Mutual Friend replaces the spreadsheets, email chains, and Dropbox folders that Broadway producers use to keep investors in the loop. Share documents, track recoupment, and stop answering the same questions every Monday.
You're producing a Broadway show and managing investor communications with email threads, shared drives, and a spreadsheet you haven't updated since previews.
Every Monday it's the same thing: pull together the operating report, export a PDF, email it to 30 people, and wait for the replies asking what their recoupment percentage is. There's a better way to do this.
Every investor can see exactly where they stand — how much they put in, how much has come back, and how close the show is to recouping. No more fielding the same question over email.
Pitch decks, OAs, K-1s, legal filings — all in one place, organized by show. You control who sees what. Prospects get the pitch deck; committed investors get everything.
Upload the weekly numbers — gross, expenses, royalties, net — and each investor sees their proportional share on their own dashboard. One upload, everyone's informed.
Who invested what, in which show, and what percentage do they own? It's all here — and it stays current as the raise progresses.
Enter an email, click send. Your investor gets a link, clicks it, and they're in. No passwords, no account creation, no tech support calls.
Know which investors opened the pitch deck and which ones haven't logged in since you sent it. Useful for follow-ups and for knowing who's actually paying attention.
You're already juggling casting, budgets, and opening night. Investor communications shouldn't eat up another afternoon every week.
No more digging through email for last week's operating report or asking your producer what your recoupment percentage is. Just log in.
Name, capitalization, opening date. That's all you need to start.
Enter their emails. They get a link and they're in — no forms, no passwords.
Pitch decks, OAs, K-1s — drop them in and control who can see what.
Upload the operating report and each investor sees their share.
This is financial data. We treat it that way.
Investors only see their own shows and documents. This is enforced at the database level — not just in the UI.
Documents are encrypted at rest and in transit. Nobody sees your files unless you've given them access.
Every view and download is logged, so you know exactly who's looked at what.
Broadway producers who are tired of managing investor communications through email and spreadsheets. Your investors also get a portal where they can see their shows, documents, and weekly numbers without having to ask you.
Nope. You enter their email, they get a link, they click it. No passwords, no sign-up forms. Works on their phone too.
Anything — pitch decks, OAs, K-1s, legal filings, press kits. They're organized by production, and you control which investors see which files based on whether they're a prospect or committed.
You upload the weekly numbers (gross, expenses, royalties, distributions) via CSV or enter them manually. The system figures out each investor's share based on the cap table and shows it on their dashboard.
Yes. Access control is enforced at the database level — an investor literally cannot query another investor's data. Documents are encrypted at rest and in transit, and every view and download is logged.
Set up your first production in a few minutes and see what your investors have been missing.