Your startup English can sound sharp while your Dutch still sounds like a shopping list. That is normal. Founder language is full of abstract words: focus, runway, customer, tool, task, team, launch, decision. At A1 Dutch level, you do not need clever pitch language yet. You need small words you can say without freezing.

This guide teaches startup tools Dutch vocabulary for A1 learners. You will learn the simplest words for people, tools, tasks, meetings, and decisions, then turn them into short Dutch sentences you can use before a founder meeting, startup event, team call, or local networking coffee.

The CEFR A1 language level is about familiar words, very basic phrases, and simple information about yourself and your direct situation. So we will keep every Dutch sentence short. I will use plain native Dutch wording, avoid heavy grammar, and show you where English startup words can stay English.

TL;DR

For A1 Dutch, learn startup words in small groups: people, work, tools, money, time, and meetings. Start with de oprichter for the founder, het team for the team, de taak for the task, de tool for the tool, de klant for the customer, ik kies for I choose, and wij maken for we make. Then write one sentence about your real work, such as Ik maak een app, Wij hebben een team, or De klant heeft een vraag.

How To Use This Guide In 20 Minutes

Use this guide as a small practice session. A dictionary gives you words. A practice session helps you speak.

Here is the 20-minute routine I recommend:

  1. Read one word group.
  2. Say every Dutch word aloud.
  3. Copy 5 words into your notebook.
  4. Make 3 short sentences about your own company, project, job, or idea.
  5. Read the sentences aloud twice.
  6. Use one sentence in a real message or meeting note.

At A1, one correct short sentence is better than one long sentence that collapses halfway. The Council of Europe CEFR table describes A1 as basic personal and concrete communication. For startup Dutch, that means you can talk about who you are, what you make, who helps you, what tool you use, and what the next task is.

Step 1: Learn The People Words

Startup work starts with people. If you can name the people in a simple way, you can understand more of a meeting.

The Dutch word for founder is de oprichter. It is a de-word. You can say:

  • Ik ben oprichter. I am a founder.
  • Zij is oprichter. She is a founder.
  • De oprichter werkt vandaag. The founder works today.

In Dutch, you may also hear founder in English, especially in startup circles. That is common in informal Dutch business talk. Still, de oprichter is the simple Dutch word worth learning first.

Use these words:

  • de oprichter means the founder.
  • de medeoprichter means the co-founder.
  • de klant means the customer.
  • de gebruiker means the user.
  • het team means the team.
  • de collega means the colleague.
  • de adviseur means the advisor.
  • de investeerder means the investor.

Do not try to use all of them in one conversation. Pick the 3 people you talk about most. If you work alone, start with ik, de klant, and de gebruiker. If you have a small company, start with wij, het team, and de klant.

I often see learners jump straight to hard words like belanghebbende for stakeholder. Leave that word for later. A1 Dutch should help you survive a real conversation. De klant heeft een vraag is more useful than a fancy word you cannot pronounce under pressure.

Step 2: Learn The Work And Tool Words

Many startup words are about work objects: the thing you make, the tool you use, the task you finish, the meeting you attend. Dutch startup people often mix Dutch and English here. You might hear de tool, de app, de website, and de pitch in the same meeting.

That mix can help you. If a Dutch speaker says de tool, you already know the meaning. Your job is to learn the small Dutch words around it.

Use these basic words:

  • de tool means the tool.
  • de app means the app.
  • de website means the website.
  • het product means the product.
  • de taak means the task.
  • het plan means the plan.
  • de vraag means the question.
  • het antwoord means the answer.
  • de afspraak means the appointment.
  • de vergadering means the meeting.

Make tiny sentences:

  • Ik gebruik de tool. I use the tool.
  • Wij maken een app. We make an app.
  • De klant heeft een vraag. The customer has a question.
  • Het team heeft een plan. The team has a plan.
  • De afspraak is morgen. The appointment is tomorrow.

If you want more business word lists after this guide, the KVK glossary for young entrepreneurs is useful because it explains Dutch entrepreneur terms in English. For broader business phrases, Preply's Dutch business vocabulary guide and DutchPod101's business word list can give you extra practice when you move beyond A1.

Step 3: Use The Verbs You Can Actually Say

Verbs make your startup Dutch useful. A noun gives you a label. A verb lets you say what happens.

At A1, you need only a small verb set:

  • zijn means to be.
  • hebben means to have.
  • maken means to make.
  • werken means to work.
  • gebruiken means to use.
  • kiezen means to choose.
  • betalen means to pay.
  • verkopen means to sell.
  • leren means to learn.
  • vragen means to ask.

Start with the ik form:

  • Ik ben oprichter. I am a founder.
  • Ik heb een taak. I have a task.
  • Ik maak een app. I make an app.
  • Ik werk vandaag. I work today.
  • Ik gebruik een tool. I use a tool.
  • Ik kies een naam. I choose a name.
  • Ik betaal voor de tool. I pay for the tool.
  • Ik verkoop een product. I sell a product.
  • Ik leer Nederlands. I learn Dutch.
  • Ik vraag hulp. I ask for help.

Then use wij when you speak about the company or team:

  • Wij maken een website. We make a website.
  • Wij hebben drie klanten. We have three customers.
  • Wij gebruiken deze tool. We use this tool.
  • Wij leren Nederlands. We learn Dutch.

I prefer learners to master 10 useful verbs before they collect 50 startup nouns. A sentence with a simple verb gets you further in a meeting than a long vocabulary list.

Step 4: Learn The De And Het Pattern Slowly

Dutch has two common words for "the": de and het. For startup vocabulary, many useful words are de-words:

  • de tool
  • de app
  • de website
  • de klant
  • de taak
  • de vraag
  • de afspraak
  • de oprichter

Some useful words are het-words:

  • het team
  • het product
  • het plan
  • het antwoord
  • het bedrijf

You do not need a full grammar theory at A1. Learn the article together with the word. Say de klant as one chunk. Say het team as one chunk.

When you forget, keep speaking. A Dutch person will still understand ik heb een plan even if you hesitate before het plan. The real win is that you keep the conversation moving.

Step 5: Build A Mini Startup Word Table

Use this table as your first startup Dutch word bank. I kept the sentences short on purpose.

founder

Dutch
oprichter
Article
de
A1 sentence
Ik ben oprichter.

co-founder

Dutch
medeoprichter
Article
de
A1 sentence
Zij is medeoprichter.

team

Dutch
team
Article
het
A1 sentence
Wij hebben een team.

customer

Dutch
klant
Article
de
A1 sentence
De klant heeft een vraag.

user

Dutch
gebruiker
Article
de
A1 sentence
De gebruiker test de app.

tool

Dutch
tool
Article
de
A1 sentence
Ik gebruik de tool.

app

Dutch
app
Article
de
A1 sentence
Wij maken een app.

website

Dutch
website
Article
de
A1 sentence
De website is klaar.

product

Dutch
product
Article
het
A1 sentence
Het product is nieuw.

task

Dutch
taak
Article
de
A1 sentence
Ik heb een taak.

plan

Dutch
plan
Article
het
A1 sentence
Het plan is kort.

meeting

Dutch
vergadering
Article
de
A1 sentence
De vergadering is vandaag.

appointment

Dutch
afspraak
Article
de
A1 sentence
De afspraak is om tien uur.

question

Dutch
vraag
Article
de
A1 sentence
Ik heb een vraag.

answer

Dutch
antwoord
Article
het
A1 sentence
Het antwoord is ja.

money

Dutch
geld
Article
het
A1 sentence
Wij hebben geld nodig.

price

Dutch
prijs
Article
de
A1 sentence
De prijs is laag.

name

Dutch
naam
Article
de
A1 sentence
Ik kies een naam.

idea

Dutch
idee
Article
het
A1 sentence
Het idee is goed.

help

Dutch
hulp
Article
de
A1 sentence
Ik vraag hulp.

Read the table aloud. Then hide the English column. If you can say 10 sentences without looking, you already have a useful base.

For more beginner word practice outside startup themes, LearnDutch.org's 1000-word beginner course and the A1 Dutch vocabulary list from LearnDutchApp can help you add daily-life words around food, time, travel, and family. Those words matter because founder life in the Netherlands also happens in normal Dutch outside business.

Step 6: Turn English Founder Resources Into Dutch Practice

You may read startup content in English and live your daily life in Dutch. That is a good learning bridge. Read one small English idea, then make one A1 Dutch sentence from it.

If your topic is focus or founder discipline, open a founder resource, read one short paragraph, and write one tiny Dutch sentence about your own work:

  • Ik kies een taak. I choose one task.
  • Ik werk vandaag. I work today.
  • Ik zeg nee. I say no.

If your topic is founder decisions, use a founder blog as the English input and turn the idea into simple Dutch verbs:

  • Ik kies nu. I choose now.
  • Ik betaal niet. I do not pay.
  • Ik verkoop vandaag. I sell today.

If your topic is roles and team work, use a venture building team resource as the team context and practice people plus tasks:

  • Het team werkt. The team works.
  • De taak is klein. The task is small.
  • Wij hebben een afspraak. We have an appointment.

The rule is simple: one English idea, one Dutch sentence. You do not need to translate the whole article. You are training your mouth and your memory.

Step 7: Make Sentences For A Real Founder Meeting

A founder meeting can feel fast, even in English. In Dutch, it can feel faster because people use short phrases and switch between Dutch and English.

Prepare 6 sentences before the meeting:

  • Ik ben oprichter. I am a founder.
  • Wij maken een app. We make an app.
  • Wij hebben twee klanten. We have two customers.
  • Ik gebruik deze tool. I use this tool.
  • Ik heb een vraag. I have a question.
  • De afspraak is morgen. The appointment is tomorrow.

Then prepare 3 question sentences:

  • Wat is de taak? What is the task?
  • Wie is de klant? Who is the customer?
  • Wanneer is de afspraak? When is the appointment?

Those 9 sentences cover identity, product, customer, tool, question, time, and task. That is enough for a beginner to participate for a moment without trying to sound fluent.

If you are going to a Dutch startup event, also check official context about the local system. The RVO page for startups in the Netherlands explains support routes and startup programs in English. You can read it in English first, then pull out small Dutch words you see often around events, support, funding, or advice.

Step 8: Practice Pronunciation Without Making It Complicated

Startup Dutch is easier when you say the words out loud. Silent reading does not prepare you for a coffee chat.

Use this sound routine:

  1. Say the Dutch word alone: taak.
  2. Say the word with the article: de taak.
  3. Say a short sentence: Ik heb een taak.
  4. Say the sentence with your real context: Ik heb een taak voor de app.

Do this with 5 words per day. Keep the list small. Repeat often.

Some quick pronunciation notes:

  • ui in gebruiker can feel hard. Listen to native audio many times.
  • ij in prijs sounds like the Dutch ei sound.
  • g in gebruiken is a Dutch sound many learners need time to train.
  • oe in goed sounds like the vowel in "food".

You do not need perfect pronunciation before speaking. You need enough clarity that a listener understands your sentence. A calm short sentence usually works better than a rushed long one.

Step 9: Avoid These Common Mistakes

Translating every startup word

Some startup words stay in English in Dutch business talk. De startup, de app, de tool, de pitch, and de meeting are common. If Dutch people around you use the English word, you can use it too.

Learning investor words too early

Words like waardering, aandelen, converteerbare lening, and due diligence are useful later. For A1, start with geld, prijs, klant, vraag, and antwoord. You can talk about more of your real day with those small words.

Forgetting the article

Learn de klant, het team, de taak, and het product as full word chunks. The article helps your Dutch sound more natural.

Making sentences too long

Long sentences break quickly at A1. Use one idea per sentence:

  • Ik heb een vraag.
  • De klant wacht.
  • Wij maken een app.
  • Het team werkt vandaag.

Practicing only business words

A founder still needs normal Dutch. You need days, times, numbers, places, food, transport, greetings, and polite phrases. Business words help at work. Daily words help you live.

A One-Week Practice Plan

Use this plan if you want a simple routine.

Monday

Word group
People
Practice task
Write 5 sentences with ik, wij, de klant, and het team.

Tuesday

Word group
Tools
Practice task
Write 5 sentences with de tool, de app, and de website.

Wednesday

Word group
Work
Practice task
Write 5 sentences with de taak, het plan, and de afspraak.

Thursday

Word group
Verbs
Practice task
Say 10 ik sentences aloud.

Friday

Word group
Questions
Practice task
Ask 5 short questions with wat, wie, and wanneer.

Saturday

Word group
Reading bridge
Practice task
Read one short English startup paragraph and write 3 Dutch sentences.

Sunday

Word group
Review
Practice task
Read all sentences aloud and fix only the words you use most.

Keep this plan on one page. A short plan you repeat beats a large word list you ignore.

When To Move Beyond A1 Startup Dutch

Move beyond this guide when you can introduce yourself, name your product, ask a small question, and describe one task in Dutch.

Your next word groups can be:

  • money and invoices;
  • customers and support;
  • planning and dates;
  • hiring and roles;
  • marketing and sales;
  • legal and company registration terms.

The Talkpal guide to Dutch business terminology for entrepreneurs is useful when you are ready for wider business vocabulary. For company registration and official Dutch entrepreneur terms, return to the KVK glossary because official words matter when forms, invoices, and public services are involved.

At A2 or B1, you can start making longer sentences:

  • Wij hebben een kleine app voor klanten in Nederland.
  • De klant gebruikt de tool elke week.
  • Ik heb morgen een afspraak met mijn medeoprichter.

For now, A1 startup Dutch should stay practical and small. You are building a speaking base.

FAQ

What Dutch startup words should an A1 learner learn first?

Start with people, work objects, and simple verbs. Learn de oprichter, het team, de klant, de tool, de taak, het plan, ik heb, ik maak, ik gebruik, and wij werken. These words let you say who you are, what you make, who you help, and what happens next. That is enough for a short founder introduction or a simple meeting note.

Is the English word "startup" used in Dutch?

Yes, Dutch speakers often use startup in business contexts. You may hear de startup, een startup, or startup event. You can also describe the idea in simple Dutch as een nieuw bedrijf, which means a new company. At A1, both can work. Use startup when the people around you use startup language. Use nieuw bedrijf when you want plain Dutch.

What is the Dutch word for founder?

The Dutch word for founder is de oprichter. A co-founder is de medeoprichter. You can say Ik ben oprichter for I am a founder, or Zij is medeoprichter for she is a co-founder. In informal startup talk, you may also hear the English word founder, but de oprichter is the word to learn first.

How do I say "tool" in Dutch?

Many Dutch startup people say de tool. You can use it in a simple sentence: Ik gebruik de tool, meaning I use the tool. You may also use het hulpmiddel, which means aid or tool, but it sounds broader and less startup-like. For A1 startup talk, de tool is easy and common.

How do I talk about my team in simple Dutch?

Use het team and short verbs. Say Wij hebben een team, meaning we have a team. Say Het team werkt vandaag, meaning the team works today. Say De taak is voor het team, meaning the task is for the team. These sentences are short, clear, and useful in a meeting.

Can I use English startup words in a Dutch sentence?

Yes, when the English word is common in Dutch business talk. You can say de app, de tool, de pitch, and de meeting. Keep the Dutch sentence around it simple: Ik heb een pitch, Wij maken een app, or De meeting is vandaag. If you are unsure, listen to the words Dutch people around you use.

What Dutch verbs help in founder meetings?

Start with zijn, hebben, maken, werken, gebruiken, kiezen, betalen, verkopen, leren, and vragen. Practice the ik and wij forms first: ik heb, wij hebben, ik maak, wij maken, ik gebruik, and wij gebruiken. These verbs help you talk about tasks, products, tools, customers, and decisions.

How should I practice Dutch before a startup event?

Prepare 6 short sentences and 3 questions. Say who you are, what you make, who the customer is, what tool you use, and what question you have. Then prepare questions with wat, wie, and wanneer, such as Wat is de taak?, Wie is de klant?, and Wanneer is de afspraak? Read them aloud before you leave.

What should I avoid when translating business English into Dutch?

Avoid long literal translations. Startup English often has abstract phrases that become heavy in Dutch. Pick the simple idea first. "We need better customer feedback" can become De klant heeft een vraag or Wij vragen de klant. The sentence is smaller, but you can actually say it.

Can A1 Dutch be useful for founders in the Netherlands?

Yes. A1 Dutch will not let you run a full investor meeting in Dutch. It can help you greet people, name your role, ask small questions, read simple words, and show that you are trying. In the Netherlands, that effort can make daily work warmer and less awkward. Start with small sentences you can use this week.