We lived the problem.
Dominic Sansone is a 20-year-old finance student at Fordham University's Gabelli School of Business, a Financial Analyst at First American Capital Group, an Investment Banking Analyst at Ashton Stewart, and the Co-Founder of CampusKey — a student housing platform near Fordham's Rose Hill campus.
He built Sansone Integrations because he lived the problem. Working across 28 active deals simultaneously as a finance analyst, he watched critical tasks fall through the cracks — not because of a lack of effort, but because there was no system. No automation. No AI infrastructure holding everything together. Clients were being lost because of poor organization in a world where the tools to fix it already existed.
That experience made one thing clear — the problem is not unique to finance. Every small business owner is juggling too much with too little support. The difference is that most of them have never been shown what AI can actually do for their specific operation. That is exactly what Sansone Integrations exists to fix.
Tyler Day is a 20-year-old Finance and Entrepreneurship student at SUNY Geneseo, a Founding Team Intern at Legacy Buddy, and a Co-Founder of Sansone Integrations.
At Legacy Buddy — a fintech startup building the Credit Karma for generational wealth — he's working across every function it takes to bring a pre-revenue company to profitability: investor outreach and fundraising support, AI-driven market research, lead generation and go-to-market strategy.
He came to that environment ready for it, spending nearly two years at Deal Partners Group, a boutique debt advisory firm supporting private credit opportunities between $5–60 million in financing. He first ran outbound B2B marketing campaigns targeting 150+ companies weekly across the technology and SaaS space. Then stepped up to work directly with the Managing Director on capital raising, CRM infrastructure and pre-qualification calls with C-suite executives.
Prior to DPG, as an Employee Benefits Intern at Brown & Brown Insurance, he learned that even multinational PubCos were slow to act on AI tools that could easily transform how they engage with clients. The problem was always the same — too much to manage, costly systems and not enough hours in the day.

