Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Home
Feb
10
6
min

The Real Pros & Cons of a High Valuation

What news headlines don't tell you.

Read More

More is always better.

…says every ambitious person, especially founders.

I follow this motto too!

Just ask my husband who has to talk me down from overdo-ing it at work, health, running, life. 😜🥴🙃

Spoiler alert: there’s diminishing returns and downsides to “more.”

Today, we’re talking about company valuations but these pros and cons apply to other things as well (ahem, high salaries).

If you don’t understand the downsides and tradeoffs of a decision, you’re not ready to make it!


A Primer on Startup Valuations

Your company’s “valuation” is what the market says it’s worth, usually because someone invests money.

Here’s some typical valuation math and how VCs think about investment returns.

These are the two most important valuation formulas that every founder should know!


The Pros of a High Valuation

Most founders want a high valuation when they fundraise for good and obvious reasons.

1. Less dilution

The higher the valuation the more ownership you, the founder, retains.

  • If you raise $1M on a $5M post money valuation, that’s 20% dilution.

  • If you raise $1M on a $10M post money valuation, that’s 10% dilution.


2. **OR** more money for the same dilution

Let’s use the same math as above:

  • If you raise $1M on a $5M post money valuation, that’s 20% dilution.

  • If you raise $2M on a $10M post money valuation, that’s 20% dilution — but you get another $1M of investment!


3. Market signal

High valuations announce “WE ARE AWESOME” to important people:

  • Your competitors

  • Future investors

  • Current employees

  • Top talent that you want to recruit

  • Customers

  • Your family member who thought law school was a better idea 😉


4. Validation of your sacrifice and hard work

You’ve been grinding.

You’re years away from an exit, but a high valuation is a milestone.

It’s been worth it.

Someone believes in you and the future!


5. Money solves (some) problems

If your higher valuation means raising more money, that can be helpful.

You can hire more people. You can give yourself a raise.

You don’t have to be the sales person, and marketer, and office manager all at the same time.

You take on new challenges and grow as a leader.

BIG caveat though: with more funding, goals get more aggressive.

So you have more money but you also have more to accomplish.

But we’ll get to that…


The Cons of a High Valuation

Founders often share the downsides of a high valuation quietly and privately, wishing they’d known ahead of time.

Never learn it the hard way when the O’Daily can give you an overview!

Now you can thoughtfully decide for what’s right for you.

1. Slow or no fundraise

If you go out to market with a (too) high valuation, investors may pass even though they really like you and your company.

You may think investors will negotiate and offer a lower valuation.

They might. If the valuation is close.

But often, they will politely and vaguely pass.

They don’t want to burn bridges or offend you by saying your beautiful $10M baby is more like a pretty cute $5M baby.


2. No wiggle room

When impressive founders go out to raise a seed or pre-seed at a high valuation, they often can.

They’re fantastic. Someone will take a chance on their ability for a grand slam.

But what they often overlook is the future math.

In successful startups, valuation doubles every fundraising round.

With a high valuation — especially in the early stages — you need excellent, near-perfect execution to hit the metrics to unlock the next fundraising round.

In seed or pre-seed, you can raise on a vision and great story.

Series A and beyond, you need stellar KPIs (e.g. ARR, CAC, LTV).

There’s little room for sales misses, hiring mistakes, or product pivots.

Which (spoiler alert) are extremely common and normal for early stage companies!

With a fair-but-not-too-high valuation, you give yourself room to run.

If company performance is good but not great, you can raise again under favorable terms, will have more investors at the table, and you keep your employees solvent and happy.

Play it the other way and you have an amazing founder with a great idea who made progress…but has to take a down round or close shop.

It’s heartbreaking.

Companies with great potential, doing good work, helping customers, but hindered by high expectations out of the gate.

A high school star with a strong college career who feels like a failure.

I know multiple founders who have said:

“I’m really glad I didn’t get that high valuation last round because we’d be dead right now. Instead we have outlasted others, we’re hitting our stride, and the team is more fired up than ever.”


3. A messy term sheet

A “clean” term sheet means fair and normal terms for the founder without any weird covenants or complicated payback waterfalls.

One thing that can happen with a high valuation is that investors agree but they include “protections” in the term sheet.

“We’ll give you the high valuation you want, but in return, we want to mitigate the risk, so we need to add more contingencies to the deal.”

^^If term sheets could talk.

Run different valuation scenarios through GenAI comparing these terms:

  • Non-participating preferred

  • Participating preferred

  • 2x participating preferred

Remember: startup news doesn’t tell the whole story! That big raise announced by your competitor doesn’t mention all the “hair” on the deal.

Know what comes along with the high valuation!


4. Lose what makes you great.

Scrappiness is not always fun but it’s incredibly valuable.

You are forced to:

  • Listen deeply to customers

  • Understand exactly what people will pay for

  • Get creative with marketing campaigns

  • Test messaging to see what resonates

  • Use AI to do more with less

  • Find smart, ambitious talent that punches above their weight class

A risk of a large round is losing your competitive edge.

High valuation → aggressive targets → scale at any cost.

Another variation:

Big raise → big goals → big spending → big miss → big uh-oh.

By the time you realize that it’s not working, you’ve spent millions building or selling the wrong thing.


5. No exit path

Can you imagine turning down a purchase offer over a billion dollars?

I know a startup that did.

It wasn’t enough money to provide a good exit given how much they raised.

I worked at several startups who stayed lean, especially compared to competitors.

At the time, we grumbled and worried about having fewer resources:

  • Smaller team

  • Fewer marketing dollars

  • Less product development

BUT we were wildly grateful when large companies started buying businesses in our space!

We had many suitors and some of our well-funded competitors were considered “too expensive.”


The “Goldilocks” Valuation

So what’s the valuation that’s not too high, not too low, but juuuuust right?

1. Be clear (to yourself) what you’re optimizing for.

  • Do you want the highest valuation at all cost?

  • Would you rather have an ideal partner at a lower valuation?

  • Is exit optionality important to you?

The right valuation for you may be different than another founder.

2. Pay attention to market signals.

You can study the data and analyze the news all you want. But ultimately getting (or not) a term sheet tells you if your valuation is correct.

The market will let you know.

3. Fair and reasonable valuation and terms from a good partner.

Easier said than done but imho THIS is the Goldilocks valuation. Something that both sides are happy with. Fair but room to grow. Aligned on the important stuff. No surprises. A great long term partner.

Not too hot. Not too cold. JUST RIGHT!


Any other pros or cons of a high valuation? What do you think makes a good valuation? What did you optimize for?

February 10, 2026
Feb
3
3
min

AI has taken all the jobs!!!!!

Except at startups where you need humans to run the AI 😉

(AI isn’t taking your job. The person who uses AI is.)

The data shows the job market is tough but the open roles in Startupland tell a different story!

These companies are growing quickly, doing important work, collaborating with other nice, smart people

…AND THEY ARE ALL HIRING!

They’re looking for hungry, motivated, positive, performance-minded folks!

#PROTIP: startups are a great place to get a free MBA while crafting your perfect role.

Share the love (aka this post) with any friends or family looking for their dream job (tips on how to find it) or who want to break into tech (more advice on that).

Of course, post any other open roles in the comments! 👇👇👇


Company: Infinite Giving

Modern financial management for non-profits. I’m on the board so I can vouch for their awesomeness and growth. 😉 Here’s one of the many reasons why I love this company.

Open Roles:


Thanks for reading The O’Daily by Kathryn O’Day! Subscribe for weekly startup advice.


Company: Carpool Logistics

Automotive logistics platform to deliver vehicles more quickly, safely, and reliably. Raised $12M Series A in 2025 and check out their results from 2025

Open Roles:


Company: Intown Golf Club

A private social club for golfers with 6 locations across the country and more on the way! Inc 5000 honoree (plus: #24 in their industry of hospitality and travel).

Open Roles:

**They hire from within so get a foot in the door and grow from there!


Company: Can’t Tell You Until Next Week 😉

The company already has extremely happy customers and 6 figures of revenue. The founder is incredible.

Open Roles:


Company: Undaunted

Proactive robotic security — see the future of security here! One year in and already profitable with raving fans. Here’s their story. Get on! 🚀

Open Roles:

  • Robotic Engineer

  • Sales Lead

Reply to this blog or shoot a note to recruiting@getundaunted.com to get more details.


Share with a friend who deserves a dream job!

Share


Company: Confetti Social

A great social media agency! I am happy customer. 🙋‍♀️

Open Roles:


Company: Play Money

Angel investing made easy. Shared from a friend!

Open Roles:


Company: Atlanta Ventures

World’s Greatest Venture Studio filled with brilliant, fun investors who care deeply and help you find a billion dollar idea and scale it. Disclaimer: I may be biased. 😂😜😁

Open Roles:

  • Founders - we love co-founding companies with passionate entrepreneurs!

  • Interns - always looking for entrepreneurial-minded students to do hands-on startup and marketing projects (reply to this blog if you’re interested!)


Even More Resources!

Fave Startup Job Boards:

Fave Startup Talent Agencies:


Is your company hiring?? Share any great roles or companies below!

February 3, 2026
Jan
27
5
min

5 Wild Ways To Pre-Sell Your Product

Fund your product before you build it!

Read More

You’ve read The Mom Test!

You’re hunting for Authentic Demand!

You’re looking for those first paying users!

But how do you get people to pay you money when you need money to build the thing that people will pay you for?

A chicken and egg problem…THAT WE’RE GOING TO DEBUNK TODAY!

Here are 5 ways I’ve seen real startups prove demand and pre-sell their product before it existed!

Are these the exact strategies you should use?

Probably not.

Every business is different.

But hopefully it will trigger an idea, inspire you, or give you a starting place for your own version of a pre-sell!


1. Sell memberships.

We used this playbook in our Venture Studio when launching The Perlant and Intown Golf Club.

We sold club memberships before the club existed.

Explain the vision. Get people excited. Offer a founding membership for $1000.

When you have 100 future members, who want it enough to put money down, several amazing things happen:

  • you know you’re onto something real

  • $100,000 of working capital

  • 100 evangelists (aka unpaid sales people) who recruit their friends

  • strong data points to share with potential investors

What’s the “selling memberships” version of what you’re working on??


2. Sell a user experience.

No tech? No problem!

Deliver the solution manually but make it much, much easier than what they are doing now.

(And automate the tech over time once you have paying customers and you know exactly what will solve their problem!)

I’ve seen this work for real companies like:

  • a logistics marketplace — got to 6 figures of revenue with a spreadsheet backend

  • remote monitoring services — leveraged offshore resources while developing scalable tech

  • task management tool — software frontend with humans behind the scenes

Customers are happy to pay because their experience is so much better. They don’t care how it happens!

What is the 10x better experience you are selling? What can you deliver now, knowing that you’ll improve and automate over time?


Thanks for reading The O’Daily by Kathryn O’Day! Subscribe for weekly startup advice.


3. Sell the product overview.

I have always loved this example from The Rebel Business School, who I also mention here.

They don’t build the content for any of their entrepreneurship education courses until they have sold the course!

They use a syllabus overview in the sales meeting. If they win the deal (they sell to economic development organizations), then they hustle to build out the specific course materials.

You can also do this for:

  • New modules on your platform — get customer contracts first

  • Next locations — do sales outreach or inbound sign ups to see where demand is

  • Your whole product — they’re called design partners! And it’s more possible to code a product in a few days than ever before!

P.S. Large companies do this too. They sell dreams, I mean, showcase aspirational customer use cases at their premier events, then spend the rest of the year actually building them!

What do you actually need to sell? Can it be a mock up instead of a full product? What’s the minimum viable version (that you can later deliver on) to get a customer onboard?


4. Sell an item, then acquire it.

Marketplace Building 101.

I love love love the Lenny’s Newsletter series on marketplaces! It tells the real stories of how great marketplaces got started.

Spoiler: it’s messy.

The company’s value prop is something like:

“We have many Things (babysitters, errand runners, hotel rooms)!”

Then someone buys a Thing from the marketplace, except it was a placeholder/test/fake-it-til-you-make-it listing.

They scramble behind the scenes to locate and deliver the Thing quickly so it feels easy and seamless.

And this is how marketplaces get started!

Lots of faking supply or demand until awareness grows and you don’t need to fake it anymore!

People also do this with consumer products. Offer a pre-order option or explain that it’s a 2 week turnaround.

Do you think Etsy creators are holding warehouses of inventory (beyond their guest room and garage 😆)? No way!

What can you sell now and then procure after? Especially great for services or physical products!


5. Sell knowledge.

I love consulting and community-building as a way to get customers! This is combo of both.

Your insights and expertise are the hook. Your research becomes a coveted and helpful data set.

You can “pre-sell” things like:

  • Paid newsletter

  • 1:1 consultation

  • Small group events

  • Workshops (in person or online)

You build trust as the expert, deliver value to your target customers, while also generating revenue and getting insight for a tech product!

Can you monetize your expertise now so that it funds (and shapes) your long term tech vision?


But What About AI???

People can build tech tools faster than ever. Like, hours instead of weeks and months.

Are these pre-sell strategies old fashioned now?? Why not just build in 30 seconds and then regular-sell?!?

  1. The best founders I know are using AI and these strategies. They can iterate faster and better with AI. They can run even MORE experiments, MORE quickly.

  2. You still have to use your own judgement and brain. Yep. You may also have to talk to real humans to learn from them and sell things. I know, terrible really. 😉 Exclusive AI-Agent-to-AI-Agent communication isn’t here…yet!

  3. When everyone can build more products faster than ever before, you will need to separate yourself from the noise! Selling before you build will be a differentiator. Your solution will be better; you will be closer to your customers.

  4. If you can build an amazing product super fast that people will pay for right away, amazing! Keep going! It’s very hard but if you’ve done it, congrats (and tell me about your product)!

Have you pre-sold your product before? What worked for you? Any other pre-selling lessons — good or bad — to share??


Enjoyed this post? Share with a founder friend!

Share


January 27, 2026
Jan
20
5
min

Was one of these a New Year’s Resolution?

  • Do more networking

  • Get better at sales

  • Start running again

  • Raise money for your startup

  • Build relationships with investors

IT’S YOUR LUCKY YEAR!!

These upcoming events will accomplish some or all of your goals!

What else should we know about?? Add to the comments any events you’re hosting or attending!


1. Atlanta Healthcare Entrepreneur Meetup

📅 Wed, Feb 4, 8:30-10a
📍Atlanta Tech Village - Buckhead

Join other healthcare founders, investors, and leaders for networking and alll the startup lessons and advice from Chris Spears, founder and CEO of OrderlyMeds.


2. Women Founders, Funders & the Future of Tech

📅 Tue, Feb 25, 4–6p
📍 Atlanta Tech Village — Buckhead

Join Atlanta Tech Village’s Women + Tech Program and the Women’s Entrepreneurship Initiative for a panel of women investors and operators (including yours truly 🙋‍♀️) sharing real insights on accessing capital, scaling responsibly, and navigating growth.

It’s an honor to be part of this all-star lineup:

Register here.


3. ATL Global Innovation Weekend

📅 Fri, Feb 20 - Sun, Feb 22
📍 South Downtown

Is this the coolest weekend ever? Urban innovation + World Cup + Atlanta’s Downtown. Let’s GOOOOOO! (Read more here.)

A 48 hour civic build moment for students, entrepreneurs, technologists, creatives, civic leaders, and neighbors to collaborate on ideas and innovations around:

  • Public Safety & Walkability

  • Cultural Preservation & Storytelling

  • Economic Opportunity & Business Vitality

  • Sustainability & Public Space Activation

  • Civic Engagement & Advocacy

You will directly impact what happens in Downtown Atlanta for the World Cup and generations to come!


4. The Power of Repositioning: Rethinking Your Career Narrative

📅 Fri, Mar 6, 11:30a-12:15p
📍 Emory University

This is one of many excellent sessions during the Executive Women of Goizueta Annual Leadership Conference including keynotes from Paige Alexander, CEO of The Carter Center, and Sara Wechter, Chief Human Resources Officer at Citi.

I’ll be on this panel alongside:

We’ll be sharing our professional stories plus advice for folks navigating pivots, promotions, or visibility moves.

You KNOW I’ll be talking about:

And whatever else these smart women want to dig in on!


Thanks for reading The O’Daily by Kathryn O’Day! Subscribe for weekly startup advice.


5. InVenture Prize at Georgia Tech

📅 Wed, Mar 11
📺 GPB Live Stream
📍 Ferst Theater, Georgia Tech Campus

One of my favorite events of the year — this is the ultimate Shark Tank-style event with $30,000 of prize money going to the top Georgia Tech entrepreneurs!

See it live on campus or watch from home on GPB streaming.

I was a judge last year and didn’t swear on live TV so I got invited back! 😅 Let’s see if I can keep a lock on the f-bombs for another year…while also (and more importantly) getting to know the next generation’s top founders!

These “kids” are SO impressive. Prepare to have your mind blown! 🤯🤯🤯


6. Founder + Funder Jog

📅 Fri, Mar 13, 6:45a
📍Tech Square - Biltmore Ballrooms

Join us for a leisurely 3.5-4 mile jog around Peidmont Park with other founders, investors, and startup folks.

Huge thank you to Katie Begando, Denis Cranstoun, and Julie Pierre for hosting. 🙏

Very friendly, lots of selfie stops and shortcuts, with coffee (and water 🥵) at the end.

Keep up your running resolution alive (and it counts as “work”)!


7. Pitch Practice

📅 1st & 3rd Fridays, 1p
📍Atlanta Tech Village - Buckhead

📅 1st Tuesday, 1:30p
📍Atlanta Tech Village - Sylvan

Led by the brilliant Jacey Cadet, get *FREE* help on your startup pitch!

Register for the session that works best for you here.


8. Office Hours with Atlanta Ventures

📅 Thu, Feb 12, 12p
📅 Thu, Mar 12, 12p
📍Virtual

Join me and fellow Atlanta Ventures partner, A.T. Gimbel, for an informal Q&A sesh.

Common topics include fundraising, product development, how to get early customers, what we look for when investing, and more!

We do these every month. Check out future dates on the Atlanta Ventures events page.


9. Seed The South

📅 Mon, May 18 - Tue, May 19
📍Charlotte, NC

Snag your tickets now for this 2-day capital summit in one of my favorite Southeastern startup cities, put on by gWen and Innovate Charlotte, hosted in Bank of America Stadium!


10. ATL Tech Week

📅 June
📍Atlanta

Dates are not yet released but if you’re thinking about coming to Atlanta in June, YOU SHOULD!

This week is a tech party with great events across tech hubs and tons of engineering talent converging on Atlanta.

The last two years I’ve talked about building a billion dollar company at the Atlanta Tech Village so I’m ready with fresh jokes and lots of advice. 😉


More Events!

I can never capture all the awesomeness. What are you looking forward to? What did I miss??

Here are some of my favorite event calendars:

And even more — a list of my favorite resources, groups, and tactics for getting a pulse on Atlanta and finding other tech folks.

Comment below with events you are hosting or other events you’re attending that we should know about! 👇👇👇


Enjoyed this post? Share with a founder friend!

Share


January 20, 2026
Jan
13
7
min

How The Best Startups are Using AI in 2026

Top 4 strategies (including fave tools) from a startup CRO and AI expert.

Read More

If I had a nickel for every time someone asked me…

How are other startups using AI?

What’s the best way to get started with AI?

How can I use AI to sell more?

…I would be a billion dollar company! (#momjoke)

Last week, I had the pleasure of sitting down with the kind and brilliant Beata Rouleau, fractional CRO and startup AI expert, who gets rave reviews from founders I trust, to get her take on these burning questions.

She’s on the front lines, improving Go-To-Market processes for startups — using AI of course.

Now you get her best advice right here on the O’Daily!

For more of Beata’s helpful insights (and access to her workshops), follow her on LinkedIn and subscribe on Substack.


1. CRIT (aka #1 Most Recommended Way For Startups To Use AI)

Do you have your notepad AI notetaker ready?

Here’s Beata’s #1 piece of advice, available for use in the next 5 minutes.

Use the CRIT framework: a prompting method to transform AI from a glorified search engine into a strategic thought partner.

This simple framework is magic…

CRIT

  • Context

  • Role

  • Interview (This is the secret sauce)

  • Task

It’s easy, repeatable, vendor-agnostic, and works for almost any AI need you can think of!

Context

  • Give the background information.

  • Examples: include your situation, goals, challenges, audience, and constraints. The more context you give the better the output!

Role

  • Tell AI who to be. Assigning a specific expertise focuses the response and shapes the tone.

  • Examples: strategic advisor, copywriter, investor, researcher, brainstorm partner

Interview

  • Before AI produces anything, have it ask you clarifying questions - one at a time. This is what separates CRIT from other frameworks.

  • Here’s the prompt: “Interview me asking me 1 question at a time, up to 5 questions, to gain additional context.”

  • ^^ this is key!! Gives you and AI more clarity by forcing you to slow down and think. AI learns what actually matters; you surface insights you didn’t know you needed to articulate.

Task

  • Explain the output you are looking for. Be specific about format, length, and what success looks like.

  • Examples: Come up with 5 non-obvious strategies to solve this problem, draft 3 email templates, create a 10 slide pitch deck

Boom! You are the thought leader, AI is a thought partner.

No more wondering where to start or asking why your AI doesn’t “get” you.

Share this prompt with your team, your friends, even (gasp) your parents!


2. Glyphic To Close More Deals

You’re gonna love this.

Beata recommends Glyphic as your AI sales copilot.

A Gong-disruptor at a fraction of the price. Yes, please!

(Not there yet? Otter.ai is great for audio recording and transcripts. Fathom has good video recording if you are more presentation and screenshare heavy.)

Once you have call recording data, you can start doing cool things with AI agents.

Don’t be scared of AI agents!

As Beata explains, agents are just “triggers and specific asks.” When X happens, do Y. That’s it. Totally manageable! 😅

Glyphic lets you build these directly in the platform.

Example AI Agents To Accelerate Sales:

  • Follow-up Email Generator: based on specifics in the call transcript, auto-generate a customized follow up email that references what was actually discussed. No more generic templates!

  • Competitor Analysis: run a monthly analysis of sales calls to understand what prospects are saying about competitors (good and bad). Use that insight to fine tune your objection handling or run a targeted outreach campaign to users of that product.

  • Trending Topics: similar to your competitive analysis, what are customers talking about or asking questions on? Pull out the trending topics to plan your next marketing campaign, LinkedIn posts, or webinar.

  • Deal Stage Patterns: look at transcripts of closed won deals, closed lost deals, and calls that moved forward but stalled. What patterns emerge? For example, if most closed lost deals are not the right fit, can you use an AI agent to better qualify leads before a demo?

  • Call Scorecards: using BANT, MEDDIC, or other sales framework, you can assess a sales rep’s calls and overall sales process. Any common misses? Use AI to create training materials around that topic. 😉

As Beata wisely points out, at a startup, every lead matters.

Once you have them on the phone, er, Zoom — make the most of it!


3. Hubspot - Still The Favorite Startup CRM

Not an AI recommendation per say but since I get asked about CRMs at least 5x/wk, I know it’s top of mind!

Beata says Hubspot continues to be the go-to startup CRM and is her recommendation for most startups.

(Kathryn’s note: can confirm - most of our portfolio companies use Hubspot!)

It is simple to set up with good out-of-the-box functionality but robust enough to have many integrations (including Glyphic) and customizations.

Salesforce — while obviously still the greatest company on earth since I worked there post-Pardot acquisition — is too complex and expensive for what most startups need unless they are enterprise or highly niche.

Most founders start with a spreadsheet (love this, stay scrappy).

Then they agonize over which CRM to use, often starting with a smaller, lower-cost option, which — if things go well — they’ll outgrow in a year.

Then they painfully switch to Hubspot and berate themselves for not starting with Hubspot in the first place.

To which I say, you had very few customers before and even less money so it was probably a good decision. Growing pains are high class problems!

#PROTIP: If you’re thinking about Hubspot, make sure you get yerself a deal!!

Hubspot offers major discounts — to the tune of 90% — through partners like startup hubs (ahem, Atlanta Tech Village), accelerators, VC firms, or sometimes credit cards like Ramp or Brex.

It will be very inexpensive to start and then get annoyingly expensive when you’re further along.

Sneak Peak — A Hot New CRM?

Beata has been hearing good things about GoHighLevel but needs to dig in further. She can neither confirm nor deny if it’s the next Hubspot or another low cost CRM that you’ll painfully outgrow in a year. Stay tuned! 😉


4. Slow Down, #1 Way To Troubleshoot AI

AI not doing what you want?

Before you swear off all technology and rage post about the overhyped AI bubble, Beata recommends:

Take a pause.
Reset.
SLOW DOWN.

Mostly likely you were going too fast and didn’t give enough information.

Whatever do you mean, Kathryn asks, as her 1 line prompt didn’t result in a perfect email draft?? 😜

Here’s the secret:

Give clear instructions.

Getting AI to work for you requires the same skills that make a great team manager:

  • Can you explain what you actually want?

  • How specific are you with deliverables?

  • Did you provide enough context?

Back in the day (when I was walking to school in the snow uphill both ways), great managers managed people.

Today, your team probably has more AI agents than humans.

Not only are they more cost-effective and don’t expect donuts on their birthday, but they don’t care about your demanding tone, snarky comments, and unreasonable asks like a 20 page report in 30 seconds!

Regardless of whether you’re managing people or AI agents, clear communication and more effort on the front end will save you time and frustration overall.


Using AI Wisely

Is AI the answer to all of our startup problems? Of course not!

As Beata reminds us — we still need to work the muscle of our brain!

AI + human creativity is where the magic happens.

AI is your thought partner, assistant, researcher, sounding board, and force multiplier.

YOU are still the thought leader!


How is your startup using AI? What’s your best AI tip? Favorite tool?

P.S. Want more Beata? (I know I do!) Go say hi on LinkedIn and subscribe to her Substack!

January 13, 2026
Jan
6
4
min

How To Get Your Team Onboard with Changes in 2026

Simple, straightforward ways to build alignment

Read More

New year, new ideas!

…And new pushback from the team. Whomp whomp 🙃

It’s normal and healthy to have internal debate at companies.

You want to have at least a few skeptics on the team so help you think through downsides and clarify your approach.

But when it’s important to get alignment around a new initiative, what can you do?

Here are 2 very simple but effective ways to get your team, board, family, anyone on board with something that feels like a (scary 😱) change!



1. Position it as an experiment.

I LOVE this strategy and do it all the time in my own life, personally and professionally.

Almost any new idea or project, I consider an experiment.

Let’s try it for a predetermined time frame and then reevaluate.

Why it works

  • Takes the pressure off everyone involved!

  • Keeps the door open for change or feedback

  • Allows you to get started without having to consider every possible repercussion

  • Breaks it into a manageable chunk of time (e.g. it’s not forever, just for a month)

  • Makes it easier for people to come along on the journey

When to use it

  • (Literally for everything but here’s some examples…)

  • Trying a new wellness habit

  • Seeing if an event has good marketing ROI

  • Implementing a new metrics tracking system

  • Working with a consultant or coach

  • Iterating on your family’s nighttime routine

  • Launching a new product offering

  • Going after a stretch goal like speaking at a large event

All of these examples have money, time, or ego at stake. Lessen the risk by making it an experiment!

#PROTIP
Schedule time at the outset for the evaluation and feedback stage. Make sure to *ACTUALLY* cut or pivot the experiment if it’s not working!


2. Get everyone involved.

Another strategy I love across all areas of life is bringing people into the fold by asking for their help.

According to the Ben Franklin effect, you like someone better after you’ve helped them, even more than if they helped you.

(This is why asking for feedback from an investor is a great way to build a relationship!)

How to do it

  • Start with that person’s strengths (“You are great at designing a streamlined process.”)

  • Acknowledge concerns or reluctance (“I know you are not sure about this new product release strategy.”)

  • Ask for help (“Would you be able to spend a few minutes mapping out a process that might work?”)

  • Explain their importance (“Your operational brain power on this will really help the team save time and be more efficient.”)

What to ask for

  • Something specific they are good at

  • Feedback on a v.1 or something that already exists (this can take less time if bandwidth is a concern)

  • Plan or recommendations on how to best implement a high level goal (“Here’s the desired outcome — how do we get there?”)

  • Finding the right person or training someone (“Can you help me find and onboard the leader we need?”)

  • A good attitude (“Your energy is contagious.”)

  • If you’re asking for their time and work, specify how much time they need to spend (“30 minutes to help me think through pitfalls and how to avoid them”)

  • If they have only criticisms, ask for their suggestions and solutions! (“What would you do? How would you mitigate that?”)

How to incorporate help

What *NOT* to do

  • Ask for help and then totally ignore it 🥴🙃😬

What to do instead

  • Explain upfront how you will use their help and the decision process. Don’t promise to include someone’s ideas. (“I’m asking for everyone’s input and then will use that to make a final plan.”)

  • Give public shoutouts for any ideas or work they did (“Sarah found a great software option for us.”)

  • Find something to include — give everyone a small win within the final plan (like in the Core Values process). Even if you don’t have high confidence or disagree about that item, if it’s not mission-critical, it may be worth conceding for the sake of alignment and the larger goal. Again, you’re testing it out and will reevaluate!


#PROTIP
Works for families, kids, loved ones as well. If I do a small part of a house project, I feel more ownership and interest in future projects. When my kids help cook dinner, they’re more likely to eat it. We let everyone pick an activity for family trips — adults have the final say — but everyone shapes the plan!


How do you get your team onboard? What helps you navigate change? Any tips or strategies to share?

January 6, 2026
Dec
16
2
min

O’Daily’s Top #5 Hits of 2025

Founder faves and most helpful advice.

Read More

Avoiding holiday shopping? Procrastinating on your 2026 planning? Wondering what O’Daily gems you missed while building your company?

My gift to you — the top 5 posts of 2025!

(Is this what you were hoping for? I’m sure I saw it on your wish list! 😂😜😉)

And if you have an extra 30 seconds, please tell me, brilliant O’Daily readers, what do you want more of or less of next year??

Planning is underway and it’s all about founders! What topics, formats, info are most helpful to you? Reply and let me know!


1. 8 Key Components of a Startup Weekly Update

10x your startup’s progress by sending a weekly update. Learn the why, what, and how in this detailed post!

2. 4 Things We’ve Learned In The Atlanta Ventures Studio

What we’ve learned — good and bad — about starting companies in our Venture Studio with examples and playbooks.

3. Finding Your Startup’s Core Values (aka Your Secret Superpower)

Run this 6-step process to uncover your startup’s culture and then leverage it for hiring, performance, and speed. It’s a competitive advantage if you do it right!

4. What They Don’t Tell You About Startup Metrics (Until It’s Too Late)

Most people (including me) spend years measuring the wrong thing! Here’s how to align your company metrics with what your customers care about. Hint: it’s not usage data.

5. 6 Considerations For Startup Parental Leave (That Doesn’t Suck)

You want to support parents but startups can be the wild west when it comes to things like maternity and paternity leave. Here’s how to craft a startup-friendly plan and what really matters (that you may not realize).


What was your favorite post — here or otherwise — this year? Any blogs that you refer back to regularly? HAPPY HOLIDAYS!!

December 16, 2025
Dec
9
3
min

On the tiny, off-chance that you’re feeling overwhelmed with holidays, end-of-year sales targets, and — oh yeah — a new year starting in 3 weeks…

Here’s your playbook for Annual Planning in 60 minutes or less.

Yes, you can do a 12 day silent retreat with monks to fine tune your strategy.

Or schedule a one hour block on your calendar and get most of the value in 0.3% of the time.

If you have more time (like, TWO hours - gasp!), I share a few more planning strategies at the end.

But no need for all that. You can get it done in 60 minutes.

Ready…set…GO!! ⏳⏱️🏃‍♀️


Plan Your Year In Under An Hour

1. Schedule 1 hour [1 min]

  • Select a day where you will have maximum mental capacity (fewer meetings, lower stress).

  • Pick a “high energy” time (e.g. first thing in the morning).

  • Do it in a location with minimal distractions. Mix it up to feel refreshed and inspired!

  • Disable all notifications. You will not succeed if you are side Slacking!

#PROTIP
For extra accountability, add someone to the invite who will make sure you do it.


2. Reflect [15 min]

  • Ask yourself:

    • What is working?

    • What is not working?

    • What is the most important thing for the year ahead?

    • Where do I want to be by end of 2026?

  • You can do this ahead of time, within the hour, or both!

  • Feel free to add other questions but shorter is better for simplicity and time.

#PROTIP
Think about these questions before you go to bed. Jot a few things down on paper. Let your subconscious work overnight!


3. One Page Strategic Plan [25 min]

#PROTIP
Set a timer. Don’t overthink it. Trust your instincts. If you get stuck, jot something down and keep going.


4. Edit [10 min]

  • If you can, let it sit for a day or two or even share with trusted folks for feedback.

  • If not (I promised <1 hour), after your first draft, simplify, simplify, simplify!

#PROTIP
Cut ruthlessly. The less you have, the more you and the team can align and focus. If you crush it and have all this extra time (said no startup ever), you can add more later.

Reminder from my boy Warry B: say no to almost everything.


5. Schedule follow up NOW! [9 min]

  • Set calendar invites today for future touch points.

  • 3 options:

    • Calendar blocks for yourself only

    • Team/leadership meetings to review (schedule now to hold the time!)

    • Working session with fellow founder, coach, or other accountability friend

  • Timing:

    • End/start of quarter - how did we do? what are next quarter’s goals and priorities?

    • Mid-quarter - are we on track? (Very helpful to us at Rigor.)

#PROTIP
Include your mission, elevator pitch, and goals in your Weekly Update.

I like a quarterly check point to zoom out and think strategically, but annual and quarterly goals need to be talked about weekly (and daily) to make progress!


Aaaaaand you’re done.

Something is better than nothing and 1 hour will get you 80% of the value in 20% (or less) of the time.

More time? Want to dive deeper?


Did you get your annual planning done in 1 hour?? What are your favorite tools or frameworks for planning? Do you follow the same process for both professional and personal annual plans? I’d love to hear about your planning process — good, bad, and ugly!

(P.S. If you’re working through your Annual Plan and want feedback on priorities and metrics (or accountability!), come chat with us at Office Hours in January.)

December 9, 2025
Dec
2
4
min

8 Signs You've Got Authentic Demand (& 10 Signs You Don't!)

ICYMI: At Atlanta Ventures…WE LOVE AUTHENTIC DEMAND!!!!!!!

Read More

ICYMI: At Atlanta VenturesWE LOVE AUTHENTIC DEMAND!!!!!!!

It’s our guiding principle when finding new business ideas.

That’s why I spent a whole blog explaining Authentic Demand including 8 articles other team members wrote, 5 resources with examples, and 7 strategies to find Authentic Demand.

But wait…there’s more!

Today, we dig into specifics:

  • What do people say?

  • What are good signs?

  • What are real examples?

  • What are misleading “false positives”?

  • How long does it take to find the illusive and magical Authentic Demand???

Let the journey begin!


Early Authentic Demand Signals: What To Look For

What They Say:

  • “Can I give you money now to build this?” (aka be a Design Partner)

  • “I also have a friend who would be interested. How do I get them involved?”

  • “I’d like to be a customer and also an investor.”

  • “When can we start?”

  • “I’ve been looking online for something like this but haven’t found it.”

What They Do:

  • Follow up with you, take a second meeting

  • Share honest feedback (because they care and want it to exist)

  • Login or engage with a prototype

  • Pay for it now (not “when this feature is added” → that’s a warning sign)

  • Make time to get set up


Real Life Examples of Authentic Demand

“You know it when you see it” is true…but not that helpful 😉

Here are specific examples I’ve seen or experienced with startups that found Authentic Demand:

  • Multiple customers get a tattoo of your logo.

  • You make a Youtube video of a hacked together version of your product and people comment asking where they can buy it.

  • Your marketing manager does implementations for a year because there’s so many new customers signing up.

  • 100% quota attainment from every sales rep for multiple quarters.

  • You have 6 figures of revenue within one quarter of launching, selling a combination of services and off-the-shelf product.

  • Your customers are really mad about some critically bad bugs but they don’t cancel (because you’re still providing so much value).

  • Your team is troubleshooting a “high class problem” several times per week.

  • You hire multiple in-house recruiters to keep up with hiring targets.


What Authentic Demand is NOT

To offer the counter-point, here are some things that may seem like Authentic Demand but are not, or things that may feel “normal” for startups but indications that you need to dig further!

  • Raising lots of money (“good at fundraising” does not necessarily mean Authentic Demand)

  • You need paid campaigns for new customers (if you’re paying a lot of money to get a new customer, that’s a yellow flag)

  • Customers like you (but don’t love you)

  • Easy to get new sales, but low retention/high churn

  • Getting meetings (that don’t convert to sales)

  • Many deals are slow rolling

  • Social media engagement (can be a good sign but this alone is not enough)

  • People telling you they like your idea (reread The Mom Test!)

  • Rate of sales is steady but not increasing

  • Everything feels like a f***ing slog (startups are hard but with Authentic Demand, they are also really fun)


How Long Does It Take To Find Authentic Demand

It depends.

Every founder’s favorite answer. 🙃

Salesloft iterated for 3 years, while building a great community of their target customers, before finding the right product.

In our Studio, most founders spend several months researching and testing a specific idea before launching a company.

The “company” still starts very scrappy with one or more of these strategies to continue to learn and refine the offering.

Even businesses that are physical locations go through significant testing phases like the golf simulator at Atlanta Tech Village before launching Intown Golf Club or doing in-house wine gatherings and signing up 100 paid founding members before breaking ground on The Perlant.

So, successful companies can take months or years to find it.

What I have seen to be true:

When you have it, you feel it and it feels fast.

  • You’re struggling to keep up with the demand.

  • You’re getting lots of inbound activity.

  • You’re dealing with problems of growth, not moving mountains to generate sales.

It’s why it’s SO WORTH IT to take more time in the early stages. Better to spend a year finding Authentic Demand than spend a few months, commit hard, and then roll a boulder up a hill for the next 3 years.


Do you agree with the concept of Authentic Demand? How did you find your business idea? When did you know you were onto something??

December 2, 2025
Nov
25
2
min

10 Things All Founders Are Extremely Grateful For

Gratitude is a superpower for startups and life.

Read More

The quickest and shortest way to a more successful life?

Realizing how great your life already is!

Gratitude is a secret super power you can leverage in startups and beyond.

Even when startups are really hard, there’s still so much to be grateful for!

Any of these resonate with you?? What else should be on the list? What are you grateful for this year? (Here’s mine w/📸!)


1. Your customers!!!!!!!!

Not possible without them. Even — or especially — when they’re mad.

2. Revenue 💰💰💰

Every dollar matters. Especially early on.

Extra, extra, extra grateful for cash flow positive.

3. The gift of feedback

It can be hard in the moment but if you take a step back, feedback means that someone (whether customer, advisor, investor, employee):

  • cares

  • believes in you

  • sees even greater potential

4. The people who believed in you early on.

Angel investors, early employees, first customers. Those who took a chance on you — before it was a thing — have a special place in your heart forever.

5. Finding your startup better half.

That key person who loves doing what you suck at. Co-founder, COO, future COO, or world-class intern.

6. Tax strategies and other free money.

Non-dilutive grants, free website design, the legal advice that saved you thousands, deal negotiation advice, and, of course, conference swag. 😉😜😂

Small moments with big impact add up.

7. Your squad, tribe, team, people.

Partner, founder friends, non-founder friends, employees, advisors, coaches.

The people who join you for late nights, support your insanity, make you shut your laptop, ask the question that unlocks everything, and most importantly, care about you no matter how your startup is doing.

Here’s 5 free ways to show gratitude or go wild with something off this year’s gift guide. 😉

8. The founders who came before you.

It’s never been less awkward to say you’re an entrepreneur at Thanksgiving dinner!

From historical figures and How I Built This idols to the entrepreneurial family members and local founders who pay it forward → thank you for blazing the trail!

9. Sleep

No one ever gets enough but OMG are we grateful for whatever we get!

The power of a good night’s sleep is incredible:

  • Fresh ideas

  • Clearer outlook

  • More optimism

  • Better health

10. Being able to found a company.

Financial, social, political freedom. Having life circumstances that make it possible.

Even when startups feel really, really hard, it’s a privilege to pursue the work, dream, and meaning of building a company.

Bonus: Time off.

Here’s my favorite before-the-holidays wisdom from Alex Friedman:

Idk who needs this but I’ve seen a few startups fail because of founder burn out. I haven’t seen any startups fail because a founder took a couple days off.


Happy Thanksgiving, y’all!

November 25, 2025
Want to read more? Subscribe to my Substack.

Want to stay up to date? New blogs come out weekly.