How I Work With Founders

A simple operator-style system for turning technical strength into market clarity, commercial learning, and repeatable traction.

Not passive advice. Not vague GTM theory. A weekly operating rhythm that helps founders make sharper commercial decisions.

The core belief

Most early-stage GTM problems do not come from lack of effort. They come from lack of compression.

Too many messages. Too many buyer types. Too many half-tested assumptions. Too many deals moving without a clear learning loop.

The job is to compress that noise into a working commercial system:

That is how companies stop relying on heroics and start building repeatability.

Phase 1

Positioning sprint

Clarify the category, the wedge, and the language buyers actually respond to.

The first step is to remove ambiguity. A company cannot scale a story that changes every week.

This phase focuses on:

Output examples:

Phase 2

Initial Customer Profile discipline

Choose the buyer more carefully so the company can sell more effectively.

Many startups lose time because they confuse possible buyers with actual first buyers.

This phase creates harder edges:

The result is better qualification, tighter messaging, and cleaner prioritization.

Phase 3

Weekly GTM cadence

Turn pipeline into a learning system.

The weekly cadence is where positioning becomes execution.

Each week should produce real commercial learning, not just activity. That usually includes:

Over time, this creates a more disciplined GTM engine and gives founders a better read on what is happening in the market.

Phase 4

Proof and trust architecture

Because enterprise buyers rarely buy on vision alone.

Technical founders often underestimate how much trust structure affects conversion.

It is not enough to have a strong product. Buyers also need confidence in:

This is where late-stage deals often break. A stronger proof system can materially change conversion quality.

What changes in 45–60 days

Before

After

How engagement usually starts

Most relationships begin with a focused sprint to determine whether there is real operating fit.

If the work proves high leverage and both sides want deeper involvement, the partnership can evolve into a longer-term equity-aligned relationship with cofounder-level operating scope.

This page should explain the logic without sounding transactional.

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