Create your profile
Claim your slug, fill in basics: name, tagline, sector, stage, location, team size. Your link is live the second you save.
Upload your deck or paste your website. Get a public link in 60 seconds. Use it for investors, customers, partners — or whoever else needs to know what you're building.
Free to start. Founding Members get $120 in credits.
Most startups live in eight tools that don't talk to each other. Your deck in Drive. Your website. Your Notion doc. Your Twitter thread. Your LinkedIn page. Your Calendly. Your investor list in a Google Sheet. Your KPIs somewhere else. Every Monday is reconciliation.
StartupCorners replaces the stack with one workspace. One profile that doubles as your shareable link. One pipeline where every conversation lives — investors, customers, partners, hires. One KPI tracker that keeps your cap table in sync. One update composer that tells you who opened, who replied, who's engaged.
We didn't build this because anyone asked for it. We built it because founders run their startup this way — just usually in eight tools. We made it one.
Six steps from signup to a link you can share with anyone. About 30 minutes total.
Claim your slug, fill in basics: name, tagline, sector, stage, location, team size. Your link is live the second you save.
Drop in 3–6 months of metrics — ARR, MRR, customers, burn, runway. The cap table renders automatically from your funding history. Per-section privacy controls let you hide what's not ready.
Paste a list of investors you're targeting. Drag through stages — from intro to wire. Log every meeting, call, and follow-up against the investor it belongs to.
Each investor gets their own link. Toggle visibility per section: show the cap table to lead investors only, share KPIs with confirmed prospects, send a teaser version to cold targets. Track who opened what.
The AI assistant scores investors and accelerator programs against your stage, sector, and check size. It tells you why each match scored. Drafts your outreach. Runs on credits.
Compose, schedule, send. Use the template (or paste your own). See who opened — and who replied. Templates and drafts keep you honest about cadence.
Browse the public investor profiles and program profiles already on StartupCorners.
Concrete starting points, copy-paste ready.
5-section structure investors actually read. Replace placeholders with your numbers and ship in 15 minutes.
Subject: [Company] update — [Month Year] TL;DR - [Top 1–3 things this month, one line each] Metrics - ARR: $X (↑X% MoM) - MRR: $X - Customers: X (↑X net new) - Cash on hand: $X - Runway: X months Wins - [Customer signed, hire made, milestone hit] Lowlights - [Honest. What didn't work. What you're worried about.] Asks - [Specific. Named. Warm intro to <person> at <fund>.] - [Customer intro at <type of company>.] - [Hiring help for <role>.] What's next - [1–3 things you're focused on in the next 30 days] Thanks for backing us. [Founder name]
What to track weekly, monthly, and quarterly. Sample numbers for a Seed B2B SaaS calibrate what good looks like.
WEEKLY (5 minutes Monday morning) - New signups / activations - Active users (DAU or WAU) - New paying customers - MRR added this week - Pipeline activity (calls booked, demos done) MONTHLY (30 minutes end of month) - ARR / MRR - Churn $ (gross + net) - Customer count - Cash position + burn rate - Runway months QUARTERLY (full review) - LTV, CAC, payback period - Net revenue retention - Top 10 customer concentration - Team size + open hires Sample numbers — Seed B2B SaaS, ~6 months in: - ARR: $40k–$200k - MRR growth: 15–30% MoM healthy, <5% concerning - Burn: $30k–$80k/mo - Runway target: 12+ months
How to organize a target list — stages, source labels, custom fields per investor. Built for a $2M seed; scales up or down.
Stages (in order) 1. Researched — investor identified, fits thesis 2. Intro requested — asked someone for warm intro 3. Intro made — warm intro sent, awaiting response 4. First meeting scheduled 5. First meeting done — pitched, awaiting next step 6. Diligence — partner meeting, DD docs requested 7. Term sheet — TS in hand 8. Closed — wired Source labels - Warm intro from <name> - Cold outreach - Inbound (they reached out) - Partner-network reference - Conference / event - Existing-investor reference Custom fields per investor - Stage they invest at (must match yours) - Sectors (must overlap) - Cheque size range - Last fund vintage - Recent active deals - Why they fit YOUR raise specifically - Last touch + Next action + Next-action date Target list distribution (raising $2M seed) - Lead: 5–8 funds (each could anchor) - Co-leads: 15–20 funds - Smaller checks: 30–40 (angel + smaller seed) - Reserve: 30+ for follow-up rounds
The same pillars from the homepage, with the depth that makes them work.
Founders track KPIs because investors ask. Then the founder spends three hours a month copy-pasting numbers across spreadsheets, decks, and email updates. Then the numbers don't match. Then an investor asks why.
Log monthly metrics — ARR, MRR, burn, runway, customers, headcount, custom KPIs you define. Six-month trend renders automatically. Cap table on the public profile updates as funding changes.
Share specific KPIs with specific investors via per-link visibility. Investors with confirmed term sheets get the full picture. Cold prospects get the teaser. Same data, different lens.
Most founders know they should send monthly updates — to investors, advisors, even key customers. Most don't, because writing it from scratch every time is a 90-minute task they push off. Then it's been 4 months. The next round is awkward, the advisor goes cold, the customer hears about a pivot from Twitter.
Our update composer has the 5-section structure people actually read (TL;DR / metrics / wins / lowlights / asks). Pull metrics directly from your KPI tracker. Schedule for end of month. See who opened, who replied.
Engagement data flows back into the pipeline. The investor who opened your last three updates is signal. The advisor who hasn't opened any is signal too.
Founders waste days researching investors. Most don't fit. The ones that do are the same names everyone else found. The result is a target list that's 80% noise.
AI matching scores investors and accelerator programs against your stage, sector, check-size range, and recent traction signals. It tells you why each match scored — which thesis dimensions overlap, which recent investments rhyme with yours.
It also drafts your outreach. Personalized to the investor's portfolio, your fit, your recent metrics. You edit and send. Runs on credits — typically a few dollars per active week of fundraising.
Includes 50 free AI credits each month. No subscription. Top up only when you need more.
Free to start. Founding Members get $120 in credits and a direct line to the founders.