cap), Micro VCs ($800K at $10M cap), Lead VC ($500K at $12M cap). Escalating caps create FOMO among later investors

10. SAFE mechanics: Simple document (use Y Combinator template), 2-3 weeks to close, $500-$1,500 legal cost. Terms: valuation cap (e.g., $10M), discount (e.g., 20%), investment amount

11. Create timeline urgency. Tell investors “We close Sept 30.” Deadline drives decisions. Without deadline, process drags 6+ months. Set close date 4-6 weeks into process

12. Lead investor matters. Get 1 lead ($400K-$600K) + syndicate others. Lead investor champions you, coordinates due diligence, moves process faster. Hard to raise without clear lead

13. Momentum signals work. Every time you close investor, email other open investors: “We just closed $XXK from [firm]. Round is filling up. Interested?” FOMO is real psychology. Use it

14. Dilution compounds across rounds. Seed dilutes you 10-15%. Seed+ dilutes another 8-12%. Series A dilutes another 15-25%. You own ~50-55% after Series A (not 80%). Model this upfront

15. Investor communication post-close. Send monthly updates to all investors (even small angels). One-page email. 1-2 hours. Keeps them engaged. Makes them advocates for future rounds

16. Avoid common mistakes: Don’t pitch wrong investors (Series A VCs for seed stage). Don’t raise too little ($500K when you need $2M). Don’t skip timeline. Don’t avoid lead investor. Don’t be dishonest about metrics

17. Plan for Seed+ from day one. Many companies raise Seed + (second seed 12-18 months later). It’s not a failure. It’s normal in 2025. Budget for it. Know your metrics roadmap to second seed

18. Market timing matters but not as much as you think. Yes, 2025 is good for seed. But if your company is strong, you’ll raise regardless. Focus on traction, not market. Traction > timing

19. Legal cost for seed: SAFE round $500-$1,500 per SAFE. Priced round (if you go that route) $15K-$25K. Cap table management $0 (use Carta for free). Budget $5K-$10K total legal

20. Action plan: (1) Determine round size and cap (model your financials). (2) Build target investor list (50-75 names, organized by tier). (3) Start collecting warm intros (4+ weeks before pitching). (4) Prepare pitch materials (deck, summary, metrics). (5) Do 15-20 soft meetings and refine pitch. (6) Launch formal process with clear timeline. (7) Execute multi-tranche SAFE strategy. (8) Close round 85 days later (approximate). (9) Build cap table model showing Series A dilution. (10) Start monthly investor updates immediately post-close. Seed rounds are winnable. Follow process, stay organized, hustle. You’ve got this

 

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