An investor told Stephany Lapierre she would never raise capital. She had three kids, no tech background, and no co-founder. But she flipped that rejection into fuel, raised $72M in startup funding for TealBook, and built an enterprise SaaS platform serving over 100 Fortune 1000 customers.
Learn how a non-technical founder overcame enterprise SaaS fundraising rejection, why the 'ZoomInfo for procurement' analogy unlocked SaaS fundraising interest, and how LinkedIn thought leadership replaced a sales team.
š Key Lessons
- š° Enterprise SaaS fundraising requires reducing your risk profile: Stephany couldn't raise capital as a non-technical founder until she recruited a CTO and COO who invested their own money.
- š§ Reframe investor rejection as actionable enterprise SaaS feedback: When an investor listed every reason Stephany would fail, she addressed each gap and returned with a stronger startup funding pitch.
- šÆ Use a relatable analogy to unlock enterprise SaaS investor understanding: TealBook struggled until the team positioned it as "ZoomInfo for procurement." When ZoomInfo went public, interest surged.
- š Outgrowing your tech stack can threaten any enterprise SaaS: TealBook grew 350% in 2021 but its MVP-era platform could not handle enterprise data volumes, forcing a painful full rebuild.
- š¤ LinkedIn thought leadership replaces a sales team for enterprise SaaS: Stephany wrote weekly LinkedIn posts and cold-messaged procurement officers to build credibility without a marketing budget.
Chapters
- Introduction
- Stephany's favorite quote on resilience
- What TealBook does and the supplier data problem
- Size of the business and SaaS fundraising history
- Origin story and nine years fighting the idea
- Getting started and early validation
- The $50,000 check from her husband
- Selling $5,000 memberships and the teal coins model
- Flipping the model for a $60 billion customer
- Why startup funding was harder than expected
- Building confidence as a non-technical founder
- Shifting the SaaS fundraising narrative
- Using LinkedIn thought leadership for enterprise SaaS customers
- Rebuilding the platform and technical debt
- Lightning round
- Wrap up and where to find Stephany
Resources