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Ethan brings a rare dual lens to this conversation: he spent years as a founder who couldn't get a meeting, then became a managing director at Techstars, where he reviewed thousands of pitches. That combination gives him a clear-eyed view of what actually moves the needle versus what founders obsess over that doesn't matter. His most counterintuitive point: the pitch deck is mostly a red herring. What separates winning rounds from losing ones is process and momentum, not narrative polish. Stacking your investor meetings into a tight three-to-four day window, having your data room ready before anyone asks, and recording customer calls in advance to close the "believability gap" are the kinds of mechanical advantages that compound quickly and that most founders simply don't know to do. Ethan is also unusually direct about what it means to pick your investors well, not just get picked by them. His framework for evaluating funds at the pre-seed and seed level cuts through a lot of brand chasing: unless it is a true tier-one name, the halo effect is minimal, and the more important question is how hard this person is going to work for you. He goes further and pushes founders to ask about fund size alignment early, since a $100M exit is life-changing for a founder but irrelevant to a large fund. That misalignment, he argues, causes more downstream friction than most founders anticipate. On the post-close relationship, Ethan offers something most VCs never say out loud: the most active period of support typically runs 18 to 24 months, and after that, a natural taper is built into the math of portfolio management. His advice is to move to text messaging as quickly as possible to collapse the power dynamic, send investor updates on a consistent clock (because the squeaky wheel genuinely does get more attention), and hold a state-of-the-union call with all investors right after close to reset expectations against what was pitched. Almost no one does any of these things, which is exactly why he recommends them.