Why Most Founders Fail to Raise Capital — and How Private Markets Really Work in 2026 | Steve Torso
Impossibile aggiungere al carrello
Rimozione dalla Lista desideri non riuscita.
Non è stato possibile aggiungere il titolo alla Libreria
Non è stato possibile seguire il Podcast
Esecuzione del comando Non seguire più non riuscita
-
Letto da:
-
Di:
A proposito di questo titolo
In this episode of the Unicorn Ventures Podcast, we sit down with Steve Torso, Founder of Wholesale Investor and CapitalHQ, to unpack what’s really broken in private capital markets — and what founders, fund managers, and advisors must do differently to raise capital successfully in 2026 and beyond.
With over 16 years at the centre of private capital ecosystems, Steve has helped connect more than 45,000+ high-net-worth investors, family offices, venture capital firms, and professional investors with companies and funds across Australia, Singapore, the UK, India, and global markets. In this conversation, he cuts through the noise and explains why most capital raises fail long before investors say no.
A central theme of the episode is infrastructure.
Steve explains why capital raising breaks down when founders treat it as a series of disconnected conversations rather than a structured system. Fragmented investor communication, repeated due diligence questions, poor information flow, and inconsistent follow-up quietly erode trust and momentum — even when the opportunity itself is strong.
This is exactly the problem CapitalHQ was built to solve: an AI-powered operating system for capital raising, investor relations, M&A, and business sales. The platform enables founders and fund managers to centralise deal information, streamline due diligence, automate investor updates, and focus on high-quality conversations instead of administrative drag.
The episode also explores how AI and automation are reshaping private capital markets — not by replacing relationships, but by strengthening them. Intelligent deal rooms, analytics, investor engagement tools, and matchmaking technology are fast becoming essential as private credit, succession-driven exits, and global investor access accelerate.
Why repeated investor questions signal poor information architecture
How to structure a capital raise so investors can self-educate without friction
What serious investors look for before committing capital
How to build long-term investor relationships instead of transactional raises
Why capital raising is becoming an operational discipline, not a sales exercise
The conversation also highlights the ongoing role of Wholesale Investor in curating high-quality investment opportunities and hosting leading private capital events, including Emergence, Venture & Capital, and sector-specific showcases across life sciences, healthcare, renewables, fintech, SaaS, private credit, and scale-up innovation.
This episode is essential listening for founders, CEOs, fund managers, advisors, and operators who want to raise capital with clarity, credibility, and confidence — while positioning their business for the next decade of private markets.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
Why repeated investor questions signal poor information architecture
How to structure a capital raise so investors can self-educate without friction
What serious investors look for before committing capital
How to build long-term investor relationships instead of transactional raises
Why capital raising is becoming an operational discipline, not a sales exercise
The conversation also highlights the ongoing role of Wholesale Investor in curating high-quality investment opportunities and hosting leading private capital events, including Emergence, Venture & Capital, and sector-specific showcases across life sciences, healthcare, renewables, fintech, SaaS, private credit, and scale-up innovation.
This episode is essential listening for founders, CEOs, fund managers, advisors, and operators who want to raise capital with clarity, credibility, and confidence — while positioning their business for the next decade of private markets.