--- title: "Do You Know How to Build a Fundraising Pipeline?" section: "Fundraising" sectionId: "fundraising" date: "2026-05" --- Fundraising is a numbers game — and like any sales process, you need to work the funnel deliberately. ## The typical fundraising funnel Here is what a realistic fundraising funnel looks like from top to bottom: | Stage | Approximate number | |---|---| | Large initial list | 150 investors | | Curated / qualified list | 125 investors | | First meetings (Zoom) | ~50 | | Second meetings | ~25 | | Enter diligence | ~10 | | Term sheets | 1–3 | Those 150 investors at the top of the funnel could produce 1–3 term sheets at the bottom. That's the realistic yield — which is why you need to start with a large, qualified list rather than a small, hand-picked one. This varies significantly from startup to startup depending on your traction, market, and how well-prepared you are going in. ## Why the pipeline matters If you treat investor outreach as a sales funnel: - You can diagnose drop-off points. Getting meetings but no second calls? The pitch needs work. Getting second calls but no term sheets? The diligence story needs work. - You can manage your timeline. If you're burning through the list too fast, slow your outreach. If you're getting too few meetings, you may need to improve your targeting or warm up cold contacts. - You avoid the psychological trap of obsessing over one or two investors. If any single investor can make or break your raise, your pipeline isn't big enough. Build the pipeline early. Relationships with investors often take months before they translate into a meeting. Start making connections before you're formally fundraising.