The best partnerships — co-investment opportunities, LP relationships, strategic syndication deals — happen between investors who know and trust each other. Remarkly helps you become the thoughtful, informed voice that other investors want to partner with, without the noise or the sales pitch.
Common challenges for vcs & angel investors
Your best partnerships come from investors who understand how you think about markets, capital deployment, and founder support. But your LinkedIn is sparse, generic, or focused on portfolio wins rather than your genuine perspective on where value is being created. Potential LP and co-investor partners can't assess whether you align without visibility into your actual thinking.
Great partnership opportunities — a founder raising a Series B in your category, an emerging manager with a strong thesis, a strategic investor entering your space — surface on LinkedIn weeks before you hear about them through formal channels. If you're not actively engaging in the conversations where these signals appear, you're finding out too late or not at all.
You want to support your founders publicly, but visible cheerleading on every portfolio post reads as self-serving or creates awkward signaling about your involvement. There's a balance between staying visible and maintaining the professional distance that LPs and co-investors expect, and most investors aren't sure where that line is.
Without a clear, visible thesis on LinkedIn, the partnership inquiries you get are unfocused. You hear from GPs managing the wrong fund size, LPs in geographies you don't serve, or co-investors with misaligned risk profiles. Your signal-to-noise ratio is terrible because your positioning is unclear.
Purpose-built features for vcs & angel investors
Remarkly helps you engage consistently in conversations aligned with your actual thesis — whether that's fintech, founder operations, capital efficiency, or geographic expansion. By showing up with specific, thoughtful perspective on the topics that matter to your strategy, you signal to potential partners exactly who you are and what you care about.
Remarkly surfaces posts and discussions where potential co-investors, emerging LPs, and strategic partners are already engaged. Instead of passive scrolling, you get a prioritized view of the conversations where partnership alignment is most likely — and you can engage with substance before formal introductions.
Remarkly helps you comment on portfolio company content in ways that add value to the conversation rather than just amplifying the company. This keeps you visible as a thought leader while maintaining professional boundaries that institutional LPs and co-investors expect.
See how Remarkly helps vcs & angel investors engage
Scenario
A fellow VC posts about the shift toward founder-operated GTM and why it matters for software unit economics
"This shift is real and it's fundamentally changing what we look for in early-stage founding teams. The operators who can build GTM from first principles — not just execute a playbook from their previous gig — are creating 3-5x better unit economics at seed. It's changing which first-time founders we're willing to back and which experienced hires we encourage them to make. Have you seen the economics change as noticeably on the product side, or is this more of a GTM efficiency play?"
Why it works
Demonstrates sophisticated investing perspective without mentioning portfolio companies. Ends with a genuine question to the other investor, naturally opening dialogue about co-investment thesis alignment.
Scenario
A founder in an adjacent vertical posts about raising their Series B and the investor landscape they're seeing
"The Series B landscape has polarized in your space — the traditional growth VCs are moving upmarket and the emerging managers with thesis focus are doubling down on seed to Series A. This creates a gap for founders who want partners who understand both capital efficiency and founder support through unit economics inflection. That gap is where the best partnerships happen. Happy to introduce you to 2-3 investors I know in your space who are building in that zone."
Why it works
Adds valuable market perspective while subtly positioning the commenter as connected and thoughtful. The offer to introduce signals partnership mindset and positions the investor as a valuable network node.
Scenario
An emerging manager posts their first fund announcement and their core thesis around vertical software
"The consolidated enterprise software market is creating real opportunity in underserved verticals — the best time to start a fund in this space is when established players are dismissing it. Your thesis around [specific vertical] addresses something I've been watching: the founder-operator entering vertical software is fundamentally different than the B2B SaaS operator. Different capital needs, different go-to-market challenges, different hiring constraints. If you're building around that dynamic, we should talk about potential co-investment opportunities."
Why it works
Demonstrates thesis understanding, signals respect for emerging managers, and directly opens the partnership conversation. Doesn't come across as patronizing because it's specific to the founder's thesis.
Immediate tactics for partnerships
Emerging managers are future LPs, co-investment partners, and deal flow sources. Show up early with substantive comments on their fund announcement posts. This visibility builds relationship when they're most open to partnership conversations.
Instead of celebrating portfolio exits, post about trends you're seeing across multiple companies in your portfolio. This signals your pattern recognition and thesis clarity, which is exactly what LPs and co-investors screen for. It keeps you visible without promotional bias.
The conversations where co-investment partnerships form are about founder support capabilities, fund operations, and capital efficiency — not product categories. Show up in those discussions consistently to signal what you actually care about.
Questions position you as intellectually curious and collaborative. Statements position you as certain. Investors want partners who ask good questions and adapt thinking, not ones who show up with pre-formed opinions.
Common questions about Remarkly for vcs & angel investors
Remarkly surfaces posts from emerging managers announcing funds, founders raising specific rounds, and institutional investors discussing deployment. You configure it to flag conversations in your investment thesis — round size, stage, geography, vertical — so you see partnership signals before they become formal processes.
Yes, with strategy. Comments should add value to the broader conversation — market insight, founder support sentiment, operational perspective — rather than just amplifying the company. Remarkly helps you write comments that signal you're a thoughtful investor, not just a cheerleader.
The opposite. Thoughtful, substantive engagement signals you stay current with market dynamics, you're collaborative about partnerships, and you have a clear thesis. LPs want investors who are visibly learning and connected. The risk is being silent or generic, not being thoughtfully engaged.
Most VCs see meaningful partnership signals and relationship deepening with 3-4 substantive comments per week. That's enough to stay visible in your network's feed without requiring more than 30 minutes weekly. Consistency matters more than volume.
Partially. Remarkly surfaces posts from institutional investors, family offices, and emerging fund managers discussing deployment criteria. You'll see signals about their thesis and appetite, which helps you assess fit before outreach. Direct LP prospecting still requires personal reach-out, but Remarkly makes your positioning clear when they research you.
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