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You’re Not Ready And That’s Exactly Why You Should Start Raising Capital, Ep. 791

podcast May 5, 2026


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This week, learn why waiting until you feel ready to raise capital is the exact mindset keeping you on the sideline. John Casmon makes the case that you will never feel fully ready, and that confidence comes from preparation. In this episode, John breaks down three practical steps to start raising capital today: building your reps, assembling the right team, and shifting your focus from yourself to the people you are trying to serve.

Make sure to download our free guide, 7 Questions Every Passive Investor Should Ask, here.

Key Takeaways

  • Confidence comes from preparation. Act first, and the feeling of readiness develops from there

  • Analyze deals, talk to people in the marketplace, and find mentors or coaches to build your reps

  • Build a team that offsets your experience gaps so you do not have to be the expert on everything yourself

  • Overcome imposter syndrome by being resourceful and knowing where to find solutions

  • Raise capital when you are not under pressure, before you have a live deal or after you have already closed

  • Shift your focus from your own fear of rejection to educating and serving potential investors

Topics

Why Waiting Until You’re Ready Is a Mistake

  • John opens by challenging the belief that you need more experience before raising capital

  • He argues directly that you are never going to feel ready, and that continuing to wait only delays progress

  • The gap is rooted in preparation and reps, and those are things you can act on today

Building Confidence Through Reps

  • Confidence comes from putting in the work: analyzing deals, talking to people in the marketplace, and working with mentors or coaches

  • John uses an NFL draft analogy: rookies have never played a professional game, but they draw on their football experience and translate it to the next level

  • Transferable skills count. Experience managing a budget, running a business, or investing in smaller residential properties can all translate meaningfully to multifamily

  • The benchmark is doing enough preparation that you know what you are talking about, and you can build toward that starting today

Aligning Yourself with the Right Team

  • Whatever you lack in experience, offset it with team members who have it: property managers, partners, analysts, brokers, coaches

  • John revisits the rookie analogy: no team drafts a first-year player and hands them the franchise. They pair them with veterans who complement their skill set

  • Building a credible, well-rounded team is how you present a compelling picture to potential investors regardless of where you are in your career

  • Coaching and mentoring adds direct value here. Having experienced people on your side removes the pressure of carrying all the expertise yourself

Overcoming Imposter Syndrome

  • Imposter syndrome is rooted in being too focused on yourself: your gaps, your fears, and your ego

  • Investors want you to know more than they do and to be resourceful enough to find solutions. That is the standard, and it is achievable

  • John shares a personal story: a former colleague unsubscribed from his investor newsletter early in his capital-raising journey, and he initially took it personally

  • He later recognized the real lesson. He had not conveyed the right message to the right audience. The feedback was about positioning, and it had nothing to do with him personally

  • The practical response to imposter syndrome is sharing your journey openly, letting people learn about you over time, and focusing on being of service

Raising Capital When You Don’t Need the Money

  • The best time to raise capital is when there is no live deal pressure, either before you have identified a deal or after you have already closed and can share openly what you are working through

  • When you are communicating without a funding deadline looming, you come across with authentic confidence

  • Pressure is detectable. Potential investors will sense desperation, and it undermines trust

  • The goal is to present opportunities and let people decide if it is the right fit

Shifting Focus from Yourself to Serving Others

  • John frames the entire challenge of capital raising as a mindset problem. You are too focused on your own feelings and your own fear of rejection

  • When someone does not invest, it is rarely personal. It is usually a messaging or fit issue, and it is feedback worth learning from

  • Your job is to get in front of the right people with the right message and the right opportunity. Finding those people is where your energy belongs

  • When you focus on how you can serve and educate potential investors, the conversation changes entirely

📢 Announcement: Learn about our Apartment Investing Mastermind here.

Next Steps

  • Start building your reps today: analyze deals, talk to people in the marketplace, and identify a mentor or coach who can accelerate your learning

  • Audit your current team and identify the experience gaps you need to offset with the right partners, managers, or advisors

  • Begin sharing your investing journey openly so potential investors can learn about you before you have a live deal requiring a funding decision

  • Practice presenting investment opportunities in a calm, low-pressure way so the conversation becomes natural before the stakes are high

  • Reframe rejection and disengagement as messaging feedback, and use it to sharpen how you communicate

  • Explore the Multifamily Mastermind and request more details here

Thank you for joining us for another great episode! If you’re enjoying the show, please LEAVE A RATING OR REVIEW, and be sure to hit that subscribe button so you don’t miss an episode.

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