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Saul Fleischman
Saul Fleischman

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Vetting an Investor Before You Pitch Them: A Solo Founder's Workflow

Most founders spend weeks polishing their deck and about forty minutes researching the person they're about to send it to. I was one of those founders, and it cost me badly.

The Pitch That Should Never Have Happened

A few years ago I sat across from a partner at a mid-sized fund and spent ninety minutes walking through MentionFox's traction numbers. He nodded in the right places. He asked smart follow-up questions. Two weeks later his assistant sent a boilerplate pass email that included a phrase - "we're not currently active in this vertical" - that a single Google search would have told me was true six months earlier. The fund had quietly pivoted to deep tech infrastructure. His last B2B SaaS investment was three years old. I had wasted both our time, but mostly mine.

That meeting taught me something I now treat as a rule: investor research is not background research. It is filtering. You are not looking for information about someone after you decide to pitch them. You are using information to decide whether to pitch them at all. The workflow I am about to describe is not about flattering investors with personalized openers. It is about eliminating the wrong ones before you write a single word of the email.

What I Actually Measure Before I Pitch

When I rebuilt my investor research process I forced myself to answer four questions about every name on my list, and I had to answer them with evidence, not impressions.

The first question is recency. Has this person or fund written a check into a B2B SaaS company in the last eighteen months? Not ever. Not famously. In the last eighteen months. Thesis drift is real and it happens quietly. A partner who made three SaaS bets between 2019 and 2021 may have spent the last two years doubling down on climate or fintech. The public portfolio page on the fund's website is almost always six to twelve months behind reality. You have to find the signal elsewhere - press releases, LinkedIn announcements from founders who just closed, and portfolio company footprints that show up in product launches and hiring surges.

The second question is stage fit. This sounds obvious and yet I still see founders pitching seed-stage partners when their ARR puts them squarely in Series A territory, and vice versa. Check size is not stage fit. Some funds write $500K checks into Series A rounds as follow-ons. Look at ownership percentages in disclosed rounds when you can find them. Look at how many board seats the partner holds and what those companies' stages were at entry.

The third question is what they actually say publicly. Not their fund thesis statement - that is marketing. I mean what they have said in podcasts, Twitter threads, Substack posts, and panel discussions over the last year. This is where social listening becomes genuinely useful instead of just flattery fuel. If a partner spent October and November last year talking about how much they love capital-efficient growth and your deck opens with a slide about aggressive burn to capture market share, you already have a mismatch. Find it before the pitch, not during.

The fourth question is who introduced recent portfolio founders to this investor. Warm introductions still matter enormously at seed and early Series A, but not all warm intros are equal. An intro from a founder the partner backed three funds ago carries less weight than an intro from someone in their current active portfolio. Mapping those relationship graphs by hand is tedious. I started using MentionFox's investor suite to surface co-investment patterns and shared board memberships, which gets me to the right connector faster than crawling Crunchbase tabs for an hour.

The Signal I Almost Always Missed Before

Here is the part most solo founder guides skip: the tone and frequency of an investor's public presence is itself data.

A partner who posted seventeen times in the last ninety days about one specific problem - say, the ROI measurement gap in B2B marketing - is not doing that randomly. That is almost certainly connected to either a recent investment they are excited about, a thesis they are actively building, or a founder problem they are trying to solve and have not yet found the right company for. Any one of those scenarios is relevant to you if your product touches that problem.

Contrast that with the partner who has been essentially silent for four months and then re-emerged posting only about fund II closing and LP relations. That person is in capital-raise mode. They may not be making new investments for another six to nine months regardless of what their website says.

I built a rough scoring system for myself. Each investor on my list gets a signal score based on: recency of relevant portfolio activity (weighted highest), public signal alignment with my core problem (weighted second), stage and check-size fit (third), and accessible introduction path (fourth). Anyone below a threshold on any of the top two criteria gets moved to a "warm but wait" list rather than an active outreach list. That one change reduced my cold pitch volume by about forty percent and improved my response rate significantly - because I was only sending to people who had given me real evidence they were paying attention to my space right now.

The Practical Workflow, Step by Step

This does not require an army of analysts. I am a solo founder and I run this on my own.

  • Step one: Start with a list of 30 to 40 names from a combination of Crunchbase searches, LinkedIn, and looking backward from recent raises by companies adjacent to mine.

  • Step two: For each name, spend five minutes doing a recency check. Recent portfolio investments, recent public statements, recent fund activity. Cut anyone who fails the eighteen-month recency test. This usually cuts the list by a third immediately.

  • Step three: For the remaining names, do a deeper signal pass. What have they said publicly in the last ninety days? What problems are they talking about? I use MentionFox to aggregate and track these mentions across platforms without manually checking every profile every day. This turns a three-hour job into a twenty-minute one.

  • Step four: Score and tier the remaining list. Tier one is "pitch now with a personalized angle." Tier two is "intro hunt in progress." Tier three is "revisit in sixty days."

  • Step five: For every tier-one investor, I write one sentence explaining specifically why I think our problem aligns with what they have been saying publicly. Not what they said they care about in 2021. What they said last month. That sentence goes directly into my outreach email and it is the difference between a reply and silence.

This whole process, once set up, takes me about two hours a week to maintain for a list of active targets.

The Honest Part

I will tell you what this workflow does not do. It does not replace judgment. It does not guarantee a yes. And it will not fix a product that is not ready. What it does do is stop you from burning your limited time and your even more limited warm-intro capital on investors who were never going to say yes in the first place. In a fundraising process where your biggest constraint is your own attention, that matters more than almost anything tactical.

If you want to see how MentionFox handles investor signal tracking, mention aggregation across platforms, and the portfolio mapping that makes step three and step four actually fast, take a look at the investor suite. And if you want to see what access costs before you build out a workflow around it, here is pricing.


If you found this useful, I write about solo-founder distribution, B2B SaaS, and what's actually working in the AI-search era over on my Substack (one post per week, no spam).

I'm building MentionFox - a B2B intelligence suite that combines brand mention tracking with AI-visibility (GEO) measurement, investor research, and outreach automation. There's a free tier and a 5-day trial of Pro at mentionfox.com/pricing.

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