We're a professional network for the startup industry where founders, investors, and job seekers can send intro requests to eachother. Every user gets one free intro request credit so try us out by making an account and meet someone new today!
Tech is an industry that is notoriously hard to break into. You need to know someone to get into the room. And if you didn't go to Stanford/Harvard, didn't work at a FAANG company or hot startup, or didn't move your whole life to SF, breaking in is 10x harder. As a Phoenix native, I felt this from 2014-2019. I felt it so hard, I decided to build a solution and that solution is Seedscout. Join the platform, request/receive introductions, and expand your network of techies. You may find that the room you've been trying to break into for years is accessible for the first time. I hope you enjoy our platform :)
I've watched @mat_sherman's unrelenting hustle since I met him back on Pioneer. Glad to see a real alternative being offered for funding and his refusal to give in is paying off!
As a founder who has benefited greatly from Seedscout I gladly take this opportunity to say well done and thank you! Grateful for the funding. Seedscout works, very well and easily.
Mat Sherman is as tenacious a hustler as there is and he's building a great platform to democratize access to startup capital for founders lacking access to privileged networks.
Congrats on the launch! A really interesting product definitely going to use it once my product grows... One thing I do want to say, is that I think it's almost quintessential to have a google login. Lack of one would definitely deter a lot of people -- including me if I wasn't coming off ph :)
The founder/startup/vc paradigm has a 90%+ failure rate. Why is that?
It's complex, a three-body problem of founder, community, and capital formation.
More founder resources: venture hackers, nfx, TWIST-- the more founders have their eyes opened to the asymmetric upside of building a tech startup.
More founders, more ill-suited founders who punk out and give up-- startups aren't actually that hard, but not everyone has the grit to stick it out.
Community formation around founders make it easier to gut it out and that's why YC, Pioneer, Angel List, Stripe, Founder U, and others have been successful. It's easier to build a startup with the support of mentors, batch-mates, and SAFE investors-- you get early adopters, true believers, boosters, a fan club, a family, warm intros, and snacks. Highly recommend everyone apply to YC, Founder U, PearX, Sequoia Arc, etc.
But this startup infra induces founder formation and some folks just aren't cut out to be founders.
Capital formation used to be moneybags backing whaling voyages to fill the boats with pre-candle combustible oils.
Used to be you need a ship, a crew, some sharp harpoons, and a backer to be a founder.
Now you need a laptop, an internet connection, and the four key founder traits: ambition, determination, optimism, and charisma.
You don't need VC, but everyone chases VC. Or they build an MVP What they really should be doing is building community around the problem they are solving. With traction, they'll get all the VC attention they want.
But every year instead of building an audience, then a community, then raising under RegCF and sharing the upside with everyone who helps them build. and grow, most founders come down with VC fever.
They polish decks. They practice pitches. They line up warm intros. And it works. They get funded. Why? Because Community-led success has driven an explosion of LP dollars to fund first time VCs, monster multi-stage funds like A16Z, and exited tech execs looking to cut seed checks (don't steal my rhymes, yo!).
But this generally only works for ingroup foundres-- right age (under 30), right degree (CS), right school (Stanford), right intros (see above on community).
For outgroup founders, there's SeedScout and similar warm intro platforms. Will it move the needle? Probably not. Why not? Because chasing VC is very mid and because most VCs are not good at picking founders. But if you are eager to get funded and you are an outsider and you feel like smarming it up with investors who get all their non-consensus ideas from the All-in Podcast, then SeedScout is a great option.
Matt Sherman is an outsider who has been punching and pandering his way into the corp VC world for a few years now. He's got connections and he wants to help founders meet VCs. Why not give his platform a try. You might just get lucky and meet the VC of your dreams.
Upvote this mofo to #1.
Very helpful platform, especially for those outside the major tech centers in the Bay and NYC. You meet some great founders here! On Seedscout, everyone has an equal shot at it.
I've been a proud Seedscout member for nearly two years now - on my second start-up. The value Mat and his team are creating both for founders and for investors deserves all the recognition!
StartupConnect is a dynamic professional network specifically tailored for the startup industry. It offers a unique platform where founders, investors, and job seekers can seamlessly interact and exchange intro requests. The provision of one free intro request credit for each user encourages trial and offers an opportunity to connect with industry peers. If you're part of the startup ecosystem and looking to broaden your network, creating an account with StartupConnect could lead you to some fantastic new connections today!
Really happy to see this project evolve. Still remember our podcast about kingdom.so.
I totally recognize myself with this tool. I don't have so much connections and I live in Thailand π
Seedscout 2.0