I pitched to Sheryl Sandberg and Accel as a young founder. Here’s how I raised $5 million and what you can do to get a yes.
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Michelle Lim, 28, is the founder and CEO of Flint, an AI startup.
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She raised nearly $5 million in seed funding from investors like Accel, Neo, and Sheryl Sandberg.
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Working at an early-stage startup and having a track record helps a lot when fundraising, she says.
 
This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Michelle Lim, the founder and CEO of Flint, an AI startup based in San Francisco. The following has been edited for length and clarity. Business Insider has verified her employment and academic history.
Entrepreneurship wasn’t on the top of my mind when I was a high schooler in Singapore.
It was only when I went to Yale that I told myself I needed to start exploring different things. That was when I started to seriously consider entrepreneurship as a career.
My entrepreneurial ambitions led me to major in computer science, which opened the door to internships at companies like Meta, Slack, and Robinhood.
My desire for more agency and autonomy over my work drove me to intern at progressively smaller companies.
My first internship was with Facebook, which at that time had about 12,000 employees. When I joined Slack, it was a 1,200-person company. And finally, when I got to Robinhood, it was a 300-person company.
When you work in a smaller company, you really feel you’re making a difference.
After graduating, I joined Warp, a coding terminal startup, as its first hire.
To many people, joining a brand-new startup as a fresh graduate is a risk. Why take the road less traveled when you can stick to the tried-and-tested path of joining a big company?
But it felt right. I was starting my career in the summer of 2020, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. I was living in New York, and people were dying every day. I could smell the ashes in the air from the cremations.
I realized then that life really is short. I could die at any time, and when that happens, I don’t want to feel regret over not taking a risky but more exciting path.
I spent four years at Warp, where I cycled through a variety of roles. I started out as an engineer, switched to marketing, and then ran the company’s product and sales. I presented at board meetings every month and jumped on calls with our investors, including Figma CEO Dylan Field, every quarter.
I learned a lot at Warp. That experience proved to be formative when I cofounded my own AI startup, Flint, in January.
As a founder, you are basically the startup’s chief rejection officer. You are taking the brunt of rejections from sales prospects, recruits, and investors.

 
 
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