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    Henry Shi

    Co-Founder at Super.com: America's #1 SuperApp | Forbes U30 | EY Entrepreneur of the Year

    Henry Shi is a professional with a diverse background in startups, tech, and finance, with a focus on computer science, machine learning, and economics.

    He holds a BCS, Honours Bachelor of Computer Science and Honors Economics from the University of Waterloo, and a Master's of Science in Computer Science with a specialization in Machine Learning from the Georgia Institute of Technology.

    Henry has been involved in various organizations such as Google, Forbes, LendUp, and Super.com, with roles ranging from Software Engineer to Co-Founder and Investor.

    His experience also includes positions at Bloomberg, Scotia Capital, and as an Entrepreneur at NEXT Canada, showcasing his versatility and expertise in both technical and entrepreneurial domains.

    Henry Shi is dedicated to connecting with talented and driven individuals to contribute to a rapidly growing startup focused on enhancing people's life experiences, irrespective of their financial situations.

    Highlights

    Oct 29 · twitter

    I got rejected by 144 investors before raising $150M for my $200M+ rev/year startup.

    After 144 rejections, I started questioning our approach.

    Were we solving the right problem?

    What were we doing wrong?

    Why weren’t investors seeing what we were seeing?

    Were we the right team to build this?

    We tried everything: different pitch angles, new deck structures, and reframing the problem.

    Then came the 145th meeting, where we closed our first growth round.

    That yes made everything worth it. But getting there took years of mistakes and hard work.

    We went through a lot of trial and error just to figure out what resonates with investors.

    We tried dozens of approaches to figure out what made investors engage.

    Some landed, most didn't. But each iteration taught us something about what builds conviction versus what just sounds good on paper.

    And once we cracked that code, our Series C closed faster than expected.

    And today, I see so many founders in the exact same position I was in 10 years ago: grinding through rejections, questioning everything, and trying to figure out what works.

    So today I want to give you the resource I wish I had back then:

    Something that shows you exactly how to structure these conversations and navigate the entire process

    (because the fundraising cycle can be a big distraction and take a toll on you as a founder).

    So I've partnered with Notion's Startups Team to create the essential fundraising resource that helps you avoid the mistakes that cost me years.

    Here's what you are getting:

    • The actual decks I used to raise $150M for Super[.]com (Series B, C)

    • 50 real examples from funded startups like Eleven Labs and Artisan AI

    • A searchable database of 10,000+ investors - angels, VCs, and accelerators you can reach out to immediately (this alone would take months to build manually)

    • An AI-powered fundraising agent built into Notion with step-by-step prompts (no separate ChatGPT needed)

    Want access?

    • Like and share this post

    • Comment "FUNDRAISE"

    • Follow me so I can DM you the link

    I'll send it over ASAP.

    P.S.: If you are serious about fundraising (now or in the future), you should grab it right away.

    I got rejected by 144 investors before raising $150M for my $200M+ rev/year startup.

After 144 reje
    Sep 10 · twitter

    Excited to be hosting this office hour with the @a16z @speedrun team

    Oct 6 · Finextra
    The rise of the theme-based super app - Finextra
    The rise of the theme-based super app - Finextra
    Jun 30 · TechCrunch
    Pitch Deck Teardown: Super.com’s $60M Series C deck - TechCrunch
    Pitch Deck Teardown: Super.com’s $60M Series C deck - TechCrunch
    Henry Shi
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    Location

    San Francisco, California, United States