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ultrasaurus | 1 year ago

> So she paid a $7,500 deposit and was all set to join Newchip when a founder friend told her to “never pay for introductions.”

Hopefully everyone knows this here, but if you paid for an introduction it's a negative signal: just cold email.

That being said, I'll make intros for only $6,500 and no warrants.

discuss

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pavel_lishin|1 year ago

Don't listen to this charlatan. For only $6,499 I'll introduce you to a chap who won't charge you a cent over $6,498 for an introduction.

oxcabe|1 year ago

Who pays for a full introduction nowadays, though?

Hear me out - we are introducing a PaaS (Pitch as a Service) platform so that founders only pay for what VC is interested in listening.

It's just $0.003/word, allowing you to optimize your introduction. It's also lazily evaluated: if someone gets bored with it, you get cut off from your introduction and just pay for what you said up to that point.

We are offering discounts for the words "AI", "LLM", and "web3". Those are half the price.

hedora|1 year ago

I charge as much as the second lowest bidder.

Second lowest because sustainable value extraction is important to me.

atherton33|1 year ago

Of note from the article: she complained and was refunded the money after being stood up for the meeting, but they never cancelled the contract she paid to sign that gave them the right to buy her out of her own company for pennies, so once it passed to bankruptcy the creditors still took her company.

darkerside|1 year ago

Wouldn't a contract like this be considered unenforceable? There were no services rendered, no exchange of value

tptacek|1 year ago

They didn't directly take her company, right? They held on to warrants for some % of the company, which killed her chances of fundraising?

morgante|1 year ago

I don't really understand how these predatory businesses continue to exist.

I understand some entrepreneurs are very out of the loop / far from the VC ecosystem, but even just Googling about it you will find lots of clear advice to never pay for introductions or accelerators.

OJFord|1 year ago

It's just falling for a scam like any other really isn't it? It happens, the promises you want to believe, etc.

We can sit here and say we don't understand how people fall for Nigerian princes, attorneys for the estate of long lost cousins, and all that sort of thing, but clearly it works on some people vulnerable and wishful enough to believe it.