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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.
5
5858 ratings
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.