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This content was originally created in English. Have in mind, we use automatic translation in Bulgarian which is not optimised. We apologise for any mistakes.
Editor Note: This article, was created by the Women in Marketing – Bulgaria team in collaboration with the speaker Roberta Pushkarova, and is based on her presentation at our Networking Dinner #002 in Plovdiv. It’s been edited for conciseness and brevity.
See what associated resource Roberta shared with attendees on the night of the networking dinner and follow along yourself – complete the author’s recommended assessments in your own time. ✨
“Freedom” and “being employed” rarely sit in the same sentence. Yet the last 3½ years showed me that the right company—one with trust, autonomy, and room to experiment—can feel freer than going solo too soon. This is how I learned that, what I actually do inside a venture capital fund, and the specific habits that let me earn that freedom every day.
I’m on the marketing & community side at Eleven Ventures, a VC fund in Southeast Europe. My “customers” form a triangle:
We actively support ~70–80 portfolio companies, and we manage the community fabric around them. Case in point: I’m currently running point on a four-day retreat in Greece—agenda, speakers, workshops, logistics—the whole thing. The “army” behind me most days? Me, a new teammate I hired and mentor, and partners who advise at the right altitude.
I finished the American University in Bulgaria with a double major (Business + Journalism) and a minor in Marketing—my perfect mix of creative + commercial.
Right out of uni I had two offers:
I listened to my gut and took the internship. I’d done 7–8 months as a PM (websites, ERPs), juggling developers and clients, and between university and COVID I was spent. Eleven became my first real job after graduation. I started as an intern; today I lead marketing, and recently hired my first report.
People to learn from. Partners with decades of scar tissue—some ex-founders with exits—and teammates already punching above their weight.
Ambition + youthfulness. Smart, hungry people who want to build, not just maintain.
A real autonomy contract. On day one I was told our only “policy” is Freedom & Responsibility:
Work where you want and when you want—just own the outcome you committed to.
Permission to experiment. The space to test, ship, and lean into what you do best—not just what a checklist says.
My standing advice: learn what you actually like by experimenting, not by overthinking.
I studied how other funds communicated (spoiler: many didn’t) and started trying… everything: social content, long-form articles, design & visuals, events, media relations, even early SEO and paid experiments.
Every new investment gets a 100-day plan we co-create with the founders. I often become their extended marketing team, helping shape:
The variety is the gift—you find your edges fast.
I didn’t stay in one lane. I embedded with other teams to test my fit and learn the machine.
Both were insanely valuable—and both nudged me back to where I’m best: creative marketing, writing, shaping stories, building audiences from zero without buying attention.
This kind of safe experimentation is a quiet freedom of employment. When you’re a founder or solo, it’s much harder to step sideways.
You know the obvious ones (salary, benefits). Here’s what actually matters to me—and how I use it.
I don’t thrive alone at home. On WFH days I’m usually in a café—four walls and silence melt my brain. A team that nudges each other forward is rocket fuel.
Ask for mentors on purpose. My manager and the partners compressed years of growth into months by letting me shadow, debrief, and iterate in public.
Even flexible companies have processes. Seeing “how things work” (cross-team flows, decision paths, quality bars) is a cheat code—whether you plan to climb the ladder, lead bigger projects, or build your own shop later.
Founders can switch off; it’s just harder. Employment makes it operationally easier to close the laptop. My rituals:
After every initiative we run mini post-mortems:
A real example: we had a timed announcement during a live event. Chaos hit; the post slipped. Fix for next time: schedule the night before. With my teammate now, we keep these loops short and human, and I added a monthly “pulse” around energy, interests, and desired ownership.
New formats, mini-campaigns, tiny visual variations—ship, measure, stop if it doesn’t work. The point isn’t to be precious; it’s to learn fast what’s ours.
This took me ages. What finally worked:
You have 24 hours. Protect your life outside work. I still like gold stars—but I like my mental health more.
After my manager left, I ran solo for 4–5 months. Full control. Then I hired—and had to relearn that delegation means different, not worse.
Now I hand over full creative freedom (“own it; pitch your ideas”) and resist nitpicking. My perfectionism notices flaws no one else sees. Good enough + on time beats perfect + never shipped.
Early on I was obsessed with the Eleven–startups–investors world. It felt like the only universe. Branching out saved me:
When you widen your circles, you see new paths, new problems worth solving—and your current work gets better. You also build a self that exists beyond your badge, which is healthy and… freeing.
Probably, yes. Ideas are forming. But I still have more to learn and more to give here. My advice if you’re itching to jump at 19 or 20: get some inside experience first. See how things work behind the curtain, discover what you’re good at, what you enjoy, and what belongs on your “nope” list. The leap will feel more natural and the odds will improve.
Our team grew from ~10 when I joined to ~20 today. I’ve gone from intern to leading marketing, hired my first teammate, and—yes—sometimes I daydream about starting something of my own (maybe one day during maternity; who knows).
But I also know this: I still have more to learn and more to give here.
If you’re itching to leap, here’s my one piece of advice:
Before you take the plunge and absorb all the risk, gain experience.
Learn what you’re good at, what you love, and what the world needs—your ikigai—inside the safety (and growth upside) employment can offer. Experiment across teams. Ask for feedback before it’s due. Build systems that let you switch off. Grow your network beyond your bubble.
Then—when you leap—you won’t just feel “free.”
You’ll be ready.
Being employed hasn’t shrunk my world—it’s expanded it. I’ve had:
If you’re in a company right now, use it:
And if you’re on the fence about the “freedom” part—remember: trust + autonomy + room to experiment is a kind of freedom too. Sometimes, it’s the freest place to grow.

Roberta Tihomirova is a Marketing Manager at the venture capital fund Eleven Ventures, an ambassador for the organization supporting women entrepreneurs, Future Females Sofia, and a co-founder of the accelerator program DEA Accelerate.
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