How to Raise Startup Funds at a Poker Table (No, Seriously)

Have you ever stared at your dwindling business bank account and thought, “If only I could just magically double this overnight”?
Well, what if I told you that there’s a story—part legend, part truth—that involves exactly that?

I’m Dulan Dias. I build, invest in, and bootstrap businesses. And like any other entrepreneur, I’ve been through moments where the numbers on the spreadsheet look more like a horror movie than a business plan. When the walls are closing in, the payroll is due, and investors won’t pick up the phone, sometimes you need creativity. Or guts. Or… a good poker hand.

Now, before you call your nearest casino, let’s play with this thought for a moment.


Business Lessons from the Blackjack Table

Blackjack and entrepreneurship share more in common than you’d think:

  1. Risk vs. Reward
    In blackjack, every decision is a dance between risk and reward. Hit or stand? Raise or fold? In business, the questions feel eerily similar: Do I double down on this product launch? Do I walk away from a market that’s bleeding cash?
  2. Reading the Room
    A good player doesn’t just stare at the cards. They watch the dealer, the other players, the energy. Entrepreneurs must do the same with market shifts, customer moods, and competitor signals.
  3. Calculated Boldness
    Sometimes, the boldest play is the only play. You can’t win if you’re paralyzed by fear.

Now, imagine bringing that same mindset into a do-or-die moment for your company. Not metaphorically. Literally.


Would You Bet Your Payroll on a Hand of Cards?

Let’s say you had $5,000 left in the bank. Not $5,000 in profits—$5,000 to keep your entire dream alive. Vendors breathing down your neck. Employees waiting for paychecks. A business that could change the world… if only it survived another week.

What would you do?

Most people would call it quits. Some might beg friends or family for a bridge loan. But a rare few? They’d walk into a casino, slide their last stack of chips onto the felt, and gamble their future on a game of chance.

Sounds insane, right? Like the plot of a Hollywood screenplay. Except, this story didn’t come from a script. It happened. For real.


The Twist You’ve Been Waiting For

In the 1970s, Frederick W. Smith, the founder of a then-struggling delivery startup, found himself in exactly this situation. His company had just $5,000 left—not even enough to cover fuel bills. Desperate, Smith flew to Las Vegas, sat down at a blackjack table, and walked away with $27,000.

That cash bought his business just enough time to survive. That company? FedEx.

Yes, the global giant that now delivers over 15 million packages a day was, at one point, kept alive by a single weekend of gambling.

Don’t believe me? Here are the receipts:

Here’s a photo of the man who quite literally bet the house to keep the dream alive:


Final Thoughts

Now, let’s be clear—I’m not telling you to fundraise at a blackjack table (please don’t!). But what I am saying is that entrepreneurship is about taking bold, calculated risks when the world says you can’t. Sometimes, survival comes from unconventional choices.

Smith’s gamble wasn’t just about money—it was about conviction. He believed so deeply in his vision that he was willing to risk it all. And that belief turned $5,000 into a $90+ billion company.

So next time you’re staring at your own business cliffhanger moment, ask yourself:
What bold move would I be willing to make to keep the dream alive?

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