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Seed Money
Seed Money
Author: Jayla Siciliano
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© 2026
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Welcome to Seed Money, this is the podcast for early-stage CPG founders who are looking to raise your first round of funding from angel investors, even with no experience and no connections.
If you are at the pre-seed or seed stage and need $100K to $500K to finally go all in on your company, this show is for you. Especially if you feel stuck, under-connected, unsure who to trust, or frustrated by investors who ghost you. Seed Money gives you clarity, confidence, and practical next steps so fundraising stops feeling mysterious and starts feeling doable.
Before going on Shark Tank and securing a deal with Mark Cuban, I raised $450K in angel funding as a first-time, pre-revenue, CPG founder. No industry experience. No network. No safety net. All during a recession. If I could do it, I know you can too. The tools and buzzwords may change, but the fundamentals of raising as a first-time founder have not.
For the past 15 years, I have helped founders prepare pitch decks, master investor Q&A, structure early deals, and raise capital with intention and confidence. Not by chasing investors, but by becoming fundable and finding partners who actually align with their goals.
This podcast is about the fundamentals that matter at the earliest stage. How to think like an investor. How to pitch with calm conviction. How to find the right angels. And how to make smart fundraising decisions that set you up for the long game.
So you can stop guessing. Stop chasing VCs who are not a fit. Stop getting ghosted by that "perfect" investor. And start doing what it takes to attract the right investors and get the funding you need to make your dream a reality.
For tools, resources, and next steps, visit
www.seedmoneypodcast.com
If you are at the pre-seed or seed stage and need $100K to $500K to finally go all in on your company, this show is for you. Especially if you feel stuck, under-connected, unsure who to trust, or frustrated by investors who ghost you. Seed Money gives you clarity, confidence, and practical next steps so fundraising stops feeling mysterious and starts feeling doable.
Before going on Shark Tank and securing a deal with Mark Cuban, I raised $450K in angel funding as a first-time, pre-revenue, CPG founder. No industry experience. No network. No safety net. All during a recession. If I could do it, I know you can too. The tools and buzzwords may change, but the fundamentals of raising as a first-time founder have not.
For the past 15 years, I have helped founders prepare pitch decks, master investor Q&A, structure early deals, and raise capital with intention and confidence. Not by chasing investors, but by becoming fundable and finding partners who actually align with their goals.
This podcast is about the fundamentals that matter at the earliest stage. How to think like an investor. How to pitch with calm conviction. How to find the right angels. And how to make smart fundraising decisions that set you up for the long game.
So you can stop guessing. Stop chasing VCs who are not a fit. Stop getting ghosted by that "perfect" investor. And start doing what it takes to attract the right investors and get the funding you need to make your dream a reality.
For tools, resources, and next steps, visit
www.seedmoneypodcast.com
73 Episodes
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Numbers won't make them care—your story will. In this episode, you'll learn how to grab investor attention with a pitch that actually connects. If you're tired of wasting time and getting minimal responses, this is your wake-up call. Hit play to learn how to stand out. Topics Covered; Why your founder story matters more than data at the early stage What investors are really evaluating when you don't have traction yet The three elements that make a founder story credible instead of pitchy How to tell a problem story that creates trust in under 60 seconds Why investors back conviction before they back certainty The biggest storytelling mistakes founders don't realize they're making How emotion builds credibility without sounding dramatic or rehearsed Why skipping your personal "why" quietly weakens your pitch How to structure your story so investors want the next meeting What makes an investor believe you won't quit when things get hard About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Subscribe, Rate, & Review Please rate, follow, and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! Disclaimer The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
It's 2026, and it's a good time to refresh your fundraising mindset. Budgets are fresh, investors are considering where to put their money, and LinkedIn is buzzing about how "now is the window." If you position yourself correctly, you could have closed your funding round by June. But no matter how much motivation you have, or how fired up investors are, founders are still being held back by basic, really simple gaps in their approach. Gaps that seem minor but quietly cost you momentum, meetings, and ultimately the funding you need. Most founders don't lose deals because the idea isn't good enough. They lose them because of what's missing in their strategies (even if they have a great business or idea). So before you send another pitch deck or book another investor meeting, there's a simple exercise you can do to make sure you're not getting ruled out before the conversation even starts. What are investors noticing that you're too close to see? What might be quietly stopping them from ever responding? In this episode, we walk through a simple but confronting exercise every founder should do before sending another pitch. Topics Covered; Why most pitch decks fail before the first meeting even happens The exercise that exposes hidden deal-breakers fast Why paragraphs, jargon, and over-explaining silently kill investor interest How to clearly answer the real question investors care about The credibility gap founders underestimate and how to close it without revenue How unrealistic valuations signal self-awareness problems, not confidence The difference between how founders think investors evaluate deals and how they actually do The true barrier to fundraising (not market conditions) About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Subscribe, Rate, & Review Please rate, follow, and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! Disclaimer The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
Getting an investor to fund your business isn't just about your idea, industry, team, or even your business model. What can help or tank your efforts often comes down to how you show up in the room. Your mindset, how you handle the power dynamics, and whether you actually see yourself as the one offering value, not asking for it. The truth is that many founders operate from a place of desperation, and investors can sense it immediately. You lose sight of the fact that you and your business are the prize. You treat the investor like a boss, not a peer, or you say your schedule is completely open. You come across as overly eager or grateful for the opportunity. These are all things that quietly make an investor pull back, even if the idea itself is strong. If you walk into investor conversations acting like you're asking for permission instead of offering an opportunity, getting funding is harder. This is something founder-turned-angel investor Shefqet Avdullau knows all too well. As a super-connector with deep experience on both sides of the table, he brings a rare perspective shaped by building, exiting, and now backing companies. How should founders actually show up in investor conversations? How do you know when an investor will help you build something, or quietly make things harder? In this episode, we unpack the parts of fundraising no one puts on the pitch deck: why desperation is detectable (and deadly), why treating investors like they're above you destroys leverage, and why confidence is often what really moves a round forward. Topics Covered; Why fundraising fails before the pitch even begins How to avoid looking desperate to investors The subtle signals investors read instantly, including desperation and lack of leverage How to engineer FOMO using calendar density and scarcity Why "owning the elephant in the room" builds more trust than perfect metrics ever will The soft-commit strategy founders should use before officially opening a round Why a bad investor is often 10x worse than no investor The SAFE agreement mistake that can cost you your company Why easy yeses are a red flag, not a win The "two-week vacation test" reveals if you've got a company or a stressful job How founders accidentally become bottlenecks About the Guest Shefqet Avdullau is a founder, active angel investor, board advisor, and "super connector," primarily in the tech ecosystem. He has made 17 investments in the last four years, with two successful exits. Today, he backs advisors and mentors tech startups, using his experience to help new founders navigate the challenges with strategic funding and real-world guidance. Having started his career as a software engineer and later founding, scaling, and exiting his own ventures, he brings an operator-first perspective to early-stage investing. For more of Shefqet's insights, find him on LinkedIn. About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Subscribe, Rate, & Review Please rate, follow, and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! Disclaimer The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
We spend so much time stressing about pitch decks…the formatting, the stats, and the perfect slide order. But honestly, that's not what trips most founders up. The real issue is way simpler: a lot of us just aren't telling investors what they actually need to hear. Not because our ideas are bad, but because the way we explain them ends up hiding the good stuff. Last week I listened to sixteen founder pitches in a row. Different industries, different personalities, and different business models. And while every single one had real potential, almost all of them shared the same 5 blind spots. What stood out wasn't the mistakes themselves, but how shockingly easy they are to fix. The founders who nailed just a few simple things immediately came across clearer, more confident, and honestly… way more fun to listen to. The difference between a forgettable pitch and a memorable one usually isn't a full overhaul. It's tiny tweaks, and once those clicks happen, the whole pitch lands differently. In this episode, I go through the 5 common mistakes I see in founder pitches, and why correcting them will get (and keep) the attention of investors. Topics Covered; Why most founders bury the most important part of the pitch How jargon kills investor confidence, even when the idea is great. The "single-takeaway rule" that instantly makes your deck clearer and more persuasive What investors actually want to know about your funding ask Invisible deal-breakers: lack of passion, weak projection, and low energy How to present traction even when you don't have revenue yet How to communicate a credible 18-month plan investors can believe in Verbal, visual, and emotional signals that matter far more than data points About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/
For years, there was a formula for raising money from VC's: perfect your pitch deck, polish your twelve slides, practice the elevator pitch, and hope someone in the limited VC circle gives you a shot. But that formula worked in a different era, when venture capital was still a close knit club and the same 1,200 people decided which ideas got funded. Those limited rules don't apply anymore. And this shift is not only relevant in VC but also when pitching angel investors. What Robert Harary has lived firsthand is that the investors who matter today aren't looking for perfect companies. They're looking for founders who are honest, self-aware, and willing to build in the open. The people who win now aren't necessarily the most connected; they're the ones who are real, transparent, and building relationships instead of performances. Robert's story is a perfect example of that shift. He raised his first million at 17 with zero network, went on to back more than 300 startups as a VC, and is now building Raisi.ai, a platform that automatically connects founders and investors, no warm intros required. In this conversation, we talk about why the old "pitch-only based" era of fundraising is over, what he sees as a new partnership-driven model, and how authenticity has quietly replaced access as the most valuable currency in venture capital. Topics Covered; Why the old fundraising playbook stopped working, and what replaced it How to raise capital without a network, connections, or pedigree What investors now value most in founders (and why "perfect" is a red flag) How to shift from perfect pitch-based to partnership-based fundraising The rise of platforms like Raisi.ai and what they signal about the future of venture How transparency and imperfection can actually strengthen investor trust What the post-2021 "venture reset" means for early-stage founders How founders can build investor relationships months before raising a round The subtle red flags that turn investors off before a single slide is shown Guest Bio Robert Harary is an early-stage VC investor, founder, and lifelong believer that access to capital shouldn't depend on who you know. He found his first deal while sitting in high school detention and has spent the decade since working to make fundraising more transparent, efficient, and equitable. Today, Robert is the #2 at Evolution VC Partners, a leading firm with 300+ portfolio companies in the Culture Tech space. Robert co-founded Raisi, a platform that automatically connects founders and investors, matching great ideas with the right capital every eight minutes. Raisi is built on a simple belief: founders shouldn't have to rely on elite networks or endless introductions to get funded. The company is redefining how startups raise money by making investor access smarter, faster, and more inclusive. Collectively, the companies Robert has worked with have raised more than $1.2 billion from firms like Sequoia, a16z, Accel, YC, and Village Global. Sign up for https://raisi.ai/ and mention The Seed Money Podcast to get a discount. Connect with Robert on LinkedIn. About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow, and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! Disclaimer The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
Starting a beverage brand might be one of the hardest things you can do in CPG. The margins are thin, the logistics are brutal, and most investors will tell you not to even try. But Harvard Business School grad Vanessa Royle and her co-founder did it anyway. They built Tilden, a ready-to-drink, premium non-alcoholic cocktail from the ground up. It all started with kitchen experiments, then they raised their first friends-and-family round with intention, and structured their seed raise to last. From the start, they made one simple but rare choice: to build for profitability, not hype, to grow slowly, stay intentional, and do things on their own terms. But that gets hard once the feedback starts rolling in. Every investor has a different take on pricing, strategy, and what success should look like. Somewhere in all those opinions, even the most confident founder can start second-guessing themselves. Vanessa eventually learned that sometimes, you really do know your business better than any investor. Feedback can be helpful, but it doesn't mean you have to change direction every time someone tells you to. So what did she figure out along the way? And what should CPG founders really look for in an investor? In this episode, Vanessa shares how she tuned out the noise, made the right calls for her company, her unexpected mini Shark Tank moment, and what's next for Tilden as the brand keeps growing. Topics Covered; Why most investors discourage founders from entering the beverage industry How to structure a friends-and-family round that sets you up for long-term success The simple way Tilden kept their cap table clean while bringing dozens of early believers on board What founders get wrong about feedback, and how to know when to trust your instincts instead Why chasing growth too fast can backfire (and how profitability became Tilden's secret advantage) How to prepare for a seed raise when investors keep moving the goalposts What it really takes to stand out in a crowded non-alcoholic category Guest Bio Vanessa Royle is a Harvard Business School grad and co-founder of Tilden, a ready-to-drink, premium non-alcoholic cocktail that redefines how we celebrate without alcohol. After quitting drinking in 2020, Vanessa was frustrated by the lack of sophisticated non-alcoholic options. So she set out to create her own premium ready-to-drink cocktail that's low sugar. She has broken through the initial push and is currently selling in hundreds of stores. To learn more, visit https://drinktilden.com/, follow @drinktilden on Instagram. If you want to learn more about investing, send an email to vanessa@drinktilden.com. About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow, and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
CPG products are notoriously hard to launch, fund, and get onto shelves. That's why the failure rate is so high. But what if right now is actually the best time to do it? The barrier to entry has never been lower, the consumer has never been easier to reach, and the path from idea to traction has never been more open. You can test, sell, and scale from your laptop without begging for retail space or burning through millions in capital. You can start lean, iterate fast, and build credibility through storytelling and traction. You can prove demand before you even produce at scale. Smaller brands are punching above their weight right now, building more influence, more loyalty, and more momentum than the legacy players. The big brands are getting squeezed, while upstarts are thriving in those small, high-end niches that used to feel impossible to break into. So the question isn't can small brands win; it's who's going to take advantage of this moment before the big players catch on? How do you make the CPG shift work in your favor? And if I were starting today, what strategy would I use to actually get funded? In this episode, we dig into what's really happening in the consumer product space and why niche, premium, mission-driven brands are quietly eating the big guys' lunch. Topics Covered; Why this might secretly be the best time to launch a CPG brand How small, focused brands are outpacing legacy giants The smartest ways to test and build traction on a budget Why "profitable and niche" beats "big and fast" every time The story investors actually want to hear (and it's not about scale) The mindset shift that makes entrepreneurship feel less daunting Startups Are Eating Big Food's Lunch About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow, and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
When most people dream about launching a consumer product, they imagine seeing it on store shelves—but few realize what it actually takes to get there. The (painful) truth is, success in CPG isn't about having a great idea. It's about surviving the numbers. Most founders underestimate how much money, time, and data it really takes to earn that spot in a category. And in this business, "bootstrapping" isn't scrappy—it's risky. I've been there. Every year, 90% of new food and beverage products fail. Not because the products aren't good, but because they are under-resourced and lacking funding, velocity, or category dynamics. They try to scale too fast, too wide, or without enough proof. They don't know what it really takes to get into a retailer, or which retailers are worth going after first. And unlike tech, it's much harder to get an early-stage consumer brand funded. Investors want traction, not potential. They want to see that your product moves off shelves, earns repeat customers, and grows a category. So what do you need to know before you raise? What actually makes investors want to bet on your brand? In this episode, I'm joined by Debbie Wildrick, a food and beverage veteran who's spent 30 years leading brands like Tropicana and 7-Eleven. She helps entrepreneurs start small, test smart, and learn fast. We dig into why traction beats hype, how to prove velocity before pitching investors, and why data and storytelling go hand in hand when you're building a brand that lasts. Topics Covered; Why 90% of new food and beverage products fail (and how to be in the 10%) How to test and prove traction before raising seed money The dangers of scaling too fast across multiple retailers What "velocity" really means and why investors care more about it than shelf space How much capital early-stage CPG brands truly need ($200K–$500K pre-revenue) Friends, family, and angel rounds: how to network your way to your first investors Why the path to profitability usually takes four years How to use your "backyard" as the smartest first market test The 10 Pillars of a Successful Company Lessons from brands like Zico, Bai, and other billion-dollar exits Guest Bio Debbie Wildrick is an Executive Leader, Industry Speaker, and Sales and Distribution Expert. Widely touted as the Queen of Beverages, Debbie has been in the food and beverage industry for over 30 years. She is extremely influential, highly experienced, and a titan of the industry. Having been with 7-Eleven and responsible for making decisions that will place powerful industry-dominating brands on store shelves and move into consumers' mouths repeatedly, building store sales and profitability is invaluable. To work with Debbie, visit https://www.debbiewildrick.com/. About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow, and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
If you're raising money, one of the first questions you'll run into is whether to DIY your pitch deck or hire someone to help. And trust me, it's not as straightforward as it sounds. I've wasted money on "professional" help that didn't move the needle, and I've also seen founders burn months trying to DIY when they should have just invested a little upfront. That's the real challenge. It's not just if you can design this yourself. It's knowing when your deck is strong enough to stand on its own. Here's where it gets even more confusing: the number of "pitch deck services" out there promising the world. Some quote a few hundred bucks, others want tens of thousands. And it's not always clear what you're really paying for. Are you getting strategy and feedback that sharpen your story, or just a prettier version of the same weak slides? In this episode, I break down the reality of pitch deck pricing. You'll learn how to figure out if you should do it yourself, what to look for in outside help, and how to avoid wasting time and money on the wrong solutions. Topics Covered; How to tell if your deck is strong enough to DIY, or if it's time to hire The red flags that your pitch isn't landing with investors What freelancers, mid-level designers, and agencies actually deliver (and what they don't) The real price ranges and what you should expect at each level Why overspending too early can waste money, but underspending can cost you months The hybrid approach that gets you professional polish without blowing your budget About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow, and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
When you're building a business that appeals to investors, you have to show that you can scale and stabilize at every level. But here's the thing - scaling isn't clean or painless…it's not supposed to be. It almost always means that things will break. Systems will strain, processes will collapse, and the business will feel unstable. This is inevitable. Growth will always stress the business. As a founder, your mindset shouldn't be preventing stress; it should be preparing for it. Every stage of growth demands that you adapt, fix what cracked under pressure, and put new structures in place that can carry you to the next level. And part of that structure isn't technical at all, it's human. Your inner circle has to be balanced. Too many yeses and you'll miss the weak spots. Too many nos and you'll never take the risks growth requires. What should early-stage founders be thinking about as they grow? How did my guest turn a $30K loan from his 401K into 20+ million in real estate and a $10M a year company? In this episode, I'm joined by entrepreneur, mentor, short-term rental expert, and investor, Josh Hatter. We unpack why scaling is supposed to feel uncomfortable, how to treat breakage as proof of progress, and why curating the right mix of voices around you might be the most important system you ever build. Topics Covered How Josh turned a $30k 401k loan into $20M+ of real estate assets and $100M under management How childhood chaos became his greatest entrepreneurial strength The real reason rental arbitrage is dangerous (and what to do instead) How to survive a once-in-a-lifetime industry collapse like COVID in hospitality Why scaling means breaking your systems on purpose The hardest balancing act in entrepreneurship Why owning the real estate your business operates in is one of the smartest wealth moves you can make How Josh formalized his mentorship group into a nonprofit Guest Bio Josh Hatter is a Short Term Rental (STR) and Bed & Breakfast (B&B) expert investor and entrepreneur. After working in Corporate America, Josh bet on himself to grow a $30,000 401 (k) loan to $20M+ of assets in 12 years of real estate investing through his principles of information arbitrage. He helps high achievers exit corporate America and reach financial independence through hospitality real estate. Visit https://www.joshhatter.com/, send an email to josh@joshhatter.com. To learn more about the mentorship program, visit https://keyscollective.org, and to stay at Josh's rentals, visit staycvp.com. About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow, and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
A lot of founders go into fundraising with the wrong idea about pitch decks. They think the deck has to include everything, every detail about the product, every market stat, every bio. But that's not what a pitch deck is for. The real job of your deck is simple: get you to the next step. It's not supposed to win the deal on the spot. It's supposed to grab attention, tell your story clearly, and make investors want to keep talking to you. Think of it like a billboard. If it's cluttered or confusing, people drive right past it. If it's sharp and clear, they remember it, and that's all you need at this stage. When I was raising money for my first company, I didn't have connections, a big name, or a track record. What I did have was a short, clear deck that told the story simply. That's what got me meetings, credibility, and eventually, funding. Done right, your pitch deck shows you can communicate like a pro and makes the whole fundraising process a lot easier. In this episode, I break down why pitch decks really matter, what most people get wrong, and how to build one that actually gets you in the door. Topics Covered; Why your deck should function like a billboard, not a book How to tell a cohesive story that flows logically and keeps investors engaged The overlooked role of timing, why investors want to know "why now?" How your deck doubles as a tool to force clarity in your business thinking The professionalism test: how fonts, colors, and flow influence investor trust Why tweaking a deck doesn't mean adding slides About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
Podcasting and fundraising don't seem to have much in common until you've done both. On the surface, each looks shiny and glamorous. But behind the curtain, they're two of the hardest things to stick with, and that's why most people quit before they ever see results. What makes them work isn't polish or perfection, it's the grit to keep showing up, the systems that keep you from burning out, and the ability to let your voice evolve as you go. Success comes not from the pitch deck or the perfect script, but from momentum built over time. After a year of podcasting, I've seen just how closely the lessons mirror the fundraising journey. Today, I'm pulling out the biggest insights, the ones that surprised me most, that every founder raising capital should hear. What metrics actually matter in both fundraising and podcasting? How do you shift from a short-term mindset to thinking of the long game? In this episode, I share 8 lessons I've learned from podcasting and why they mirror raising money for your business. Topics Covered: Why consistency is more important than charisma The only metric you should track at the start How to embrace progress over perfection The underestimated role of authenticity in getting investors to lean in The sanity-saving role of systems and processes in keeping you on track Why marketing yourself matters How your voice evolves (and why that's a good thing) About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
When you're getting ready to pitch investors, it's easy to get caught up in saying all the right things. You want to sound polished, credible, maybe even impressive. But in trying to be professional, you might be dialing down the one thing that matters most in the room: your passion. And I don't mean hype or over-the-top energy. I'm talking about real conviction, the kind that shows up in your voice, your body language, and the way you talk about the problem you're solving. Because at the early stage, investors aren't just investing in your business. They're investing in you. They're human, they respond to energy, and your belief gives them permission to believe, too. But here's the tricky part: your belief can get buried under performance or the "professional" tone you think you're supposed to use. So what are the small things that make your pitch lose its punch? How do you actually convey passion, without overdoing it? In this episode, I'm breaking down what it really means to pitch with passion. I'm sharing how to make sure your energy, your story, and your personal connection to the work come through clearly, confidently, and with just the right amount of fire. Topics Covered; How to bring more passion into your pitch without veering into hype Why your "professional mask" could be diluting your conviction What it really means to pitch with energy and urgency The subtle cues that make your pitch feel timid or defensive One mindset shift that instantly changes the power dynamic in any investor meeting About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
When you're building a company, it's tempting to obsess over tactics. What to put in your deck, who to pitch next, which lever to pull. But that's not what separates the founders who break through from the ones who burn out. It's not tactics, it's tolerance. Your tolerance for risk, rejection, ambiguity, and delayed wins is the true edge in early-stage entrepreneurship. When fundraising is slower and the pressure's higher, your ability to keep going without quick results is everything. The founders who survive and grow are the ones who can hold their nerve when things get messy or quiet. How do you determine how much risk and uncertainty you can handle? How do you overcome the fear of wasting your time? In this episode, I'm sharing 3 simple but powerful questions to help you build that tolerance muscle, shift your mindset, and keep showing up even when it feels like nothing's working. Topics Covered; Why "risk" is subjective, and how that shapes your entrepreneurial journey The two types of risk founders must weigh How surviving failure once eliminates the fear of it happening again How to lead with borrowed belief and the most important asset in a pitch The emotional cost of inaction About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
You're doing all you can to reach out to investors, showing up, pitching, and doing everything right, but you're still getting no's… or worse: crickets. Like many businesses, fundraising slows down in summer. Feeling in limbo is one of the worst feelings, and can be super discouraging. Investors are on vacation, inboxes are quiet, and momentum feels like it's evaporated. Unfortunately, when investors leave you hanging, you start to question everything. One of the hardest truths about early-stage fundraising is this: rejection and being in limbo are part of the deal. It's normal to feel like you're putting in the work and not seeing results. But there are steps we can take to stay grounded when we're not getting the feedback or traction we hoped for. So, how do we stay mentally sharp when progress feels invisible? In this episode, I'm sharing 8 ways to deal with rejection, silence, and the feeling of being stuck in fundraising limbo. Topics Covered; Why not hearing back is more discouraging than a "no" How to mentally handle the summer slowdown How to normalize rejection and slow responses Why tracking pitch volume matters more than tracking outcomes What to do when rejection hits or you feel stalled The importance of finding your founder community Why celebrating micro-wins isn't optional, it's a mental health strategy About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow, and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
If you're walking investors through your pitch deck slide-by-slide. Hiding the biggest risk in your business until the very end or treating meetings like job interviews, you're making the same mistakes that keep founders stuck in the endless cycle of "we'll pass for now." Fundraising isn't just about your traction or your vision. It's about breaking the pattern-recognition bias VCs use to filter out anything that doesn't look like their last big win. If you want to raise serious capital, you have to show them why you're the outlier worth betting on. Alexander Wulff has raised over $20 million (including an $8 million seed round) by doing the opposite of what founders are usually told. Today, he's building Nume, an AI CFO built to replace the spreadsheet chaos founders like you deal with every week. Why do we need to work hard for warm intros? Does presenting our pitch deck actually work against us? In this episode, Alexander shares what actually works when you're raising capital, especially when your model doesn't fit the mold. You'll learn how to lead with your biggest risk (instead of trying to hide it), and how to reframe the pitch deck as a teaser. Topics Covered; How Alexander raised $20M+, including an $8M seed round The "tech plus service" strategy that scared off most VCs What 100+ failed VC pitches taught him about objection-handling Why cold outreach almost never works (and how to get warm intros fast) How to structure a pitch that starts with your biggest risk Why "average energy" founders rarely win VC money Why passion, performance, and "controlled craziness" matter more than polish Smart ways to use AI to make financial ops proactive, accurate, and founder-friendly Guest Bio Alexander Wulff is the co-founder and CEO of ScaleUp Finance, which began as a CFO-as-a-Service platform combining technology and human expertise to help startups manage their financial operations. Today, that vision has evolved into Nume—the world's first true AI CFO, built to eliminate the spreadsheet chaos and reactive reporting that holds founders back. Alexander's entrepreneurial journey started early. He published a bestselling book at just 19 and launched his first venture at 20, turning dormant university-held patents into a funded startup. His experience spans fundraising, fintech innovation, and scaling high-growth companies, and he brings a unique mix of operational insight and bold, contrarian thinking to everything he builds. Visit https://www.scaleup.finance/ to learn more and connect with Alex on LinkedIn. About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/
You're not "too busy" to fundraise, you just have too much on your plate. If you keep telling yourself you'll start pitching investors "next month," but that month never comes, this episode is for you. Because let's be honest, fundraising isn't something you accidentally find time for. It's something you make time for. And if your calendar is packed with tasks you shouldn't be doing, you'll never get the breathing room you need to raise capital. How do you shift from "I'll do it all myself" to "Who can do this so I don't have to?" In today's episode of Seed Money, I explore the overlooked reality that most founders don't talk about: how trying to do it all keeps you from doing the one thing only you can do. Dan Sullivan's game-changing book Who Not How helped me a lot, and now I'm sharing what it actually takes to free up your time (and brain) so you can raise money without burning out. Topics Covered; How over-functioning founders sabotage their own growth Why you need to be the one pitching (and what you shouldn't be doing) How to start small: offloading just 1-2 tasks to open up bandwidth The perfectionist trap and how to escape it About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
There's nothing that crushes your confidence quite like staring at your bank balance and realizing you might not make your bills in a few months. Your savings are dwindling, you've got a life to pay for, and there's still no funding in sight. At the same time, you still have to step up, sell your vision, and pitch your startup like everything's fine. You're not alone, so don't feel bad. This happens to entrepreneurs everywhere, and it happened to me. People don't talk enough about the most gut-wrenching parts of entrepreneurship: raising funding while financially hanging by a thread. Struggling to make ends meet, sacrificing short-term stability for the long-term win. How do you keep going when the financial pressure mounts? How do you make sure you can still pay your bills? In this episode of Seed Money, I'm getting real about one of the hardest parts of raising capital and how to keep walking the tightrope between chasing your vision and paying for your life. Topics Covered; Focus on the outcome, not the path How to stay fundable when you're broke The Side Hustle Survival Playbook How to reframe struggle as proof of grit About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast, where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/ Please rate, follow and review the podcast on https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/seed-money/id1740815877 and https://open.spotify.com/show/0VkQECosb1spTFsUhu6uFY?si=5417351fb73a4ea1/! Hearing your comments and questions helps me come up with the best topics for the show! The information in this podcast is educational and general in nature and does not take into consideration the listener's personal circumstances. Therefore, it is not intended to be a substitute for specific, individualized financial, legal, or tax advice.
If you're in the early-stage and struggling to find the right investors and feeling lost in the startup maze, we totally get it, we've been there. It's no easy task to leave that comfortable job with big dreams but zero roadmap. When I first started my entrepreneurial journey, I had no clue how to network, who to talk to, or where to even begin building the connections that could make or break my startup. I'm guessing this sounds familiar. Even with today's abundance of startup resources, knowing where to start and who to talk to can feel overwhelming. Today's guest, Neil Bloom, lays it out to help you navigate the startup and funding landscape and how to find a village to support you on your path to getting funded. Your Guest: Neil Blum From aerospace engineering to startup investing and community building, Neil has seen what works (and what doesn't) when it comes to fostering innovation outside Silicon Valley. As CEO of Rising Tide Partners, he's helped countless founders navigate the funding landscape while building sustainable startup ecosystems. Ready to stop spinning your wheels and start building real connections? Hit play and discover how to turn your local ecosystem into your competitive advantage. Connect with Neil Bloom Here: https://www.risingtidepartners.co/ https://interlock.capital https://www.linkedin.com/in/nealbbloom/ Have a question for future episodes? Connect with Jayla on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/jaylasiciliano/ or email hello@seedmoneypodcast.com
Listen as Jay reveals the strategic approach he took that led to a successful pre-seed funding round in just 4 weeks! Jay Kriner, a Shark Tank alum turned tech entrepreneur, shares his methodical 9-month strategy for building investor relationships before ever making an ask. His approach centers on authentic networking, professional preparation, and timing—spending months connecting with VCs, angel investors, and wealth management professionals on LinkedIn without revealing his funding intentions. By the time he launched his official raise, he had built a network of 1,000+ qualified connections who were already familiar with his name and progress. The result? A funding commitment within weeks of launching his campaign. Jay's story demonstrates that successful fundraising isn't about cold outreach—it's about relationship building, consistent value delivery, and strategic patience that pays off when you're ready to make your move. The episode is packed with Jay's real stories—the good, the messy, and everything in between. If you're tired of hearing the same old "perfect your pitch deck" advice and want to know how relationships actually get built before you need the money, this one's for you. Connect with Jay and learn more about Gale Project here: Gale Project website: https://www.galeproject.com and Linkedin: Connect with Jay on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jayktx/ About Your Host Jayla Siciliano, Shark Tank entrepreneur turned real estate investor, excels in building brands, teams, and products. CEO of a bi-coastal luxury short-term rental company, she also hosts the Seed Money Podcast where she's on a mission to help early-stage entrepreneurs turn their ideas into reality! Connect: Website: https://seedmoneypodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaylasiciliano/ Subscribe and watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@seedmoneypodcast/



