Navigating Market Entry and Fundraising in PropTech

Dec 2025

The European building sector is undergoing a profound transformation. New environmental and operational standards are redefining how buildings are designed, operated, and upgraded. Against this backdrop, a young technology startup, which we will refer to as Project Atlas, set out to develop a software platform enabling commercial buildings to become fully COO-compliant through data-driven monitoring and automation.

The ambition was clear. The execution was not.

The challenge

Project Atlas had developed a strong technical foundation: a robust software solution combining building data, compliance logic, and operational insights. Early pilots confirmed the relevance of the technology. However, the company faced three critical challenges:

  • No clear go-to-market strategy in a highly fragmented real estate ecosystem

  • Limited visibility on how to structure a credible business plan beyond product development

  • No defined roadmap for approaching investors, despite growing capital needs

Like many early-stage technology companies, the founding team was strong on product and vision, but lacked a structured approach to commercialization and financing.

Our intervention

Genki International was engaged to support Project Atlas through a structured advisory mandate, internally referred to as Project Horizon.

The objective was not to rewrite the product story, but to translate technical value into a coherent business narrative, an executable plan, and an investor-ready strategy.

Our work focused on three pillars:

1. Structuring the business model and market entry

We worked with the founders to clarify:

  • Target customer segments across commercial and institutional real estate

  • The decision-making chain between owners, operators, and service providers

  • A pricing and deployment model aligned with compliance-driven purchasing cycles

This resulted in a focused market entry strategy, prioritizing a limited number of high-impact use cases rather than a broad, unfocused rollout.

2. Building a credible business plan

Under Project Blueprint, we supported the company in structuring its first full business plan, including:

  • A clear value proposition linked to regulatory and operational pain points

  • Financial projections grounded in realistic sales cycles and deployment constraints

  • A phased growth plan connecting product roadmap, hiring, and capital needs

This exercise helped align the founding team internally and created a single reference document for partners and investors.

3. Preparing for fundraising and execution

Finally, through Project Northstar, we assisted Project Atlas in:

  • Defining its funding strategy and investor targeting approach

  • Refining the equity story and investment narrative

  • Preparing management for investor discussions and due diligence

In parallel, we introduced execution discipline through clear operational priorities, KPIs, and short-cycle reviews.

Key outcomes

Within the first year following the engagement, Project Atlas achieved several critical milestones:

  • Successful market entry with its first commercial customers

  • Deployment of the platform in initial buildings, validating operational assumptions

  • Completion of its first institutional fundraising round

  • Establishment of a structured operating model supporting scale

Most importantly, the company transitioned from a product-led initiative to a structured, investor-ready business with a clear execution path.

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Suivant

From Vision to Execution in a Fragmented Market