How to Build a Target Investor List That Converts to Meetings

Founder building a target investor list on a laptop in a London coworking space

Knowing how to build an investor list is one of the most underrated skills in early fundraising. Most founders open their raise by emailing every investor they can find, then wonder why the response rate is close to zero. A focused, well-researched target investor list does the opposite: it concentrates your time on the people most likely to write a cheque at your stage, in your sector and at your geography. This guide sets out how to build an investor list that earns meetings rather than silence, with the UK sources and the qualifying questions that make the difference.

The aim is not a spreadsheet of 400 names. It is a prioritised list of investors who plausibly invest in companies like yours, sequenced so you approach them in the right order and at the right time.

Why a targeted list beats a mass mailout

Investors talk to each other, and they remember a scattergun approach. A generic deck blasted to every fund in London signals that you have not done your homework, and it burns relationships you may want later. A targeted list also protects your most valuable resource, which is time. A pre-seed or seed raise typically takes three to six months, and you only get one first impression per investor. Spending an hour qualifying each name up front saves weeks of chasing people who were never going to invest.

There is a sequencing benefit too. A good list lets you start with lower-priority investors to sharpen your pitch, then approach your top targets once the story is tight and you have early momentum to point to.

Step 1: define your ideal investor profile

Before you collect a single name, write down what a relevant investor looks like for this round. Be specific across four dimensions:

  • Stage. Pre-seed, seed, Series A. A fund that leads Series A rounds will not write your first 150,000 pound cheque, and the reverse is true for an angel.
  • Cheque size. Match their typical investment to what you actually need to fill the round.
  • Sector and thesis. Fintech, healthtech, climate, deep tech, consumer. Many funds publish an explicit thesis; take it seriously.
  • Geography and structure. UK-based or UK-active funds, and whether they can support SEIS and EIS, which most UK angels expect at the earliest stages.

That profile becomes your filter. Every name you add gets checked against it.

Step 2: where to source UK investors

You do not need paid databases to start, although they help at scale. Reliable UK and open sources include:

Researching UK venture capital firms and angel networks
Pull names from several UK sources, then qualify each one.
  • UK Business Angels Association. The UKBAA lists angel networks and syndicates active across the UK, which is the fastest route to early-stage backers.
  • Open investor databases. OpenVC, Dealroom and Crunchbase let you filter funds by stage, sector and geography, and many entries link to a fund’s stated thesis.
  • The British Business Bank. Its programmes and co-investment partners point you toward regional funds and government-backed capital.
  • Portfolio pages and recent deals. Find three or four startups that look like yours and note who funded their pre-seed or seed. Those investors have a proven appetite for your space.
  • Your network and warm intros. LinkedIn, accelerator alumni and other founders are the highest-converting source of all. A warm introduction beats a cold email every time.

Pull names from several sources rather than one, then move straight into qualifying. A long unqualified list feels like progress but is not.

Step 3: qualify each investor against your round

For every name, spend a few minutes confirming they fit your profile. Check that they are actively deploying (a fund near the end of its life may be tapped out), that they invest at your stage, and that they have not already backed a direct competitor, which usually rules them out on conflict grounds. Note their most recent investments and whether they led or followed. Aim to capture, for each investor, why they are a fit in one sentence. If you cannot write that sentence, they probably do not belong on the list.

Step 4: build the list in a simple CRM or spreadsheet

Treat fundraising like a sales pipeline, because that is what it is. A spreadsheet is enough to begin with. Useful columns include: investor or firm name, the specific partner to approach, stage and cheque size, sector fit, the one-line reason they fit, your warm-intro route (and who can make it), status, and the date of last contact. As the raise grows, a lightweight CRM helps you track follow-ups so nobody goes cold by accident. The discipline matters more than the tool.

Step 5: prioritise and sequence your outreach

Sort the qualified list into tiers. Tier one is your dream backers who fit perfectly and can add real value. Tier two is a strong fit but less perfect. Tier three is plausible but a stretch. Counterintuitively, open with a few tier-two and tier-three names so you can refine your pitch and your answers on lower stakes. Then run your tier-one approaches in a tight cluster, because investor interest compounds: momentum and the hint of a competitive round move people from maybe to yes far more reliably than a deck ever will.

How many investors should be on your list?

For a typical UK pre-seed or seed raise, a well-qualified target list of 40 to 80 investors is a healthy range. Fewer than that and a normal conversion rate may not produce enough meetings to fill the round; many more and the list is probably padded with names that do not really fit. Quality of fit, not length, is what gets the list converting to meetings. You will find more founder guides on fundraising over at Idea London.

Frequently asked questions

How do I find the right partner at a VC firm to contact?

Look at the firm’s team page and recent deals to find the partner who covers your sector or stage, since they usually announce the investments they lead. Approaching the relevant partner, ideally through a warm introduction, is far more effective than emailing a general inbox.

Should I include angels as well as funds on my investor list?

At pre-seed and seed, yes. Angels often move faster than funds, write the earliest cheques and can provide hands-on help. The UK Business Angels Association and angel syndicates are a good starting point for building that side of the list.

Is it worth paying for an investor database?

For a first raise, free and open sources are usually enough to build a strong list. Paid databases save time once you are scaling outreach or raising a larger round, but they are not a substitute for qualifying each name against your own profile.

How important are warm introductions versus cold outreach?

Warm introductions convert at a much higher rate, so map your network against the list and use intros wherever you can. Cold outreach can still work if it is highly targeted and shows you understand exactly why that investor fits, but it should not be your main channel.

When should I start building my investor list?

Begin researching well before you formally open the round, often two to three months ahead. Building relationships early means that when you start raising, some investors already know you, which shortens the path from first meeting to term sheet.

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