The Capital Flex Podcast

S1EP06 - Find the Excitement with Mical Jeanlys-White

Naseem Sayani Season 1 Episode 6

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0:00 | 41:14

What happens when you stop trying to convince investors and start qualifying them instead?

In this episode of The Capital Flex, I sit down with Mical Jeanlys-White, CEO and founder of WealthMore, an AI-native wealth tech platform built to bring expert financial strategy to everyday investors who traditional wealth management overlooks. With more than 20 years in financial services, including a decade at JPMorgan Chase building category-defining products, Mical is now applying her institutional experience to a new model: an AI financial coach paired with human advisors, no account minimum and a flat fee structure designed for the upwardly mobile professional building real wealth.

We unpack what fundraising feels like when rooms are loaded with bias and pattern recognition. Mical shares the principle guiding her raise, “find the excitement”, and why she’s not looking for polite interest or a “circle back,” she wants real momentum. We talk about writing your own investment memo, reading body language as a signal and why building a consumer brand is not marketing fluff, but a capital strategy when you are operating without a champagne budget.

Key Topics Discussed:

  • What “find the excitement” actually looks like in a raise
  • Why brokered introductions accelerate trust and reduce friction
  • How to read investor chemistry quickly and stop over-investing in the wrong rooms
  • How bias shapes the way diverse founders get framed, even when it is nowhere in the deck
  • Why writing your own investment memo reframes diligence
  • Why building a consumer brand is a capital strategy, not a luxury

My Reflection:
What stayed with me wasn’t just the strategy, it was the discipline. Mical does not beg rooms to understand her. She does not over-explain to earn validation. She reads the room, names the signal and moves on.

Too many founders confuse effort with progress. We believe that if we refine the slide or explain it one more time, the investor will finally get there. Meanwhile, the right investor is already leaning in. The right customer is already waiting. The right momentum is already available.

Capital does not just fund your company. It shapes your nervous system. And if you are spending your most valuable resource, your attention, on people who are not excited, you are not fundraising. Discernment is the skill.

This Week’s Challenge:
If you’re a founder:

Before your next investor meeting, create a “find the excitement” filter. Write down three signals that mean real momentum. List three disqualifiers you will not rationalize. Draft one sentence you will use to close the loop when the excitement is not there.

If you’re an investor or ally:

Notice when interest is vague and diligence is slow. Ask yourself whether you are leaning in with conviction or staying in polite observation mode. Fundraising is not about convincing. It is about qualifying.

Links and Resources:
WealthMore: https://wealthmore.com/
Mical on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mical-jeanlys-white-9126366/

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And if you’re looking for a more candid space to talk fundraising, power and building inside systems not designed for you, stay close. The conversation continues.

Production and Administration work completed by Smart Podcast Solutions and Elevate Virtual Business Solutions.