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The 30-minute first meeting

8 min read · Pre-seed → Series A · Updated April 2026

A first meeting that takes 60 minutes was probably going to be a pass anyway. The signal you need fits in 30 — and the discipline of fitting it forces sharper questions.

The 30-minute structure

The 5 questions that surface signal

1. "What's the most common reason a customer doesn't convert?"

Tests whether the founder talks to customers. Bad answer: vague generalities. Good answer: "40% of trial users hit a regulatory question on day 3 that we don't yet answer in onboarding. We're shipping the fix in March."

2. "What metric did you choose to optimise this quarter, and why?"

Tests whether they know what stage they're at. Pre-seed: usage. Seed: retention. Series A: efficient growth. The wrong metric for the stage is a flag.

3. "Walk me through your last hire."

Tests recruiting craft. "I sourced 38 people, talked to 14, did real work tests with 5, hired 1, and they ramped in 6 weeks" beats "someone came through a referral and seemed great".

4. "What's your cap table?"

Tests legal hygiene. A founder who can rattle off founder %, ESOP, and prior investor breakdown without checking has done the work. A founder who says "I'll send it" might have a mess.

5. "Why now?"

Three forces, specific. If they don't have three, the timing thesis is weak. (Most founders haven't thought about this carefully — your job is to push them to.)

The "tell me more" multiplier. When a founder gives a thin answer, say "tell me more" instead of asking a follow-up. The phrase is calibrated — it surfaces depth without leading. Use it 3–4 times per meeting.

Patterns that mean immediate pass

Patterns that mean second meeting

The follow-up

Within 24 hours, send a 5-line email. Be specific about next steps — even if the next step is no: