Shownotes
Most CEOs preparing to raise capital focus on pitch decks, projections, and presentation polish. George Dubec argues that investors are making decisions much earlier — based on founder credibility, clarity, visibility, and whether they believe the CEO can actually execute.
In this episode, George explains why investor trust increasingly outweighs traditional fundraising materials, how modern founders should rethink investor communication, and why AI-driven presentation formats are rapidly changing the expectations around fundraising and growth.
George Dubec is an entrepreneur, author, networking strategist, and advisory board member for America’s Real Deal — a streaming investment show that combines investor pitches, crowdfunding, and consumer visibility. Drawing from decades of business experience and exposure to startup funding environments, George shares what he believes investors actually evaluate when deciding whether to back a company.
The conversation explores why founder credibility matters more than polished decks, how networking directly influences funding opportunities, and why CEOs need to adapt quickly to AI-driven communication and operational shifts. George also explains how investor psychology is changing in an increasingly crowded and attention-constrained market.
Key Takeaways
- Investors increasingly evaluate founder credibility before they evaluate pitch materials.
- Short-form video presentations can create stronger investor trust signals than traditional pitch decks.
- Networking remains one of the most underutilized funding advantages for growth-stage CEOs.
- CEOs who delay AI adoption risk falling behind in communication, productivity, and operational leverage.
- Strong decision-making increasingly depends on filtering emotion from judgment and focusing on verified information.
George Dubec
Entrepreneur, Author, Networking Strategist, and Advisory Board Member at America’s Real Deal
Website:
LinkedIn: