Why Proximity to Customers Matters More Than Proximity to Capital: Sabeer Nelli on Where Founders Should Focus

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Fintech Leader Highlights Why Founders Who Stay Close to Real User Problems Consistently Outperform Those Optimizing for Investor Attention

TYLER, TX, USA – May 4, 2026Sabeer Nelli, CEO of Zil Money, has shared his perspective on one of the most consequential choices a founder makes: where to direct their attention in the early years of building a company. According to Sabeer, while access to capital is often treated as the defining advantage in the startup world, the founders who build companies that last are overwhelmingly those who remain close to the people they serve – not the people who fund them.

Sabeer notes that the startup ecosystem has long celebrated fundraising milestones as proof of progress. Press coverage, social media posts, and founder conversations often center on how much a company has raised and who is backing it. He explains that this dynamic, while understandable, can quietly pull founders away from the work that matters most: understanding what customers actually need and why current solutions are falling short.

“The founders who outlast the noise are the ones who spend more time talking to their customers than talking to investors,” says Sabeer. “Capital gives you runway, but proximity to your customer gives you direction.”

He points out that many of the most common startup failures trace back not to a lack of funding but to a loss of customer insight. As teams grow and investor meetings multiply, the feedback loops that shaped the original product often become slower and more filtered. Sabeer highlights that founders who deliberately protect their access to unmediated customer feedback – through direct conversations, support queues, and direct observation – tend to make better product and business decisions over time.

Sabeer also emphasizes that proximity to customers is not just a product strategy – it is a cultural signal. When a company’s leadership is visibly close to the people it serves, that orientation tends to permeate the organization. Teams build differently when they know the person whose problem they are solving might speak directly with someone in leadership.

He notes that this principle applies equally to founders building in major tech hubs and those building from emerging regions. Regardless of geography, the companies that achieve meaningful scale are almost always the ones whose founders remained genuinely curious about the problem they were solving = and resistant to the temptation of optimizing for headlines instead of outcomes.

Looking ahead, Sabeer Nelli believes the next generation of breakout founders will be defined less by their fundraising pedigree and more by how deeply they understand the lives of the people they serve. The fintech CEO sees customer proximity not as a tactic but as the foundational discipline that separates companies that matter from those that merely scale.

Contact Info

Website: www.sabeer.com

LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/sabeer-nelliparamban

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