Icon
Networking Flywheels and Flexible Financing with Settle CEO Alek Koenig

Networking Flywheels and Flexible Financing with Settle CEO Alek Koenig

Adrian Alfieri
Adrian Alfieri
CEO, Verbatim

Alek Koenig is the Founder & CEO of Settle, an accounts payable tool that helps eCom teams streamline cash flow, automate B2B transactions, and eliminate tedious vendor payments.

Settle recently closed a $60 million Series B round led by Ribbit Capital and has partnered with over 500 merchants since launch, including brands like Huron, Brightland, Branch, and Italic.

We sat down with Alek to discuss his non-negotiables for choosing investors, how founders can navigate alternative capital providers, and how he leveraged his network to land customers.

“Settle provides both transparency and flexibility to the financing we offer so founders can focus on managing their business operations. But there’s much more we want to accomplish. Right now, we’re just scratching the surface.”

Going Zero to One: Networking Into Early Users

As Alek puts it, the Settle team truly started from zero and started out trying to sell to brands directly, in hopes of acquiring their first batch of customers who might set things in motion.

However, cold emails and LinkedIn messages fell flat, especially because the company hadn’t built up a client portfolio or trusted brand identity. So, Alek then pivoted to connecting with investors, advisors, and trusted members of the networks surrounding Settle’s target user.

Once proactive networking opened those doors, the first flow of clients was inbound, leading gradually to the team’s current flywheel and a positive feedback loop of consistent referrals.

According to Alek, most of these consumers became day-to-day users and, more importantly, product evangelists for Settle because they were often lean brands who had no finance teams and thus had to outsource to accounting and finance firms to get by.

But, much more than saving a few hours of labor per week, Settle was able to financially streamline and shift these early businesses in a new direction for the better.

In this sense, the Settle growth story illustrates that networking can be a critical tactic for your brand’s zero-to-one growth, but will also likely fall flat on its face if your product can’t deliver on the added value it promises.

By properly executing both prongs of the strategy, Settle has been able to grow entirely by word of mouth with little-to-no sales or marketing budget required.

“From a customer acquisition lens, we’ve been incredibly fortunate. We work with about 500+ brands who’ve all come from active networking and word of mouth.”

DTC Primer: Alternative Capital Providers

When asked how early-stage DTC teams should navigate selecting an alternative capital provider, Alek provided a number of actionable recommendations and cautionary tales.

Due Diligence Before Decision Making

Alek advises speaking to as many providers as possible early on in order to best understand your range of options.

Generally, if you’re pre-revenue, it will likely be difficult to acquire debt from providers. Instead, Alek recommends going the route of raising equity for R&D, building out a team, etc.; achieving product-market fit; and then purchasing and converting inventory into revenue.

Once a brand has attained a predictable cash flow, raising equity becomes secondary to the fact that it can finally begin introducing debt to its capital structure.

Later on, as a brand matures to the point of courting VCs and other investors, in Alek’s words, one should raise as little cash as they need under the best possible terms. After all, VC money is easily the most costly form of capital that should only be utilized when truly necessary.

Meanwhile, for more repeatable operations such as marketing or inventory, you should stick to utilizing debt in order to keep a larger portion of your hard-built company down the line.

When a Provider’s Too Good to Be True

In terms of red flags to be wary of throughout the search process, Alek advises exercising caution in order to not enter a situation with onerous terms out of desperation for capital.

More specifically, tactics such as personal guarantees and warrants should be a sign to steer clear. While the former may have been an industry norm two decades or so ago, they’re now broadly unnecessary and present the risk of personal liability if projected outcomes go south.

Meanwhile, the latter can quietly result in a greater dilution; however, if the warrant at hand presents a sustainable solution with a low cost of capital, it could potentially be worthwhile.

In this vein, certain solutions such as financial covenants, which are usually high-risk, can be promising if your company has an experienced team on deck that can vet terms and agreements, as well as a much stronger certainty in where it’ll stand a few years down the line.

“As an emerging brand, you often just don’t know what the future will hold. So, when it comes to navigating financing options, I recommend doing your due diligence and playing it safe. Don’t need to risk it all for some quick capital.”

Choosing His Investors: Partners First

When it came to raising venture funding for Settle, Alek points out that once his team had established product-market fit, they began shifting their focus towards building positive investor relationships — long before the company was in need of financing or looking to raise a round.

After all, you’ll be hard-pressed to find a VC who’ll sign checks to teams they barely know or who are likely approaching them with tunnel-vision focus on the money.

It’s a long-term mentality that Alek recommends to any founder that might raise venture in the coming years.

In the process of raising a seed round, the Settle team made a list of target firms with whom they’d already formed connections and underwent a tight, two-week process jam-packed with meetings, diligence requests, and follow-ups.

They eventually landed on Founders Fund to lead their seed round, not because they offered the highest valuation, but because of the deal partner they’d be working with day-to-day who could offer key connections and actionable guidance within the fintech and commerce ecosystems.

When it came to building out the rest of the cap table for that seed round, Alek followed a similar practice: focusing on individuals who’d cut small checks while still opening doors.

In Alek’s words, that meant influencers with deeper experience in B2B SaaS or eCom, advisors to brands they admired who could broaden fundraising connections or something else entirely that could generally sharpen their strategy and expand user reach within a short time horizon.

“While raising for Settle, we weren’t gunning for investors who gave us the best valuations. We were really optimizing for the best partner who could give us the domain expertise we needed. My view is always that the partner comes first.â€ï»ż

Adrian Alfieri
Adrian Alfieri
CEO, Verbatim
ridge ($100M+ revenue)
ridge ($100M+ revenue)
407K followers
Ridge
Mudwtr
Atlas Coffee Club
Gruns
Gwella
Ombre
Problem

Coming up with 100 unique, 30-second scripts is painful.

Manually matching 3-second clips (from your 10,000-video library) for every shot of your 100 scripts is even more painful.

Creating 3 permutations of each of the 100 ads (for A/B testing) makes the pain even worse.

Now imagine voiceovers, captions, & uploading all 300 ads to Meta & TikTok on top of this. Also imagine you're an agency doing this for 10 brands (now we're at 3K ads).

Products for scriptwriting, video editing, creative storage, UGC, creative analytics, & competitor ad spying exist, but they're not built for making ads (or just built badly).

Capcut
Capcut
Video editing
$9.99/month
Adobe Premiere
Adobe Premiere
Video editing
$54.99/month
ChatGPT
ChatGPT
Scriptwriting
$20/month
Foreplay
Foreplay
Ad spying
$99/month
AdSpy
AdSpy
Ad spying
$149/month
Recharm
Recharm
Creative storage
$500-$3K/month
Motion
Motion
Creative analytics
$1K-$10K+/month
Billo
Billo
UGC
$99/video
Air
Air
Creative storage
$600-$5K+/month
+10 other tools
Solution

Icon solves this with the first AI Admaker. Think ChatGPT + CapCut, but for making winning ads with AI in minutes.

Icon starts by looking at your video library & tagging scenes (e.g. "sofa," "unboxing"). These scenes become reusable clips used as lego blocks for making ads.

From there, just enter ideas into AdGPT (ChatGPT for ads) to generate ads with perfectly matching clips for every scene.

AdGPT gets your ads 80-99% complete. Make edits with AdCut (CapCut for ads) or prompt AdGPT until you're happy.

3-person creative teams make 30 ads per month. With Icon, they make 300 (& get more winners).

We also replace $2K-$30K in monthly costs: scriptwriting (ChatGPT), video editing (CapCut, Premiere), creative storage (Frame.io, Air, Recharm), UGC (Arcads, MakeUGC, Billo), creative analytics (Motion), competitor ad spying (Foreplay), & more.

Solution

How it works

  • 1. Turn your videos into legos
    1. Turn your videos into legos
    Icon looks at your video library & tags scenes (e.g. "unboxing"). These scenes become reusable clips used as lego blocks for making ads.
  • 2. Create ads with AdGPT
    2. Create ads with AdGPT
    Use AdGPT to create ads that are 80-99% complete with perfectly matching clips for every scene.
  • 3. Edit ads with AdCut
    3. Edit ads with AdCut
    Use AdCut to edit your 80-99% complete AdGPT ads until you're happy.
  • 4. Replace Motion & Foreplay
    4. Replace Motion & Foreplay
    Save $2K-$30K/month with free creative analytics, free competitor ad spying, & more.
    You can also replace Frame.io, Air, & Recharm with our 0% markup creative storage, but feel free to do this later (we integrate with them).

AdGPT Workflows

  • Bring a script
    Bring a script
    Save time by finding matching videos for your script with Icon.
  • Bring a creative brief
    Bring a creative brief
    Save time by finding matching videos for your brief with Icon.
  • B-roll cutting
    B-roll cutting
    Save time by cutting in B-roll on your talking head videos with Icon.
  • Long form to ad
    Long form to ad
    Save time by turning reviews & interviews into ads with Icon.
  • Clone script from ad
    Clone script from ad
    Save time by cloning winning ad scripts from top brands with Icon.
  • Ad from voiceover
    Ad from voiceover
    Save time by creating an ad from a voiceover with Icon.

Products

Icon
ChatGPT
CapCut
Scriptwriting
check
check
x
Creative briefs
check
x
x
Audience research
check
x
x
Video editing
check
x
check
Creative storage
check
x
x
UGC videos
check
x
x
Creative analytics
check
x
x
Competitor ad spying
check
x
x
Ad Manager upload
check
x
x
Text or image-to-video
check
x
x
Made for ads
check
x
x
0% markup on usage
check
x
x

What they're saying

Obvi
"We went from spending hours making each ad to building entire campaigns in minutes. Icon helps us shape perfect creatives at incredible speed."
Ron Shah

Ron Shah

CEO, Obvi
$100M+ revenue
Raycon
"Going from script to finished ads was overly complex. Icon streamlined the process from scriptwriting to ad creation with a few clicks."
Ray Lee

Ray Lee

CEO, Raycon
$100M+ revenue
222 Creative
"Our creative team was drowning in repetitive work. Icon transformed our workflow - now we can focus on strategy while they handle the rest."
Marco Staal

Marco Staal

CEO, 222 Creative
100+ clients with $10B+ revenue

Agency Directory

GR0

GR0

Monthly ads created
1000
Monthly adspend
$10M+
Avenue Z

Avenue Z

Monthly ads created
1000
Monthly adspend
$10M+

Story

Kennan Davison

Kennan Davison

CEO, Founder
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Founder at Skio (CEO 2021-2024, $15M+ ARR & profitable, $8.4M seed).
Previously: Pinterest, Hulu, W+K (ad agency), Top 200 NA LoL, YC S20 (solo founder), Dropout.
Hi, I'm Kennan!
Growing up, I loved competitive gaming and eventually reached Top 200 North America in LoL (out of 100M+ players).
Reality hit at the end of high school: I needed to support myself so I taught myself to code. I quickly fell in love with it, started skipping class to work, and dropped out after a year of college to join Pinterest.
After Pinterest, I started a company called Skio which does subscription management software for brands on Shopify. In 3 years, we've partnered with 1000+ brands (Liquid I.V., Milk Bar, Polaroid, Barstool, Unilever, KraveBeauty, Boba Tea Protein), reached $15M+ ARR & profitable ($8.4M seed), and built an amazing team of 50.
With advancements in generative AI (video specifically), I saw an opportunity to transform advertising (hence Icon & building the first AI Admaker).
I love learning how we can help better. Feel free to reach out any time at kennan@icon.me.

Investors

Founders Fund

Founders Fund

Icon Investor
Founders Fund
Founders Fund
Founders Fund
Founders Fund
Founders Fund
Founders Fund
Founders Fund
Peter Thiel's Founders Fund is a venture capital firm. Its partners have founded and funded companies including PayPal, Palantir, SpaceX, Anduril, Flexport, Airbnb and Stripe.
Kennan Davison

Kennan Davison

CEO, Founder
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Kennan Davison
Founder at Skio (CEO 2021-2024, $15M+ ARR & profitable, $8.4M seed).
Previously: Pinterest, Hulu, W+K (ad agency), Top 200 NA LoL, YC S20 (solo founder), Dropout.

Explore more