• 46 minutes 5 seconds
    He shut down his last startup and gave the money back—then hit $1M ARR in 6 months. | George, Founder of Monk

    George had to wind down his last startup and give investors their money back. He went deep into the valley of despair, certain he'd missed his window to build something big. Then he met a co-founder, decided to start over, and started selling.

    In this episode, George breaks down how a customer signed a $36K pilot off nothing but a Loom and a one-pager, how cold email took him from zero to $1M ARR with no sales team, and why a "seven out of ten" is the most dangerous hire you can make.

    Why You Should Listen

    • How a customer signed a $36K pilot after a single Loom and zero calls.
    • Why he gave the money back on his last startup—and what "follow your energy" really means.
    • How cold outbound email built his first $1M ARR with no sales team.
    • Why a "seven out of ten" is the most dangerous hire you can make.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, fintech, accounts receivable automation, AI agents, cold outbound email, B2B SaaS, Series A fundraising, services as software


    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:01:39 The Moment of True Product Market Fit
    • 00:03:33 Shutting Down a Small-Market Startup
    • 00:07:44 Picking Fintech From Five Ideas
    • 00:17:12 From Black Box to Full App
    • 00:24:47 $1M ARR on Cold Email Alone
    • 00:36:11 Why a "Seven" Is the Most Dangerous Hire
    • 00:42:15 Compressing a $25M Series A

    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    22 June 2026, 9:00 am
  • 42 minutes 37 seconds
    He quit his $50M ARR startup to work as a paralegal—then raised a $60M Series A. | Dan Mishin, Founder of Manifest

    Dan founded and scaled a $50M ARR, SoftBank-backed startup—and could've stayed to make tens of millions. Instead, he handed it to his chief of staff and started from scratch. He wanted something bigger. He took an entry-level paralegal job to learn everything about law hands on. Then he built Manifest, which just raised a $60M Series A.

    In this episode, Dan breaks down why he did intake calls for 1,000 legal clients before building anything, how free Slack communities turned Fortune 500 HR managers into buyers without a dollar of ads, and why he refused to sell software to law firms even when investors told him he was crazy.

    Why You Should Listen

    • How 2 months working as a paralegal beat years of customer discovery.
    • How free Slack communities turned Fortune 500 HR managers into clients.
    • Why earned media compounds like an asset while paid ads burn like an expense.
    • Why impact is the best driver for starting startups.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, legal tech, legal AI, AI-native law firm, immigration law, services as software, community-led growth, earned media, customer discovery, Dan Mishin, Manifest


    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:06:34 Walking Away from $50M ARR
    • 00:13:12 Why Immigration Law Has AI Leverage
    • 00:18:01 The AI-Native Law Firm Model
    • 00:21:49 1,000 Intake Calls Before Building Anything
    • 00:30:21 Turning Free Communities Into Buyers
    • 00:37:20 Earned Media That Compounds

    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    15 June 2026, 9:00 am
  • 53 minutes
    He churned 100% of his revenue on purpose—then grew 10x to $2M ARR in under 12 months. | Ali Khokhar, Founder of Amigo AI

    Ali quit his job a few months after ChatGPT launched, convinced AI would eat labor marketplaces like Upwork. With no co-founder and no code, he collected $12K from real customers—using a faked demo and a cloned voice. Then he pitched 100 VCs in 10 days and got 47 straight 'no's.

    In this episode, Ali breaks down how he banked $12K in revenue before writing a single line of code, how a $20/month Slack community drove Amigo's first $1M in ARR, and why he churned every existing customer to go all-in on $100K+ healthcare enterprise deals.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why validation only counts when dollars exchange hands.
    • How a $20/month paid community turned into $1M in ARR.
    • Why he refunded every customer and churned 100% of his revenue.
    • Why founders must sell the first $2M themselves before hiring an AE.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, AI agents, healthcare AI, enterprise sales, pre-seed fundraising, community-led growth, customer validation, pivot, Amigo AI

    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:08:37 From Upwork to Starting Amigo
    • 00:13:30 $12K in Revenue Before Writing Code
    • 00:23:24 Pitching 100 VCs in 10 Days
    • 00:30:20 47 No's—Then FOMO Took Over
    • 00:37:12 The $20/Month Community Behind the First $1M
    • 00:45:47 Churning 100% of Revenue on Purpose
    • 00:01:49 The Moment of True Product Market Fit

    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    8 June 2026, 9:00 am
  • 42 minutes 52 seconds
    He hit $1M ARR by sending 500,000 cold emails—then raised a $25M Series A in 6 days. | Mark Hughes, Co-Founder of Solidroad

    Mark was running a startup out of a tiny annex office in Dublin with zero product usage. Then one customer turned it on and overnight he saw usage spike to thousands of simulations. He got to $1M ARR 100% through outbound, by sending 500,000 cold emails. A few months ago he closed a $25M Series A.

    In this episode, Mark breaks down the pivot from sales roleplay to customer support that unlocked his first real traction, the cold outbound playbook that took him to $1M ARR (500K emails, 250 meetings, 40 customers), and why doorstepping customers in Utah is what drove his net revenue retention to 186%.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Exactly how to use a cold outbound strategy to hit $1M ARR.
    • Why getting on 56 flights last year to visit customers led to 186% NRR.
    • How he closed a $25M Series A in just 6 days.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, AI startup, customer support, cold outbound, Y Combinator, Series A, enterprise sales, SaaS, Solid Road


    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:06:10 The Pivot From Sales to Customer Support
    • 00:12:54 Why Moving to SF Changed Everything
    • 00:22:34 Cold Outbound to $1M ARR
    • 00:32:47 Doorstepping Customers for 186% NRR
    • 00:39:17 Closing a $25M Series A in 6 Days

    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    1 June 2026, 9:00 am
  • 38 minutes 28 seconds
    Q1 2026 w/Carta: What you need to raise a Series A. | Peter Walker, Head of Insights at Carta

    The AI boom is making founders feel like the market is wide open, but the data tells a sharper story: valuations are up, round sizes are bigger, and the bar to “count” in a top-tier fund’s Monday meeting keeps rising. We sit down with Peter to translate Q1 2026 venture capital trends into founder reality, from seed-stage pricing distortions driven by AI infrastructure to the quieter pressure building across the rest of the startup market.

    We get specific on early-stage fundraising benchmarks and why Series A now looks riskier than many people assume. Median Series A valuations have climbed close to 2x in a few years, while typical raises jumped from roughly $8M to $10M to $13M to $15M. That changes everything: ownership targets, follow-on costs, and the outcome math that pushes investors (and founders) toward “decacorn-plus” expectations. If you are pitching $100M ARR as the endgame, you may already be behind.

    Then we zoom out to the forces shaping who wins: Bay Area gravity, a real valuation gap versus other hubs, and practical tactics like visiting the Bay to capture network effects without uprooting your life. We also dig into defensibility in AI application startups, where building is faster but competition is fiercer, plus the rise of smaller teams and solo founders, and what that means for hiring, equity, and motivation on early teams.


    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 LLM Hype And Bubble Warning
    • 00:02:13 Five Stars Then We Begin
    • 00:03:02 Seed Prices Spike In AI Infra
    • 00:07:10 2026 Benchmarks For Pre-Seed To A
    • 00:09:36 Series A Doubles And Exit Math
    • 00:12:54 Bay Area Gravity And Valuation Gap
    • 00:18:22 Defensibility Gets Harder In AI Apps
    • 00:23:22 Smaller Teams Solo Founders Talent Shifts
    • 00:35:20 VC Fund Shakeout And Final Share Ask

    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    25 May 2026, 9:00 am
  • 21 minutes 47 seconds
    How to get a VC (like me) to wire you $2M in under 2 weeks (the FOMO playbook) | Solo Episode

    I meet 1,000+ founders every year. Most are bad at fundraising.

    I also interview 100+ of the world's best founders on my podcast each year. Most are incredible at fundraising.

    One raised $14M in 17 days. another was 3x oversubscribed on a $3M round. another closed a seed in hours from a single X post. All are first-time, unproven founders.

    They don't waste time becoming "friends" with VCs. They have a business to build. They treat fundraising for what it is: a process where you manufacture FOMO as fast as possible, take the money, and move on.

    This video breaks down the 4 steps the best fundraisers use to raise fast. The same 4 steps taught at YC and 500 Startups (where i went). The same 4 steps you can run on thousands of VCs worldwide to close $2-3M in weeks not months.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why you need to reach out to 50 VCs on the same day just to end up with three term sheets.
    • How to engineer intro blurbs that make VCs feel like they're already late to the game.
    • Why setting fake deadlines is the fastest way to destroy all your credibility with investors.
    • How one founder raised $3M in five weeks by starting with a $1.5M target and driving FOMO.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, fundraising, raising a seed round, VC pitch, FOMO, startup fundraising playbook, term sheets, investor meetings, Pablo Srugo, venture capital

    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:01:30 Step 1: Build a List of 50 Qualified VCs
    • 00:06:00 Step 2: Engineer the Intros
    • 00:14:00 Step 3: Compress the Timeline
    • 00:20:00 Step 4: Manufacture FOMO
    • 00:26:00 Three Rules to Never Break

    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    18 May 2026, 9:00 am
  • 37 minutes 27 seconds
    Coinbase's ex-CPO bet on AI agents before ChatGPT—now he's closing 7-figure Fortune 500 deals. | Surojit Chatterjee, Founder of Ema

    Surojit spent 14 years at Google building mobile ads into a $100B+ business and then took Coinbase public as Chief Product Officer in 2021. In early 2023, before "agent" was even a word in AI papers, he started Ema in stealth—betting on a future where teams of AI agents would replace the "human glue" inside Fortune 500s.

    In this episode, Surojit breaks down how a Hitachi deployment across 55,000 employees became Ema's true PMF moment, why he spent the first year obsessed with SOC 2, ISO 42001, and air-gapped architecture before chasing revenue, and why one client just cut their HR team from 1,000 people to 550 by automating 65,000 monthly job changes.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why true PMF is when your average salesperson can sell the product without you in the room.
    • How a single Hitachi deployment unlocked credibility for every Fortune 500 deal that followed.
    • Why a cold email—not a warm intro—turned into Ema's largest partner today.
    • How partnering with PwC and KPMG became a faster wedge into the C-suite than any conference.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, AI agents, enterprise AI, AI employees, Fortune 500 sales, Surojit Chatterjee, Ema, agentic AI, enterprise software


    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:02:00 Hitachi Was the PMF Moment
    • 00:04:10 What Ema Actually Does
    • 00:11:48 From Coinbase to a Pre-ChatGPT Bet
    • 00:28:48 The Cold Email That Won a Top Partner
    • 00:30:52 Small Dinners Beat Massive Conferences
    • 00:36:11 The Moment of True Product Market Fit

    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    11 May 2026, 9:00 am
  • 55 minutes 46 seconds
    How this 1st-time founder went from closing customers for $500 a month to $300,000 a year. | Sean McCarthy, Founder & CEO of BackOps

    Sean was spending four days a week inside customer warehouses at Amazon Shipping when he noticed the same thing everywhere: back-office admin staff churning every six months, buried under the same repetitive claims and reshipping tasks. He talked to eighty-five warehouse owners, quit Amazon in July 2024, and cold emailed his way to a pre-seed round within weeks.

    In this episode, Sean breaks down why he paused all sales to rebuild BackOps as an enterprise-grade platform, how an SOP recorder that takes eight minutes replaced months of deployment delays, and the scrappy enterprise playbook—from sending donuts to warehouses to building the customer's board deck for them—that wins $300K Fortune 500 deals.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why talking to 85 customers before writing a line of code is worth more than anything.
    • How an eight-minute screen recording replaced months of SOP-writing delays.
    • Why "what are your problems?" fails in enterprise and a pointed use case wins eight out of ten times.
    • How to structure pilots that auto-convert so you never end up in post-pilot purgatory.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, supply chain, AI automation, enterprise sales, BackOps, first-time founder, warehouse operations, logistics AI, Sean McCarthy, agentic AI


    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:02:24 Beating a Giant on 5% Odds
    • 00:09:25 Eighty-Five Warehouse Interviews
    • 00:16:33 V1: A Slack Bot for Reshipping
    • 00:22:05 Pausing Sales to Rebuild for Enterprise
    • 00:34:49 The Scrappy Enterprise Sales Playbook
    • 00:48:23 Two Intentional Wow Moments in Every Demo
    • 00:53:40 The Moment of True Product Market Fit

    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    4 May 2026, 9:00 am
  • 40 minutes 45 seconds
    He built for 2 years before raising a dollar—then hit $13M ARR and a $40M Series B. | Alex Halliday, Co-Founder & CEO of AirOps

    Alex spent two years building AirOps nights and weekends during the pandemic before raising a single dollar. A chance conversation with Sam Altman—while walking down the street during SF Pride—sent him down the LLM rabbit hole months before ChatGPT existed. He pivoted his product toward AI, picked marketers as his customer, and never looked back.

    In this episode, Alex breaks down why he picked marketers over every other AI use case after watching them build 80-step workflows on his platform, the consultative sales motion that converts almost every pilot to annual at $60K–$250K ACVs, and why positioning—not product—was the unlock that took AirOps from $1M to $13M ARR.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why picking the highest-taste customer is more important than picking the biggest market.
    • How proof-point-driven outbound gets you past the "nobody's heard of you" problem.
    • Why the founder-to-seller handoff is a forcing function for focus—and when to make it.
    • How a consultative, education-led sale converts almost every pilot to annual contract.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, AI marketing, content engineering, SEO, AEO, AI search, enterprise sales, SaaS growth, AirOps, Alex Halliday, Greylock


    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:03:06 Two Years in the Idea Maze
    • 00:06:51 Why He Picked Marketers Over Everyone Else
    • 00:14:36 What Best-in-Class Content Looks Like Now
    • 00:25:42 From $1M to $13M ARR
    • 00:28:29 Building a Repeatable Sales Machine
    • 00:36:15 Competing in the Hottest AI Category
    • 00:38:44 The Moment of True Product Market Fit

    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    27 April 2026, 9:00 am
  • 52 minutes 22 seconds
    180 VCs rejected him—then a $60K billboard got him to $2M ARR in 4 months. | Isaiah Granet, CEO of Bland AI

    Isaiah pivoted mid-YC, landed in the bottom 10% of his batch, and watched 180 investors say no—their reason: phone calls won't exist a year from now. Voice AI was not yet a thing. With almost no money left, he and his co-founder bet everything on building AI phone calls from scratch. Bland went from pre-seed to a $40M Series B in a year.

    In this episode, Isaiah breaks down how a $60K billboard and a strategic influencer campaign generated close to a billion impressions, why he fired 50% of his customers right after raising a Series A, and the enterprise sales playbook that lands six- and seven-figure contracts with companies most people have never heard of.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why 180 VCs saying your market won't exist is actually a bullish signal.
    • How two billboards and a wave of micro-influencers generated a billion impressions.
    • Why firing half your customers right after raising your Series A can save your roadmap.
    • How internal newsletters and org-chart mapping win six-figure enterprise deals.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, voice AI, AI phone calls, enterprise sales, Bland AI, YC pivot, billboard marketing, influencer marketing, call center automation, Isaiah Granet


    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:02:34 A Typhoon Replaces an Entire Call Center
    • 00:11:52 The YC Pivot and 180 Rejections
    • 00:19:05 Betting the Company on In-House AI
    • 00:24:11 The Billion-Impression Billboard Campaign
    • 00:34:49 Firing 50% of Customers After Raising $20M
    • 00:38:43 The Enterprise Sales Playbook
    • 00:50:52 The Moment of True Product Market Fit

    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    20 April 2026, 9:00 am
  • 52 minutes 20 seconds
    She bet on a consumer app when every VC wanted B2B—then grew to $10M ARR. | Anada Lakra, Founder of BoldVoice

    Anada Lakra just raised a $21M Series A for BoldVoice, a $150/year pronunciation app that helps immigrants speak English with confidence. But she started from zero in her Harvard dorm room and a problem most VCs didn't think was big enough. She recruited a Hollywood accent coach, shipped a bare-bones V1, and got into YC.

    In this episode, Anada breaks down why she launched a consumer app when every investor was chasing B2B, how a Reddit thread called "Judge My Accent" became an early growth hack, and why switching to annual-default pricing transformed her unit economics overnight.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why building a consumer app in the 2020s is not as crazy as VCs think.
    • How Reddit threads and guerrilla marketing drove BoldVoice's first thousand users.
    • Why defaulting to annual pricing gave her instant CAC payback.
    • How she grew from zero to $1M ARR and raised a $21M Series A.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, consumer app, B2C startup, pronunciation app, accent coaching, AI app, YC startup, mobile app growth, Anada Lakra, BoldVoice


    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:02:14 The Accent Problem Nobody Was Solving
    • 00:11:49 Getting Into YC with No Revenue
    • 00:22:48 Shipping V1 from a Dorm Room
    • 00:29:31 Guerrilla Growth on Reddit and Facebook
    • 00:36:05 Cracking the YouTube Influencer Playbook
    • 00:48:09 Why Annual Pricing Changed Everything
    • 00:50:47 The Moment of True Product Market Fit








    Send me a message to let me know what you think!

    16 April 2026, 9:00 am
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