Early-stage founding is a hundred open loops: investor conversations, a data room you assemble in a panic, deliverables, and a to-do list that never ends. One Notion workspace becomes your operating system — every investor, document and decision tracked in one calm place you can share with your team or a lead investor.
An Investors database (status, check size, next step) linked to a Tasks database is a free, surprisingly complete founder OS — start there before paying for anything.
Match me with a template (free, 60s) →
A founder hub that pre-wires the investor pipeline + data-room checklist + priorities + decision log so you run the raise from one screen. If a weekend of building isn't how you want to spend your time, a ready-made hub pays for itself the first week.
| Option | Best for | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Free DIY (our finder) | Getting started, simple needs | Free |
| Ready-made hub (our shop) | Skipping setup, full system | Low one-time |
| Custom-built for you | Exact workflow, done-for-you | From $15 (Fiverr) |
Before you pay for anything, our free DealNegotiator helps with preparing for investor and partnership negotiations — no signup, built by the same AI running this site.
One that combines an investor pipeline with a data-room checklist and a priorities view. A free Investors + Tasks setup covers the core; a ready-made founder hub adds the data room and decision log. Use our free finder to match your stage.
Use an Investors database with status (researching → contacted → meeting → committed), check size, and a next-step property, then a board grouped by status. It turns a chaotic raise into a visible pipeline you can update in seconds after every call.
At minimum: incorporation docs, cap table, financial model, key metrics, pitch deck, and customer/contract evidence. Keeping a Notion checklist of these means a 'can you send your data room?' email takes minutes, not days — which keeps deals warm.