Most agency roundups skip straight to the list. This one doesn't - because for a meaningful number of people reading this on Startups.com, the honest answer is: you're not ready for a dedicated PPC agency yet. And paying one before you're ready is one of the fastest ways to burn budget and lose confidence in the channel.
The good news is the readiness criteria aren't complicated. I've seen the same five failure modes over and over. Not "wrong agency." Pre-conditions not met.
If you clear the framework below, the agency list is for you. If you don't, there's a more honest path forward before you get there.
Before you shortlist a single agency, work through these six dimensions honestly. They are not a scoring exercise - they are blockers. Any one of them unresolved will limit what a paid media agency can achieve for you, regardless of how good they are. This is not about finding reasons not to start. It's about making sure the investment produces a real signal rather than an expensive lesson.
1. Product-Market Signal
Do you have repeatable evidence that your product works? Not "people like it" - consistent conversion from demo or trial to paid, low early churn, and customers who can articulate in their own words why they bought. Paid media scales demand. If the demand isn't real yet, it scales confusion. You'll spend £5k/month finding out that your positioning doesn't land, and the agency will have a hard time making the numbers work regardless of how well they run the campaigns.
2. ICP Clarity
Can you name exactly who you're targeting without hedging? Not "B2B SaaS companies" - industry vertical, company size, role, and trigger event. Something like: "Marketing Directors at 50-200 person fintech SaaS companies who've just missed their pipeline target for the second consecutive quarter." That level of specificity. Paid media forces precision. Vague ICPs mean expensive learning cycles that eat your runway before producing a usable signal. This is the most common failure point I see in early-stage companies.
3. Message-Market Fit
Do you have validated pillar messaging? Not perfected - validated. You should know what language resonates with your buyers, which pain points make them lean forward, and what your real differentiation is. An agency can and should help you A/B test creative variations and headlines. But if you don't know yet why customers buy, the agency is running creative experiments on a hypothesis that doesn't exist. They'll deliver clicks. You won't know what to do with them.
4. Pipeline Infrastructure
Does your sales-side infrastructure exist and actually work? A CRM with leads routing correctly, a follow-up process that runs consistently, and a sales team that will act on what paid media sends them. A good agency will handle the tracking setup - GA4, GTM, offline conversion imports, CRM attribution. That's their job. What they cannot fix is a broken sales process or a CRM that nobody uses. If qualified leads come in and disappear because there's no follow-up system, paid media will look like it's underperforming when the problem is post-click. No agency can compensate for a pipeline that isn't being worked.
5. Budget Runway
Can you sustain enough spend to see a real signal before pulling the plug? For sales-led SaaS with long cycles, that typically means 90+ days - the person who clicks your ad today may not become a customer for three to six months. For product-led SaaS where users can convert to paid in under 30 days, you will see signal faster and the runway requirement is shorter. Either way, the question is the same: can you make a rational decision after seeing enough data, rather than cutting spend during the learning phase because the board expected pipeline in week six.
6. Organisational Readiness
Is there someone in-house who can brief the agency, review strategy, and close the loop between marketing and sales? Paid media without sales alignment produces leads that go nowhere. If the person managing the agency relationship is also running content, events, and comms, the bandwidth to run the partnership properly probably isn't there. Agencies reflect what they're given. A disorganised client gets disorganised results.
If you have gaps on any of these - particularly ICP clarity or message-market fit - the most useful step before hiring a PPC agency is working with a team that helps you sort those foundations first. Growth Division specialises in exactly this stage. They place fractional growth experts across messaging, positioning, and channel validation to help founders establish what works before committing to a single channel at scale. Once you're through that process, come back to this list.
The agencies below were selected based on verified SaaS PPC work with named clients or documented results, and independent review data - not just their own marketing. For each agency I looked at:
| Agency | Best For | Min Ad Spend | Pricing Model | SaaS-Only? | Geography |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upraw Media | Series A–C B2B SaaS, pipeline attribution | £10,000/month | Retainer from €5k/month | Yes | UK/EU/US |
| Powered by Search | $5M–$50M ARR SaaS, high ACV/long cycles | Not stated | From $5,000/month | Yes | Toronto/Remote |
| 42 Agency | Series A–B SaaS, demand gen + RevOps | Not stated | From $6,500/month | Yes | Toronto/Remote |
| Directive Consulting | Mid-market/enterprise SaaS, full-funnel | ~$5,000/month | From $5,000/month | Yes | US/UK |
| KlientBoost | SaaS + eCommerce, rapid creative testing | Not stated | % of spend + flat | No | US |
| TripleDart | Post-PMF SaaS, APAC/global, full-stack | $8,000/month | From $3,500/month | Yes | India/Global |
| Aimers | Series A–B SaaS, multi-platform PPC | $3,000/month per platform | Custom | Yes | Georgia/Remote |
| SpearGrowth | Series A–B B2B SaaS, pipeline attribution | $12,000/month | Custom | Yes | India/Remote |
| Impactable | LinkedIn-primary B2B SaaS, demand gen | $5,000–$10,000/month | From $849/month | No | Texas/Remote |
| Refine Labs | $50M+ ARR SaaS, demand creation | $50,000/month | From $20,000/month | Yes | Boston/Remote |
Paid media, analytics, and landing pages for B2B SaaS pipeline
Founded: 2016 | HQ: UK (remote) | Team: 10
Most agencies on this list offer PPC as one of several services. Upraw does three things: paid media, the landing pages your ads point to, and the analytics that connects spend to revenue. That's it. A decade of B2B SaaS only - no ecommerce, no generalists, no juniors. Small by design: a tight team of senior veterans covering paid search, paid social, landing pages, analytics, and conversion copywriting. Nobody here is learning on the job. Nobody here is managing 40 accounts and hoping yours doesn't slip. Clients include Bynder, Chili Piper, Recruitee, Omnipresent, SEON, and Marvel.
Strengths:
Honest caveats:
What clients consistently say: 5.0/5 on Clutch (5 reviews), 4.9/5 on Google (16 reviews). Clients reference the quality of communication and proactive problem-solving - the sense that the agency is genuinely invested rather than executing a checklist. Clutch reviewers specifically highlight improved CPA and lead quality across campaigns. The recurring theme across both platforms is attribution and reporting clarity: being able to show the board where pipeline is coming from. The main constraint flagged is capacity - Upraw doesn't take on clients they can't serve well.
Best fit: Series A–C B2B SaaS companies with UK, US, or European market focus who need pipeline metrics that hold up in board meetings, have attribution complexity, or have previously worked with agencies that couldn't connect spend to revenue.
Think twice if: You need high-volume creative production across multiple ad formats simultaneously, or you're looking for a full-service agency to run SEO, content, and paid media under one roof.
Pricing: Retainer-based, from €5,000/month Min ad spend: £10,000/month
Demand generation for $5M–$50M ARR B2B SaaS
Founded: 2009 | HQ: Toronto, Canada (remote-first) | Team: ~29
Powered by Search is a Canadian B2B SaaS agency that has absorbed two adjacent boutiques - Wunderkind (demand gen) and Growth Gorilla (digital PR/link building) - into a full-funnel offering under founder Dev Basu. Their stated ICP is specific and worth paying attention to: B2B SaaS with £5M–$50M ARR, high ACV ($50K–$500K+), sales cycles of 6–18 months, and buying committee motions. If that describes your company, the fit criteria are clear. If it doesn't, they probably aren't optimised for you.
Strengths:
Honest caveats:
What clients consistently say: On-site testimonials from VP and CEO-level clients consistently praise methodology depth, quick results demonstration, and long-term relationship orientation. The Ninety CEO's "we're in for the long haul" is a meaningful retention signal. Without independent platform reviews, you're taking their word for it - but the testimonials are at a seniority level that carries weight.
Best fit: B2B SaaS companies with ARR above $5M, long sales cycles, high ACV, and buying committees. Particularly strong for PE-backed SaaS acquisitions (they have a dedicated landing page for this).
Think twice if: You're pre-$5M ARR, your primary channel is Google Search rather than full-funnel demand gen, or you need the comfort of third-party review verification before signing.
Pricing: From $5,000/month Min ad spend: Not stated publicly
Demand generation and RevOps for Series A–B SaaS
Founded: 2018 | HQ: Toronto, Canada (remote-first) | Team: ~19
42 Agency is a founder-brand play. Kamil Rextin - who spent nine years in-house at B2B SaaS companies before starting the agency - is a genuinely respected voice in B2B demand gen circles, with a Substack (42slash.com) that covers attribution, media mix modelling, and the limitations of branded search with analytical depth most agencies don't publish. If you've read his writing, you trust the agency. If you haven't, there's almost nothing in the public review record to anchor a decision on.
Strengths:
Honest caveats:
What clients consistently say: The four Clutch reviews are uniformly positive - strategic thinking beyond the brief, proactive flag-raising, organised documentation, "embedded team member" feel. One reviewer flagged that reporting didn't go deep enough beyond campaign metrics. Too few reviews to identify reliable patterns; direct reference checks are essential.
Best fit: Series A–B SaaS companies growing from $5M to $50M ARR, sales-led or hybrid GTM motions, HubSpot ecosystem, where demand gen strategy and RevOps integration matter as much as raw PPC execution.
Think twice if: You need a PPC specialist with deep Google Ads technical execution as the primary deliverable, you want month-to-month flexibility, or you need the reassurance of significant independent review volume.
Pricing: From $6,500/month (demand gen); from $12,500/month (holistic strategy) Min ad spend: Not stated publicly
Full-funnel B2B SaaS marketing for mid-market and enterprise
Founded: 2013 | HQ: Irvine, California | Team: ~130–190
Directive is the largest specialist B2B SaaS agency on this list and one of the longest established. Their "Customer Generation" methodology - connecting PPC to pipeline through financial modelling (CAC, LTV, payback period) - is substantive and not just a label. The client list is genuinely impressive: ZoomInfo, Calendly, Adobe, Arctic Wolf, Gong, Dropbox. The Arctic Wolf case study (59% pipeline increase QoQ, 109% closed-won revenue increase QoQ) is the kind of result that holds up under scrutiny.
The honest complexity with Directive is the internal culture picture. A 2.7/5 Glassdoor rating from 154+ anonymous reviews, 31% CEO approval, and documented patterns of leadership instability and routine layoffs are not a small sample of disgruntled ex-employees - that's a structural signal. The consequence for clients is account team instability, which their own Clutch reviews reflect: multiple clients mention mid-engagement team changes. You can still get excellent results at Directive. The question is whether the account team running your campaigns in month six is the same calibre as the team that pitched you.
Strengths:
Honest caveats:
What clients consistently say: Clutch reviewers consistently praise strategic thinking, the "true partner" feel, and methodology clarity. Recurring concerns: account team changes mid-engagement, attention-to-detail gaps, and a passive execution style where Directive waits to be directed rather than leading proactively. Strong at strategy; variable on consistent execution.
Best fit: Mid-market and enterprise B2B SaaS ($10M–$100M+ ARR) where a full-funnel agency covering paid, SEO, RevOps, and CRO under one roof justifies the overhead. Companies that have exhausted specialist PPC agencies and need a broader strategic partner.
Think twice if: You're Series A or earlier, you need a long-term senior-led partner without account team churn risk, or you're uncomfortable with the cultural dynamics the Glassdoor data surfaces.
Pricing: From $5,000–$6,500/month (entry); enterprise custom Min ad spend: ~$5,000/month
High-volume creative testing across PPC and CRO
Founded: 2015 | HQ: Costa Mesa, California | Team: 80–150
KlientBoost has the strongest independent social proof of any agency on this list: 396 Clutch reviews. That's not a manufactured number - it reflects an agency running hundreds of engagements at volume. Their "Growth Grid" methodology (financial modelling to tie PPC investment to CAC and LTV) is genuinely differentiating. Founder Johnathan Dane has been publicly transparent about business challenges - including posting about revenue drops during the 2022–23 SaaS downturn - which is a level of honesty rare in agency marketing.
KlientBoost is not a SaaS specialist. They work across ecommerce, lead gen, and SaaS. For buyers who need breadth and volume - testing at scale across multiple channels with strong creative infrastructure - they're a legitimate choice. For buyers who want a team that thinks exclusively in B2B SaaS economics and pipeline metrics, the generalist positioning is a genuine gap.
The Glassdoor picture (3.6/5, 209 reviews) warrants transparency. A confirmed layoff pattern, CEO culture concerns, and multiple reviewers flagging pressure to upsell clients on services they don't need are recurring themes. These are client-relevant signals, not just employee grievances.
Strengths:
Honest caveats:
What clients consistently say: Clutch reviews praise result quality, conversion improvements, and the integrated testing approach. The G2 reviews reference clients "unlocking and scaling channels we had nearly written off." Concerns emerge around account team consistency and, in some cases, a transactional rather than partnership-oriented relationship style.
Best fit: Series A–C SaaS companies wanting integrated PPC and CRO with high creative testing velocity, a strong proof base, and accessible pricing. Also a reasonable option for companies not yet at premium-tier spend who need a reputable agency with verified results.
Think twice if: You need exclusively B2B SaaS expertise, you want a long-term senior-led partner, or you're uncomfortable with the internal culture signals the review data surfaces.
Pricing: Percentage of ad spend + flat fee Min ad spend: Not stated publicly
Full-stack SaaS marketing for post-PMF companies scaling globally
Founded: 2020 | HQ: Bengaluru, India | Team: ~87
TripleDart was founded by four co-founders, two of whom (CEO Shiyam Sunder and co-founder Jayakumar Muthusamy) came directly from Hey Digital - where they ran accounts for Hotjar, Stream, CXL, and Lokalise. That background shows in their work. The agency has built a genuinely broad capability stack: PPC, SEO, ABM, content, MarOps, and performance creative, with an OKR-based variable pricing model that ties fees to results in a way most agencies avoid.
The pipeline metrics in their case studies are better-framed than most: $400K pipeline in 2 months for Multiplier, 6x pipeline growth for Airbase, 40% improvement in MQL-to-SQL for CleverTap. The 57-review Trustpilot profile (5.0/5, most recent February 2026) is the strongest recent client-side signal of any agency here.
The honest context: TripleDart doubled headcount from 44 to 87 in roughly four months in 2025. Rapid growth at that pace almost always means junior hires filling gaps. One Glassdoor review (among 37) specifically called out young, inexperienced management and a culture that favours senior team exposure over junior development. The work/life balance sub-score (3.6) is the lowest of any TripleDart dimension. These are worth probing on.
Strengths:
Honest caveats:
What clients consistently say: Trustpilot reviewers reference specific capabilities - AEO/GEO optimisation, Marketing Operations quality, the Slate platform - rather than generic praise. Multi-service engagements and long-term relationships are represented. The recurring theme is "systematic, professional, delivers quality results."
Best fit: Post-PMF SaaS companies at Series A–C who want a full-stack marketing team (not just PPC specialists), are comfortable with India-based delivery, and are willing to engage an agency on a multi-service basis rather than paid media alone.
Think twice if: You need a PPC specialist rather than a full-stack marketing partner, UK/EU/US time zone alignment is essential for your workflow, or you want independent review volume beyond Trustpilot for due diligence.
Pricing: From $3,500/month; OKR-based variable component on top Min ad spend: $8,000/month
Focused SaaS PPC execution across multiple platforms
Founded: 2014 | HQ: Tbilisi, Georgia | Team: ~40–56
Aimers is a pure-play B2B SaaS PPC agency. That's not a marketing claim - every Clutch and GoodFirms review comes from a SaaS or tech company. Their service scope is narrow by design: paid search, paid social, and CRO in service of paid performance. No SEO, no content, no RevOps. The named client results are the strongest in this mid-tier peer set - 164% increase in qualified leads for Mixpanel, 670K+ new users for Uppbeat over a two-year engagement, 4x growth in sales opportunities for Orion Labs.
The structural reality is a Georgian-based team at Eastern European price points. For European SaaS companies, the time zone (UTC+4) adds one layer of friction; for US companies, it's nine hours ahead of EST. The $50–$99/hr Clutch rate is meaningfully lower than US/UK agencies, which is either a value proposition or a seniority signal depending on your perspective.
Strengths:
Honest caveats:
What clients consistently say: Proactive, responsive, Slack-accessible, feels like an embedded team. No catastrophic negative reviews across any platform - consistent execution without drama. The strongest independent Clutch signal in the mid-tier agency group here.
Best fit: Series A–B SaaS companies needing focused, reliable PPC execution across Google and LinkedIn (and Meta/YouTube where relevant), with accessible minimum spend and a track record verified by independent reviews.
Think twice if: You're US-based and need same-day responsiveness, you need a proprietary strategic framework or demand gen methodology rather than execution, or you're at enterprise scale where a $50–$99/hr team may not have the seniority depth you need.
Pricing: Custom; ~$50–$99/hr (Clutch) Min ad spend: $3,000/month per platform
Demand creation for $50M+ ARR B2B SaaS
Founded: 2019 | HQ: Boston, USA (remote) | Team: ~51
Refine Labs sits at the top end of the market and isn't for most people reading this. Their minimum retainer starts at $20,000/month. They expect clients to already have $50,000/month or more in paid media spend and $50M+ in ARR. If you're not there yet, bookmark this and revisit later.
What Refine Labs does - for the companies it serves - is genuinely different from the rest of this list. The "Brand → Demand → Expand" framework and Revenue Engine Optimization methodology is built around the idea that the MQL system is broken at scale: that optimising for form fills in B2B SaaS produces the leads that sales won't touch, and that the real work is building demand before buyers are in-market, then converting it. Chris Walker's departure (he sold all shares in July 2025) is the significant story here - he built the brand, the methodology, and most of the thought leadership. CEO Megan Bowen is capable but the brand equity is diminished.
Strengths:
Honest caveats:
What clients consistently say: Independent review data is limited (no meaningful Clutch presence, G2 unclaimed). Credibility is community-driven - reputation built through podcast reach, The Vault membership, and word-of-mouth among B2B SaaS marketing leaders. Testimonials on-site praise the shift from MQL to revenue metrics and strategic thinking quality.
Best fit: $50M+ ARR B2B SaaS companies with enterprise-level paid media budgets who are looking to transform their demand strategy, not just optimise their Google Ads campaigns.
Think twice if: You're below $50M ARR, you need affordable PPC execution, or you're evaluating agencies primarily on independent review platform credibility.
Pricing: From $20,000/month; $35,000 one-time strategy assessment Min ad spend: $50,000/month
Paid media and SEO for B2B SaaS pipeline generation
Founded: 2021 | HQ: Bengaluru, India (remote-first) | Team: ~10–15
SpearGrowth is a young, tight B2B SaaS PPC agency founded by Ishaan Shakunt in 2021. The positioning is deliberate: no ecommerce, no B2C, no generalist work - exclusively B2B SaaS, primarily Series A-C companies. The agency caps active client engagements at 12-18 at any given time, which is a meaningful constraint given their team size, and frames it as a quality commitment rather than a capacity limitation.
The case study results are credible: 13x SQLs from paid ads in six months for an unnamed HRM SaaS, 60% increase in India leads and 86% jump in SQLs following offline conversion implementation for a legal tech client, and consistent pipeline attribution work from click to closed deal. Named clients include Darwinbox, Sprinto, and Zluri - all genuine B2B SaaS businesses. The result framing is SQL and pipeline-focused rather than click and MQL volume, which matters.
The honest context: SpearGrowth is a micro-agency founded four years ago. The Glassdoor picture (14 reviews, 4.9/5) is positive at the headline level, but some reviews describe founder arrogance and a lack of structured career development. For clients, the more relevant signal is whether Ishaan himself is involved in your account. At 10-15 people and 12-18 active engagements, the model depends heavily on a small core team. One mixed Glassdoor review raised the concern that the agency functions like a startup with more ambition than operational maturity.
Strengths:
Honest caveats:
What clients consistently say: Clutch reviewers consistently reference data-driven approach, proactive experimentation, ownership mindset, and the feeling of working with an embedded team rather than an external vendor. Recurring theme: strong at structured testing and SQL attribution. One review noted speed of execution could improve during periods of rapid change.
Best fit: Series A-B B2B SaaS companies who want a focused, senior-led paid media partner at a more accessible price point than US/UK agencies, are comfortable with India-based delivery, and prioritise pipeline attribution over creative volume.
Think twice if: You need a long established agency with deep client reference pools, UK/EU/US time zone alignment is essential, or you need creative production at scale alongside paid strategy.
Pricing: Custom; minimum $12,000/month in ad spend Min ad spend: $12,000/month
LinkedIn-first B2B paid media for pipeline generation
Founded: 2018 | HQ: San Antonio, Texas (remote-first) | Team: ~50+
Impactable is the largest LinkedIn Ads-focused agency in North America by their own claim, and the claim is plausible. Founded by Justin Rowe, the agency built its early reputation through Justin's own LinkedIn content - a genuinely useful body of work on LinkedIn Ads strategy - and converted that audience into clients. They now describe themselves as investor-backed and growing fast, having absorbed Bounty Hunter (a European SaaS PPC micro-agency) in late 2024 as part of an acquisition strategy.
The agency has since expanded beyond LinkedIn into Google Ads, programmatic, and Meta - positioning as a full-funnel B2B paid media shop with LinkedIn as the core differentiator. Their proprietary DemandSense tool is positioned as an audience intelligence layer on top of standard LinkedIn targeting.
The honest picture from Clutch (30 reviews, mixed) is more nuanced than the homepage suggests. Most reviews are positive - clients reference LinkedIn expertise, responsiveness, and proactive campaign management. But there is at least one review in the current dataset describing a failed engagement: no meetings booked, no monthly reports delivered, avoided meeting requests. One bad review in 30 is not a pattern, but it's the kind of specific operational failure worth asking about directly.
Strengths:
Honest caveats:
What clients consistently say: Positive reviews reference LinkedIn expertise, proactive communication, and measurable lead generation. The Lacework case study (full-funnel LinkedIn strategy for pipeline) is the strongest independent signal. Mixed reviews surface inconsistency at execution level - the quality of your engagement depends heavily on which team member is assigned.
Best fit: B2B SaaS companies where LinkedIn Ads is the primary or most important paid channel, who want a specialist rather than a generalist, and who are comfortable with a high-growth agency still building operational maturity.
Think twice if: Google Ads is your primary channel, you need consistent senior-led execution without team assignment risk, or you require deep pipeline attribution across multiple platforms as a core deliverable.
Pricing: From $849/month (LinkedIn-only entry); custom for full-funnel Min ad spend: $5,000–$10,000/month
These are the questions that expose the gap between agency pitch and agency reality. A confident, specific answer to each of these is a good sign. Hesitation, deflection, or a pivot to credentials is not.
"Who will actually be working on my account day to day?"
The most important question. You're buying specific people, not an agency brand. Find out the seniority and tenure of the person running your campaigns, not the partner who pitched you. If the answer involves "your dedicated account manager will liaise with our strategy team," that's an account management layer you're paying for that sits between you and the person doing the actual work.
"What does your reporting look like - can I see an example report?"
Ask for a real report, anonymised. You're looking for whether they report on pipeline and revenue metrics or on clicks and impressions. If the example report is full of CTR graphs and ad spend charts without connecting to qualified pipeline, SQLs, or revenue, you're looking at an agency that measures the wrong things.
"How do you measure success beyond MQLs?"
Most agencies will give you the right answer in the abstract. The follow-up is: "Can you show me a case study where you improved pipeline quality without improving raw MQL volume?" If they can, they understand B2B SaaS. If every case study measures lead volume or CPA, they're optimising for the wrong number.
"What's your experience with our specific GTM motion?"
Product-led growth and sales-led require fundamentally different paid strategies. If you're PLG, ask whether they've built campaigns optimised for trial activation rather than demo requests, and whether they know how to work with product analytics data. If you're sales-led with 6-month+ cycles, ask how they handle attribution across long journeys and how they connect ad spend to closed-won revenue.
"What happens in month three when results are slower than expected?"
B2B SaaS PPC rarely produces pipeline results in the first 60–90 days. A good agency will have a clear answer: here's what we measure early, here's what signals tell us we're on track before pipeline materialises, here's what we'd change if we weren't seeing them. An agency that promises fast results or deflects this question is either inexperienced or overselling.
"Can I speak to a current client in a similar stage and sector?"
Not a former client. Not a testimonial. A current client who is actively working with them, at a similar funding stage and in a similar vertical. This is the due diligence step that most buyers skip. Don't skip it.
For a deeper framework on evaluating agency fit before you sign - including how to run a pilot, how to compare agencies without defaulting to price, and what a healthy relationship looks like in practice - see the full guide: How to Choose a B2B SaaS PPC Agency Without Getting Burnt.
Founding Partner @ Startups.com platform | Clarity.fm, Launchrock, Fundable, Zirtual, and Co-Host of The Startup Therapy Podcast. Ryan has 15 years of experience as a Founder, Advisor, Mentor, and Investor — the quintessential startup guerrilla. He works with 100's of the best startups every year on everything from ideation, idea validation, early marketing traction, customer acquisition to fundraising, scaling, and operations.
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