You know how sometimes you get a text from a friend?

Something that says like, "Hey, you should meet my buddy Steve." There's no context, there's no reason, just Steve. And now you're in this weird spot.

Let's say you're in the middle of a huge launch of your business. South by Southwest is around the corner and you've got a big activation. Or you just hired your new CEO, CFO—something massive is going on in your life. And now you're in this weird spot where saying no makes you look like a jerk. So you say yes.

And 30 minutes later, you're on a Zoom with this guy who's pitching you a timeshare in Tulum.

Everyone lost. You lost. Steve lost. Your friend definitely lost. Because now you don't trust their intros anymore.

That's the problem.

Introductions are broken. They've been broken for a long time. Someone connects two people with zero context, zero consent, and zero accountability. Then they disappear like a hit and run. But for networking.

I'm David.

I make introductions for a living. Good ones. The kind where both people walk away saying, "How did you know I needed to meet that person?"

For a long time, I had the same problem everyone else has. I'd connect two people, something great would happen—a deal closes, someone gets hired, a partnership forms—and I'd hear about it a year later at a dinner party. "That intro you made? Changed my life." Cool. Glad I could help. I'll be over here eating bread.

But here's the thing: the person who got introduced? They actually wanted to say thank you. They just didn't have a way to do it that felt right.

So I built SuperConnected.

I pick two people

Sometimes it's two people in my network. Sometimes it's someone in my network and someone new. Or sometimes there's a very clear scenario where it's obvious that a person needs help in a specific context, and I know that connecting this person with another person will be valuable for both parties.

I write up why

The app helps me write up why—not just "you'd vibe," but the actual specific reason the connection matters. Then it scores the intro. We call it the sizzle score. If the intro is vague or lazy, it tells me. Think of it like a bullshit detector for networking.

Both people see context

Once the intro is dialed in, both people get a message. Not a calendar invite. Not a group text. A clean, simple page that shows them an anonymized bio of the person they'd be meeting and the reason I think they should connect. Anonymized—that's important. Because if I show you someone's full name and title, you're going to Google them, decide you already know enough, skip the intro entirely. Humans are predictably lazy. I say that with love.

Both people decide independently

Both people see the context. Both people decide independently if they're interested. That's double opt-in. Nobody's obligated. Nobody's ambushed. If both say yes, the introduction happens. The identity of the other person is revealed. But if one says no, no harm done. There is no introduction made.

Now here's the part that changes things.

When a connection I make creates real value—a deal closes, an investment lands, someone gets their dream job—there's a simple value sharing agreement already in place. Both parties agreed to it upfront, before they ever met.

So when things happen, the person who made it happen—the connector—actually gets recognized for it. Not just with accolades. But in the form of money. And it's not a finder's fee you have to chase down with awkward texts. It's built in.

I know you're thinking: "This is just LinkedIn." God knows LinkedIn is a platform. SuperConnected is a power tool for one person. Me and my network.

When you get an intro through SuperConnected, you're not getting a notification from an algorithm. You're getting a personal introduction from someone who put their reputation on the line because they genuinely believe you two should meet. That's the difference.

I'm not connecting strangers to strangers. I'm connecting people who actually know people to people who actually know people. And I'm giving both of them every reason to say yes or the freedom to say no.

The Wall of Value

Over time, every successful connection gets tracked. I'm building what I call a "wall of value." A running total of the impact these introductions have created: deals closed, people hired, partnerships launched. It's a legacy. Something I can show my kids one day and say, "I helped make all this happen."

Look, networking doesn't need another app.

It doesn't need another platform. It doesn't need another place to collect business cards you'll never look at again. It needs better introductions. That's SuperConnected.

No more Steves. Well, better Steves. Steves with context.