Emissary connects B2B sales teams with recently departed senior executives from target accounts, offering insider knowledge that no public dataset can replicate.
ENTRY ANGLES
Consulting network platform for recently-departed senior engineers · Knowledge monetization platform for product managers and data scientists · Integration with offboarding software (like Tilt) to capture departing employees at moment of separation
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Two-sided marketplace platform development, HR/offboarding software integration capabilities, Knowledge validation and matching algorithms
Emissary positions itself against the AI trend rather than with it. While competitors race to build AI sales coaches and AI market intelligence tools, Emissary's pitch is simple: there are things only people who have actually worked inside a target company can tell you, and no public dataset will ever replicate that.
The platform is a consultant marketplace, but narrowly scoped: advice is available only on marketing and sales, and the consultants are exclusively former senior executives – director level and above – who left their most recent employer within the last 18 months.
That recency constraint is the key differentiator. Emissary has 12,000 consultants in the network, with former employees of 93% of Fortune 500 companies represented – and 97% of them departed their previous employer within 18 months. Their institutional knowledge is current.
The platform helps with three types of problems: getting to the right people inside target companies and framing a pitch correctly for that audience; understanding what will accelerate a deal through a buyer's internal decision process; and building relationships inside target industries to identify adjacent sales opportunities.
Subscriptions include 11 live one-on-one sessions with selected consultants, plus access to a content library of research and articles produced by the network. The library has independent value and also serves as a marketing channel, giving prospective clients a preview of the depth of insight available.
What the consultants provide that no AI can approximate is knowledge of what actually drives decisions inside specific companies: who holds real influence versus formal authority, what the company is genuinely investing in versus what it says publicly, which internal champions are worth finding and how to find them. The AI equivalent draws on public filings, press releases, and LinkedIn profiles. The Emissary consultant draws on 10 years of internal meetings.
Emissary raised $5.18M in its current round, bringing total funding to $30.2M across six rounds.
The shift of senior executives into freelance and consulting work is a real and growing trend. People at the director and VP level have started treating their accumulated expertise as a portable asset rather than something they exchange exclusively for a single employer's salary. Some are building consulting businesses deliberately; others are using the freelance period as a bridge between full-time roles.
Several platforms have built businesses around this trend. Paro and Scaleup Finance – [covered in separate reviews](/review/neozhidannyj-sposob-zarabotat-na-uvolnenijah) – offer fractional CFO services by subscription; Paro has raised $68.5M and Scaleup Finance $9.1M. Bolster started by matching current senior executives with startups as part-time advisors or board members and has since expanded to full-time hiring, raising $13.8M.
Emissary has found a position that serves this demographic well. The platform gives former executives 1–2 years of meaningful income and continued industry involvement during the period between roles – maintaining visibility, building relationships across their client's accounts, and generating concrete results to document before the next permanent move. For the executives who aren't ready to retire but aren't yet ready to commit to a new full-time role, it's a functional holding pattern with upside. The self-selection effect is also useful: consultants who don't generate results for clients naturally churn out within 18 months, leaving a network that's been organically filtered for quality.
The US sees more than half of all employees change jobs in a given year. Among that group is a consistent supply of recently-departed senior executives whose institutional knowledge is fresh and marketable. That supply is structural and unlikely to shrink – workforce mobility has been increasing for decades, driven by generational shifts in how people think about careers and by the expansion of freelance and contract work as legitimate professional paths.
The most obvious platform to build for this population is what Emissary already built: monetize the transition period by connecting recently departed executives with buyers who need their specific knowledge. But the same logic extends to other high-knowledge, high-mobility professional categories.
Senior engineers change companies frequently. So do experienced product managers, data scientists, and healthcare administrators. Each group carries institutional knowledge that decays in value within 18–24 months – which creates a natural window for a platform to capture and monetize it.
A [prior review](/review/neozhidannyj-sposob-zarabotat-na-uvolnenijah) covered Tilt, a platform that automates the offboarding process for HR and managers and raised over $10M. The interesting extension of Tilt's model is that it sits precisely at the moment of separation – which is also the moment when a departing employee might be most receptive to joining a consulting network or purchasing career transition services. Platforms that own the offboarding workflow own a high-quality, high-intent audience at exactly the right moment.
For the executive network model specifically, the constraint is quality control at scale. As the network grows, the 18-month recency filter does significant work – but vertical focus (limiting consultants to specific industries or functions) would deepen the value proposition further and make it harder for generalist alternatives to replicate.