Earlier versions of this brief inferred his post-Diageo status from indirect signals. This version is built from the verified LinkedIn Experience section:
Verified status: Stephen left Diageo Feb 2026 after 21 years 11 months. He's now operating in two parallel modes: (1) Operating Executive · Self-employed working with investors, boards, and leadership teams on growth + portfolio clarity, and (2) Strategic Advisor to Founders at The Cookaway — a DTC food experience — a role he started in Oct 2025 (4 months before leaving Diageo). The Cookaway role is the proof point: this is exactly the relationship pattern he wants to build with multiple companies, and he's already executing it.
Why this is unusually favorable for BevGenie:
What weakens: Diageo NA pilot via him is no longer an authorization play — it's a warm-intro-and-positioning play. He'd still be a champion if he wanted to be, but the pilot conversation now routes through people he used to work with. Same as any warm intro from a former senior exec, but freshest in the next 6-12 months.
What to NOT do: walk in and pitch. He's a long-tenured corporate executive freshly into operating-executive mode — the founder who arrives respecting his thinking + offering a sharp value exchange wins. Treat Meeting 1 as a peer-level industry conversation, not a sales pitch. Specifically don't ask "would you consider being an advisor?" — he's already advising. Ask "is BevGenie the kind of company that fits the portfolio you're building?"
His most recent Diageo role sat squarely in the Innovation function — where AI gets evaluated and operationalized. Now that he's out, he can speak about that experience without NDA-style hedging:
Strategic implication: Don't pitch him AI generically. He's already past that. The conversation is about which specific agentic workflows actually unlock value in BevAlc commercial teams — and BevGenie has worked answers to that.
Direct mapping: BevGenie's current state (pre-seed, raising, one validated customer, recent Diageo decline, going into the May 13 VC Reverse Pitch) cross-referenced with what Stephen specifically unlocks. This is the answer to "how can he be useful to us, not just as an advisor."
| BevGenie's current gap / need | What Stephen specifically delivers |
|---|---|
| Pre-seed raise · investor conversations 2-6 weeks out (May 13 VC Reverse Pitch today + Tier 1 outreach) | Credentialed advisor name on the deck. "Former SVP Marketing & Innovation NA, Diageo (21 yrs)" is the kind of cap-table line that materially shifts VC perception for Rachel ten Brink (Red Bike) and Karen Lopez (TR Ventures). No employer-approval barriers since he's out. Vector ①. |
| One validated customer (Sera Luce) — need 2-3 more design partners to make Series A case | Warm intros to BevAlc supplier execs — former Diageo NA leaders (Ed Pilkington CMIO, Stephen Rust Pres US Spirits, Mike Ditter Head of AI) + peer-supplier alumni network across Pernod Ricard, Bacardi, Beam Suntory, Brown-Forman, Constellation. Even 2-3 converted intros materially reshape the Series A narrative. Vectors ③ + ⑥. |
| Mike Ditter (Diageo Head of AI) politely declined Feb 25 — Diageo doors closing | Sponsor a re-introduction to Mike with the new wedge framing. Stephen is the only realistic path to a non-cold second conversation with Mike. With Stephen as bridge + the rehearsed objection-handling responses (see below), the Feb decline can be revisited. |
| BevGenie's wedge story is "agentic intelligence for BevAlc supplier commercial teams" — but the framing has been moving as the product evolves | Voice-of-customer sessions from a freshly-departed senior NA exec — 2-3 deep dives on what supplier marketing-and-commercial teams actually need, how decisions actually get made, what tool patterns fail. Sharpens the wedge story for both product roadmap + investor pitch. Vector ②. |
| Limited public visibility — pre-seed founders aren't on the BevAlc industry-circuit radar | Marketing Academy + CEO Magazine peer network — senior-CMO/CGO peer intros across consumer brands. Possibly conference-speaker access (speculative until verified with him directly). Vector ⑦. |
| Pricing + competitive positioning is still founder-intuition, not operator-validated | Marketing-tech tool-stack teardown — direct knowledge of Pencil/Grip/CreativeX/Vizit/Project Halo deployment realities at Diageo. Plus marketing-budget allocation logic for $3.7B-scale supplier orgs. For commercial-team tools (Salesforce/Crunchtime/Lilypad/Encompass), warm-intro path to former colleagues with direct knowledge. Vectors ④ + ⑤. |
| First commercial hire decision approaching (Head of GTM / VP Sales / industry CSM) | Warm referrals from his 21-year Diageo network — Diageo + peer-supplier commercial-team alumni are exactly the candidate pool. Saves 4-6 months of recruiter time + ~$30-50K fees. Vector ⑧. |
| Future-stage optionality (Series A in 12-18 mo, possible strategic conversation later) | Eventual Diageo corp-dev / acquisition radar. Not near-term (Distill Ventures wound down March 2025; he's not internal anyway). But if BevGenie scales to meaningful Series A traction, Stephen's ex-senior-Diageo relationships could broker a strategic conversation. 18-36 month optionality, not a near-term plan. Vector ⑨. |
The honest single-line summary: Stephen's highest-impact contributions to BevGenie at this exact moment are (1) named advisor on the deck for the active raise, (2) 2-3 warm intros to supplier commercial leaders that could convert to design partners over Q3-Q4 2026, and (3) sharpening the wedge story via voice-of-customer sessions. The pilot-via-him fantasy was always one degree removed from his function and is now fully external — pursue it only as a possible outcome of the warm-intro path, not as a target.
ConsumerIQ has had two prior Diageo meetings in early 2026. Stephen is most likely third-touch, not first-touch — and the prior decline reasoning matters for how the Stephen conversation needs to land.
In the original (wrong) framing this was a risk: a sitting Diageo SVP would naturally route any vetting back to Mike Ditter (Head of AI & Emerging Tech NA), and Mike had already politely declined in Feb. Since Stephen has actually left Diageo, the dynamic flips:
"Stephen — congratulations on the new chapter. Saw your Operating Executive shift on LinkedIn and the work with The Cookaway. Quick context before we dive in: we've had two prior Diageo NA conversations this year. Edward Monteiro de Barros and Bianca Goins in January, then Mike Ditter on the AI side in February. Mike's read at the time was that BevGenie overlapped with existing solutions and that the bigger blocker was capability rather than tooling. That feedback genuinely shaped what we've built since. We'd value your read for two reasons: (1) you ran Marketing & Innovation NA right up to Feb — you know what 'too much overlap' really meant inside the org and what would have shifted Mike's view; (2) you're outside now, so you can give us the honest read a sitting employee can't. The bigger question we'd love your perspective on: is BevGenie the kind of company that fits the portfolio you're building?"
Why this works: (a) opens with respect for his new chapter + signals you've done your homework, (b) uses the Mike Ditter context as honest evidence we listen + iterate rather than as a complication, (c) ends with the right framing — "fits your portfolio" not "would you advise" — because he's already a working advisor, not a sitting executive being recruited.
| Name | Role | Status / context |
|---|---|---|
| Edward Monteiro de Barros | Diageo NA · Innovation team | First-touch via BevNet workshop. Substantive product feedback. Offered to set up brainstorming session. Worth re-engaging. |
| Bianca Goins | Diageo NA · Insights / Strategy adjacent | Self-described "not the right person." Was triple-booked the day of demo, jumped early. Routed us to Mike Ditter. Could be a courtesy re-introduce if Stephen asks who else we've spoken to. |
| Mike Ditter (Michael Dieter) | Head of AI & Emerging Tech, Diageo NA. Boomerang exec (returned ~1.5 yrs ago). | Polite decline Feb 25. Said BevGenie overlaps with existing solutions; tool fatigue + capability-level-zero objection. Office: 3 WTC + Stamford CT AI capability center. Critical to address his objections directly in the Stephen pitch. |
| Dan (last name unknown) | Diageo NA · with Edward at BevNet | Declined Jan 27 demo. Minimal data point. Confirm with Edward who Dan is + whether worth re-including. |
Diageo is mid-restructure. Stephen's not inside it anymore, but the macro shapes which industry conversations are credible right now.
Stephen isn't an internal Diageo decision-maker anymore, but he just lived through this exact macro from the inside. He likely has strong, candid views on:
Meeting 1 use: ask him to teach you, don't pitch him. "Lewis's framing reads like our value proposition on paper. From your time inside, how much of that translates to actual commercial-team change vs leadership-comms positioning?" Answer will be gold.
In the prior framing, these were "Stephen's colleagues he could route us to." Now they're "Stephen's former colleagues he can warm-introduce." Different leverage but still useful — relevant for the first ~12 months after his exit, before relationships cool.
| Name | Role · why they matter post-Stephen |
|---|---|
| Ed Pilkington | Chief Marketing & Innovation Officer, Diageo NA. Stephen's most recent C-level skip — likely worked closely with him. Warm intro from Stephen is far stronger than cold outreach. If BevGenie's wedge becomes "we're in conversation with several supplier marketing leaders," Ed's view matters. |
| Stephen Rust | President of US Spirits, Diageo NA. Heads the commercial / sales side — the realistic BevGenie customer-team owner. Stephen White can introduce; Rust authorizes pilots on the commercial side. |
| Mike Ditter | Head of AI & Emerging Tech, Diageo NA. The person who politely declined us Feb 25. A Stephen-sponsored re-introduction (with new wedge framing) is the most realistic path back to Mike — same person, different framing, different outcome possible. |
| Mark Sandys | Chief Innovation Officer, Global Diageo. Senior to NA Innovation. Stephen would know him from the global Innovation org. Future scale conversation, not near-term. |
Three articles in April–May 2026 + ongoing LinkedIn posts. Use these themes as warm-ins — quoting his framing back to him in his own language wins immediate credibility.
His thesis: the category-contraction narrative is wrong. Brands remain strong; what's broken is how value is being communicated and priced relative to consumer expectations. This is fundamentally a data + decision problem — exactly the wedge BevGenie addresses.
BevGenie hook: "Your 'mispricing not broken' frame is the most accurate read on the category we've seen — and it's literally the value proposition behind what we're building. Supplier commercial teams don't have the decision infrastructure to act on this insight in real time."
Themes evident in his recent posts: moderation normalizing · premium under scrutiny · RTDs + spirits-adjacent formats accelerating · gin/sessionable category surging (gin exports +16.7% YoY in 2025) · price-conscious consumers shifting toward value · cocktail culture pivot (martini renaissance, persistent aperitivo).
BevGenie hook: "Three of your seven forces — moderation normalizing, premium under scrutiny, the shift to value — all converge on the same operational problem: supplier commercial teams have to re-segment customers and re-route pitches every quarter, but they're doing it in spreadsheets. We've built the agent layer that automates this."
His thesis: what it takes to launch and scale billion-dollar consumer brands. Drawing on Johnnie Walker, Casamigos, Don Julio playbooks. Signals he's thinking about brand-building patterns that transfer outside BevAlc — relevant for any future BevGenie pitch to non-BevAlc CPG buyers.
BevGenie hook: "Your 'Breakout Curve' framework — the stages a brand has to clear to hit billion-dollar — is exactly what supplier marketing and commercial teams are trying to operationalize in 2026 with 30% less budget. The decision velocity needed at each stage is what we're enabling."
Stephen's Innovation org sponsors or is adjacent to all of these. Treat these as given in conversation — don't pitch generic AI capabilities Diageo already has.
What this means for the conversation: Diageo has clearly nailed consumer-facing AI (creative, content, personalization, trends). BevGenie's wedge — commercial-team-facing agentic intelligence (supplier-side workflow automation) — is the gap. Lead with that distinction in Meeting 1.
Ranked by impact-per-effort given BevGenie's current pre-seed stage. The first 3 are the killers; the rest are accretive.
Adding "Stephen White, former SVP Marketing & Innovation NA at Diageo (Jul 2023 – Feb 2026, 21-yr Diageo veteran)" as a named advisor on the BevGenie deck is a credential cascade. Specifically resonates with: Rachel ten Brink (Red Bike — CPG operator-investor will instantly recognize the weight), Karen Lopez (TR Ventures — signals BevGenie has real industry pull), 2048 Ventures (vertical-AI thesis values industry experts), and any Insight Partners conversation. The signal is: "this founder can attract senior Diageo alumni to the cap table." Hard to fake. Bonus precedent: The Cookaway already lists him as Strategic Advisor — the model + structure of this advisory relationship is already road-tested in his portfolio.
Sit with Shyam + Srini for 90-min sessions on: (a) how a Diageo NA Marketing & Innovation team's day actually flows + adjacent Commercial-team workflows he observed, (b) where data lives + where it doesn't, (c) what decisions take how long + why, (d) the general pattern of why marketing-and-innovation tools succeed vs underperform inside a big BevAlc supplier, (e) which agentic workflows would unlock the most value if they worked. Now that he's out, he can speak more freely about industry-level patterns — though specific internal numbers, RFP details, or named-vendor pricing will likely still be NDA-protected. Stick to industry-pattern questions; he'll respect you more for understanding the line. Still the highest-quality voice-of-customer signal BevGenie can realistically get.
The original brief framed this as "internal pilot champion" — that's wrong now, but the warm-intro path is still real and high-value. Stephen can credibly warm-introduce to Ed Pilkington (CMIO NA), Stephen Rust (Pres US Spirits), Mike Ditter (Head of AI), Mark Sandys (Global CIO). A Stephen-sponsored re-introduction to Mike — with new wedge framing — is the most realistic path back to the conversation that stalled in February.
Stephen ran Marketing & Innovation, not Commercial — so his deepest competitive insight is the marketing-tech and AI-tooling stack Diageo actually deployed: Pencil, Grip, CreativeX, Vizit (the Virtual Content Studio stack), Project Halo (Johnnie Walker GenAI bottles), the Think Party AI consumer-trends panel, Elli (Seedlip AI assistant), Foresight Report AI trend-tracking with Samy. He'll know which delivered ROI vs which underperformed, the build-vs-buy tradeoffs, and where the gaps are. For BevGenie's positioning against these (we're commercial-team-facing, they're consumer/content-facing), this is gold.
Stephen managed substantial portfolio P&L inside Diageo's $3.7B global marketing budget. He'll know where the budget lines actually sit, what AI/innovation tools get funded vs cut, and how procurement evaluates new vendors. Useful for BevGenie pricing strategy when targeting marketing-adjacent decision-makers. Note: commercial-team software pricing (Salesforce / Crunchtime / Lilypad / Encompass) is one degree removed from his function — those are in Stephen Rust's (Pres US Spirits) commercial-org budget, not Stephen White's Marketing & Innovation budget. For that pricing signal, his network access via warm intro to commercial-side former colleagues is the path, not his own direct knowledge.
Senior BevAlc executives migrate across suppliers regularly. Stephen's deep multi-region Diageo network spans former colleagues now at Pernod Ricard, Bacardi, Beam Suntory, Brown-Forman, Constellation, plus the major distributor-side execs at Southern Glazer's, Republic National, Breakthru. Each warm intro is a BevGenie design-partner conversation that would otherwise take 6 months of cold outreach.
Evidenced credentials: Fellow of The Marketing Academy (UK senior-marketer mentorship/peer network) + 2026 Judge for CEO Magazine Executive of the Year. These are real network anchors but more limited than "speaker on the BevAlc circuit." What he can credibly do: peer-to-peer warm intros to other senior CMOs/CGOs in his Marketing Academy cohort + cross-industry execs from CEO Magazine judging pool. What's more speculative: getting Shyam onto an IWSR / Drinks Innovation Forum / BevNet panel — his recent thought-leadership cadence could support it but we don't have evidence of an active speaking circuit yet. Ask him directly in Meeting 2 which industry stages he's plugged into.
When BevGenie hires its first Head of GTM, VP Sales, or industry-experienced Customer Success Lead, the candidates ideally come from Diageo / Pernod Ricard / Brown-Forman commercial-team alumni. Stephen's network is the warm pool for these roles. Even one good referral saves 4-6 months of recruiter time + $30K-50K in fees.
Correction from prior version: Distill Ventures (Diageo's CVC) is effectively wound down — Diageo backed out March 2025. Strategic CVC capital from Diageo is not a realistic path. What IS still real: if BevGenie scales to a meaningful Series A/B foothold across multiple BevAlc suppliers, Diageo's corporate-development function may want a strategic conversation (acquisition, commercial partnership, or anchor-customer deal). Stephen — as a recently-departed senior NA exec — would have natural relationships with Diageo's corp-dev / strategy leadership and could broker that introduction down the road. Not immediate. Not the reason to engage him today.
Stephen's 8 years 1 month at Boots Healthcare International (UK consumer healthcare FMCG, 1996-2004) means he understands non-alcohol CPG vocabulary. He managed a £70M portfolio across Strepsils, Optrex, Mycil, Karvol as Marketing Manager. If BevGenie ever wants to extend the platform into adjacent CPG verticals (beauty / health / functional beverages), Stephen's the connector between BevAlc-only-credibility and broader-CPG-credibility. Daash Intelligence (Red Bike portfolio) sits in exactly this beauty/CPG adjacency. Bonus signal: his current advisor role at The Cookaway (DTC food experience) shows he's already operating in non-alcohol CPG today.
| Tier | Ask | What we offer in return | Trigger |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 Meeting 1 |
30-minute "voice-of-customer" listening session. No pitch. We ask him questions; we listen. | Free for him; we send a sharp follow-up summary of his framing applied to one specific BevGenie use case — demonstrating we listened + thought about it. | Use his recent "Seven Forces Reshaping Beverage Alcohol" article as the warm-in. "Three of your seven forces map directly to problems we're solving — wanted to learn how you saw them play out from inside Diageo NA before you left." |
| Tier 2 Meeting 2-3 |
BevGenie product walkthrough (30-45 min) with the specific ask: "poke holes." We want him to push back on the architecture, pricing, GTM, anything. | Acknowledgment in our roadmap that his feedback shaped X feature; ongoing visibility into BevGenie's progress as a friend-of-the-company. | Only after Tier 1 has happened and the follow-up summary landed well. Don't push to demo on Meeting 1. |
| Tier 2 Month 1-2 |
Formal advisor agreement: 0.25–0.5% equity vesting over 24 months in exchange for ~4 hours/month strategic input + permission to use his name in investor materials + up to 6 high-quality intros over the relationship. | Standard advisor equity grant; visibility into a fast-moving early-stage company; tangible vertical-AI portfolio addition (pairs with his existing Cookaway DTC-food advisory) to point to in future board/strategic-role conversations. | Only after demo + a strong second meeting. Don't propose equity in Meeting 1. |
| Tier 3 Month 2-6 · the prize |
Warm-intro to one specific BevAlc supplier customer-prospect (Diageo NA or peer like Pernod Ricard, Brown-Forman, Constellation). Stephen names someone in his network who'd be open to a 30-min BevGenie conversation. We do the actual selling. | Stephen's introduction credit when the pilot lands. No internal-political cost to him. Builds the advisor portfolio with a tangible outcome to point to. | After advisor relationship is formal + after we've shipped one or two pieces of his feedback into the product (proving we execute on input). Don't ask in Meeting 1. |
Verified: Stephen is already in advisor mode (Strategic Advisor to The Cookaway since Oct 2025; Self-employed Operating Executive since Feb 2026). The question isn't whether he'd advise — it's whether BevGenie fits the portfolio he's actively building. Frame the ask accordingly.
The framing for the ask: not "please help us," but "here's what I think you're optimizing for at this point in your career — we're a strong candidate for that portfolio." Senior executives respond to this read on their motivations far better than they do to generic "great founder seeking advisor" pitches.
Don't make terms up. The market has converged on standards. Use them.
| Term | Recommended for Stephen |
|---|---|
| Equity grant | 0.40% of fully diluted shares. Sits at the upper end of the pre-seed advisor range (0.25-0.50%) — justified by his seniority and the strategic-account-access value he brings. Median pre-seed advisor grant is 0.21% per Carta H1 2025. |
| Vehicle | Stock options (ISOs preferred, NSOs if ISO not available). Use the FAST template (Founder / Advisor Standard Template by Founder Institute) as the legal base — it's the industry standard and removes negotiation friction. |
| Vesting | 24 months, monthly vesting, no cliff. Standard for advisors (different from employees' 4-year + 1-year cliff). Reflects that advisors deliver concentrated value early. |
| Time commitment | ~4 hours per month — typically a monthly 1-hour call + ad-hoc questions/intros + 1-2 deeper sessions per quarter. Don't promise less; the time helps justify the equity to him. |
| Deliverables clause | Soft-defined. FAST template language: "industry insight, customer introductions, strategic advisory on go-to-market." Don't lock him into specific intro counts — corporate execs hate that. |
| Termination | Either party can terminate with 30 days notice. Vesting stops at termination; vested options have 90-day exercise window post-termination. |
| Confidentiality | Mutual NDA built into the FAST template. Critical for him — protects his ongoing post-employment NDA / non-compete obligations to Diageo. Make sure the agreement explicitly says he doesn't share BevGenie confidential info externally and BevGenie won't ask him to share Diageo confidential info from his prior tenure. |
| Use of name + bio | Permission to list him as "Advisor" on the BevGenie website + investor materials. Default bio language: "Stephen White, former SVP Marketing & Innovation NA, Diageo (21-year veteran); also Strategic Advisor to The Cookaway." Get his sign-off on the exact wording — ex-employees sometimes prefer specific phrasings about their former employer. |
| IP assignment | Standard work-product-assignment clause — any specific deliverables produced as part of advisory work become BevGenie's IP. (His existing thought leadership and Diageo-paid work remain his.) |
Mike's Feb 25 pushback is the most likely shape of pushback Stephen will offer, since they're in adjacent functions at the same HQ. Have these ready.
| If he says… | Respond with… |
|---|---|
| "This overlaps with existing solutions Diageo and peers already have." | "Mike said the same in February. Here's where we'd disagree: the existing solutions are consumer-facing or knowledge-graph-on-data-platform — Project Halo, Think Party, ChatGPT-for-enterprise rollouts. BevGenie's wedge isn't there. It's commercial-team-facing: the sales/marketing folks in supplier organizations who need decision velocity on segment-and-pitch routing, distributor briefs, on-premise account prioritization. That workflow surface doesn't exist in Diageo's AI portfolio today — you'd know." |
| "Tool fatigue is real — supplier orgs don't need another tool." | "Agreed — that's also what Mike said. We've reframed since then. BevGenie isn't 'another tool the commercial team has to learn.' It's the agent layer that takes work OFF other tools — the Salesforce + spreadsheet + email triage that supplier reps do today. The success metric is fewer tools touched per workflow, not more." |
| "Capability is at level zero in enterprise — orgs need to teach people first, not deploy tools." | "Mike's exact framing. We think he's right — and that's the case FOR BevGenie, not against. Agentic intelligence is the capability accelerator that lets level-zero teams do level-three work. The agent does the high-cognitive-load reasoning; the rep does the relationship work. We're not asking them to learn Cursor or write prompts. We're giving them the equivalent of an analyst sitting next to them, 24/7." |
| "Mike already passed — what's changed?" | Three things changed since Feb 25: (1) Dave Lewis's restructure + the "NA customer service not acceptable" public mandate — the macro context for accepting commercial-team innovation is completely different now. (2) We've sharpened the wedge to commercial-team-facing, away from the enterprise-AI-tool framing Mike rightly pushed back on. (3) Specific new BevGenie capabilities shipped since Feb (fill in: any new features, customer wins, etc). |
| "Why are you talking to me about this when Mike's still the Diageo AI lead?" | "You're not who we want to pitch — Mike is. But pitching Mike cold again would be the same conversation as Feb. Your read on whether the new wedge framing is materially different from what he saw is what would make a re-introduction worth doing. We're asking for your assessment, not for you to advocate. If you think it's not different enough, that's important information too." |
Mike Ditter's stated thesis is "capability-led approach" — he believes the right way to use AI is to build human capability, not deploy more tools. This is actually BevGenie's strongest narrative if pitched right. BevGenie isn't a tool replacing a tool — it's an agent that elevates commercial-team capability from level-zero to level-three on day one. Frame the entire Stephen conversation around "capability acceleration for commercial teams" — Mike's own philosophy becomes the rationale for BevGenie, not the objection to it.
Goal: Learn + signal that BevGenie respects his expertise. Position him as an outside-in industry voice (his current Operating Executive frame), not as a Diageo proxy. Not: pitch or demo.
Opening (90 sec, prior-history aware): See the dedicated "Revised Meeting 1 opener" block above — it congratulates the post-Diageo chapter + The Cookaway, then folds in the Jan/Feb Diageo touchpoints, then ends with the right framing: "is BevGenie the kind of company that fits the portfolio you're building?"
Questions to bring (calibrated for ex-Diageo perspective):
Close (60 sec): "This was incredibly useful. Can I send you a one-pager that takes your framing and shows how we'd apply it? No pressure — just want you to see the actual product mapped to what you said."
Goal: Show BevGenie executes on input. Earn the right to ask for the formal advisor relationship.
Structure: 30-min product walkthrough where Shyam explicitly references Stephen's points from Meeting 1. "When you said X, that made us re-think Y — here's what changed." Then 15 min open feedback. Then propose formal advisor relationship as the close.
What to demo: the single sharpest workflow — likely the distributor-brief-generation agent or the competitive-intelligence agent. Not the full platform tour. One thing, done well, with clear before/after.
Ask framing for the advisor relationship: not "would you consider advising?" — he's already advising at The Cookaway. Frame as: "Given what you said + what we just walked through, does BevGenie fit the vertical-AI/BevAlc slot in the portfolio you're building? If yes, we'd love to formalize you as a named advisor on standard FAST terms — here's what that looks like."
Goal: Convert advisor relationship into 1-2 concrete warm-intro paths into BevAlc supplier commercial teams.
Frame: "Stephen — given what you've seen of BevGenie + what you know about how supplier marketing-and-commercial teams evaluate this kind of thing, who in your network is most likely to be a real first-customer conversation? Could be a former Diageo colleague (Ed Pilkington, Stephen Rust, Mike Ditter with new framing), or someone you know at Pernod, Bacardi, Brown-Forman, Constellation. We're not asking you to sell on our behalf — just to make the warm introduction so we can take it from there."
Listen carefully: the names + sequencing he gives you tells you exactly which BevAlc supplier orgs he reads as ripe for our wedge, and which he thinks won't move.
He's already advising at The Cookaway, so "I don't take advisor roles" isn't the likely shape of a decline. More plausible: BevGenie doesn't fit his portfolio thesis, his post-Diageo NDA carve-outs are stricter than expected, or he goes back into an operator FT role. Plan for all three.
| Scenario | What to do |
|---|---|
| He says his post-Diageo NDA / non-compete blocks formal advisor work in BevAlc | Unlikely given he already advises The Cookaway (food/CPG-adjacent), but possible if his non-compete reads strictly. Pivot to informal mentor relationship. "Totally understand. Would you still be open to 30-min quarterly check-ins as a sounding board? No formal agreement, no equity, no public mention — just the conversations." Still 80% of the value. Revisit formal advisor terms once the non-compete window closes (typically 6-12 months post-exit). |
| He says "let me think about it" after Meeting 2 | Follow up in 7 days with a concrete next step, not a polite ping. "Wanted to share two things since our conversation: (1) here's the one feature we built/changed based on your feedback, (2) here's the one introduction I'd find most valuable if you're comfortable making it." Forces him to engage on substance, not commit-or-not. |
| He's interested but the pilot path stalls inside Diageo | Don't push. Internal Diageo politics are not your battle. Pivot the value to: (a) his network of former Diageo colleagues now at smaller suppliers (which is where most of BevGenie's early customers come from anyway), (b) competitive intel + voice-of-customer sessions, (c) the credentialed-advisor signal for investors. |
| He says no entirely | Ask for two things before exiting: (1) "Who in your network would you point me to?" Senior execs almost always offer 1-2 names even if they decline themselves. (2) "What would have made this a yes?" The answer is gold for the next advisor conversation. |
| He goes silent after Meeting 1 — no Meeting 2 happens | Two follow-up attempts max (one at 1 week, one at 3 weeks). After that, deprioritize and reallocate the energy. Don't burn the relationship by over-pursuing. Stay top-of-mind via occasional LinkedIn engagement with his posts; he may circle back at the right moment. |
| He validates BevGenie but routes back to Mike Ditter | Most likely "soft yes" outcome — handle carefully. If Stephen says "I think you should talk to Mike Ditter about this," the response is: "We did in February — happy to share what came of it. The framing he saw was different from what we'd want to take back to him now. Would you be open to a quick joint conversation — you + Mike + us — where we can re-anchor the discussion with the new wedge framing? Your function's lens is what makes that conversation different." Don't go back to Mike alone — same person, same framing, same outcome. Bring Stephen as the bridge. |
If Stephen doesn't convert, the same playbook applies to peer profiles. People to research as backup advisor candidates:
Stephen White is unusually well-positioned to be a high-impact advisor specifically because his current job is to evaluate the exact kind of tool BevGenie is building, at the exact company we'd most want as a customer. The 10 contribution vectors above are real and compounding — even half of them landing is transformational for a pre-seed BevAlc-vertical-AI startup.
Probability-weighted highest-value outcome: Stephen becomes a named advisor + delivers 3-5 warm intros into BevAlc supplier execs (Diageo NA, Pernod, Constellation, Bacardi, Brown-Forman) that convert to design-partner conversations over Q3-Q4 2026. Probability-weighted floor outcome: 2-3 voice-of-customer sessions + a credentialed senior-BevAlc-alumnus name on the cap table for the next investor conversations. Both outcomes are accretive; the floor case is achievable inside 30-60 days from Meeting 1.
Recommended posture going into Meeting 1: respectful, curious, listening-first. Lead with his thought leadership; defer the demo. Earn the right to ask for the pilot through showing — across two or three meetings — that BevGenie listens, executes, and respects his time.