Playbook / Series A B2B SaaS
You raised a Series A on founder-led growth. Now the board expects a repeatable engine, and the moves that got you here will not get you to the next round. This is the order of operations that turns founder hustle into a system, what to fix first, who to hire, and the mistakes that quietly burn your runway.
At Series A, your job is to convert a founder-led motion that works but does not scale into a repeatable engine that someone other than the founder can run. The trap is spending the new capital on headcount and channels before you have proven what actually compounds. The companies that make it to a strong Series B treat the first two quarters after the round as a focused search for repeatability, not a land grab. The playbook below is the order I run when I take a Series A B2B SaaS company as a fractional.
Before scaling anything, get attribution and pipeline data into one source of truth. You cannot find what is repeatable if you cannot trust the numbers. This usually exposes which founder-led channel actually drove the revenue.
Identify the single acquisition motion with the cleanest payback, and resist the urge to run five at once. Series A growth is about deepening one channel to repeatability, not breadth.
Systematize that motion: messaging, funnel, lifecycle, and the dashboard that proves it. Turn the founder’s intuition into documented plays a team can run.
Once the engine is proven, hire the execution layer. The first hire is a doer who owns a number, not a manager. See the growth hiring sequence.
Only after the first engine is humming do you add a second motion, using the same measurement discipline. This is how you reach Series B with a diversified, provable growth story.
The most expensive Series A mistake is hiring a VP marketing to manage a team that does not exist yet. At this stage you need execution, not function management. The right first move is a senior operator, often fractional, who runs the plays personally and builds the engine before you commit to a full-time leadership salary. A fractional head of growth proves the model, then tells you honestly when a full-time hire is justified and what to hire for. See fractional head of growth and the full hiring sequence.
Pouring the round into paid before attribution is trustworthy. You scale spend on numbers that do not match the bank.
Spreading thin across motions so none reaches repeatability. Depth beats breadth at Series A.
Paying for leadership with no team to lead, getting slideware instead of shipped growth.
Handing your one proven channel to an agency before you understand it well enough to direct them.
I led acquisition at Elementor from roughly $200K to over $20M ARR between 2018 and 2020 as the product scaled past five million users, the full arc from early traction to a repeatable engine. I led growth at cnvrg.io, a B2B SaaS MLOps platform, ahead of its acquisition by Intel announced November 2020 (TechCrunch). I drove 337% MRR growth at Riverside. The playbook above is not theory; it is the order I have actually run. See the cnvrg.io and Elementor case studies.
Three ways to engage, from a roadmap you run in-house to an embedded operator who runs the playbook for you.
2-4 week audit of your growth stack plus a 90-day roadmap. Fixed scope, converts to a retainer.
The measurement and attribution build from step one.
Measurement. Get attribution and pipeline data into one trustworthy source before scaling anything, because you cannot find what is repeatable on numbers you do not trust.
A senior operator who runs the plays personally, often fractional first, not a VP marketing managing a team that does not exist yet. See the growth hiring sequence.
One, deepened to repeatability, before adding a second. Series A growth rewards depth over breadth. Five shallow channels reach repeatability in none.
Usually no. Hiring function management before there is a team to manage is the most common expensive Series A mistake. Hire execution first.
The first two quarters after the round should be a focused search for repeatability in one motion, not a land grab. That is when the engine gets proven.
Yes. As an embedded operator I run the measurement fix, the motion search, the engine build, and the first-hire guidance, then hand off to a full-time team when the stage justifies it.
A fixed-scope diagnostic sprint runs $6,000 to $8,000. Infrastructure builds start at $5,000 per month. A full embedded operator engagement runs $8,000 to $18,000 per month.
This playbook is built for B2B SaaS, but the measurement-first discipline applies to AI startups and ecommerce too. See B2B SaaS services.
Book a 15-min call. I will tell you what to fix first, what to ignore for now, and whether your one proven motion is ready to scale.