Ask Jason LIVE!: Unpacking Startup Strategies with Real-Time Q&A | E1921

Episode Summary

In episode 1921 of "This Week in Startups," titled "Ask Jason LIVE! Unpacking Startup Strategies with Real-Time Q&A," Jason Calacanis hosts a live Q&A session, addressing a wide range of questions from startup founders and entrepreneurs. The episode covers various topics, including investment strategies, the future of seed stage investment structures, and the impact of AI on startups. One of the key discussions revolves around how seed stage investment structures, like convertible notes and safes, might adapt to startups aiming for sustainable growth with minimal external funding. Jason highlights the importance of these financial instruments in early-stage investing and shares insights on how founders can navigate the complexities of fundraising and investor relations. The conversation also delves into the role of AI in startups, with Jason emphasizing that AI is becoming a fundamental technology that will be incorporated into virtually every product. He advises founders to be clear about how AI is used in their products and to consider its potential in improving operations, product features, and future opportunities. Jason encourages startups to think about AI not just as a buzzword but as a tool that can provide significant advantages, such as data analysis and customer support enhancements. Throughout the episode, Jason offers practical advice on building a startup, from understanding customer needs and defining a clear value proposition to efficiently using technology like AI. He stresses the importance of execution, building a delightful product, and being open to learning and adapting based on market feedback. Listeners also get a glimpse into the experiences of founders who have participated in Founder University, a program run by Jason's team. The program is praised for helping participants refine their business ideas, accelerate their startup's growth, and prepare for fundraising. Overall, the episode provides valuable insights and guidance for entrepreneurs at various stages of their startup journey, highlighting the importance of adaptability, customer focus, and leveraging technology like AI to build successful businesses.

Episode Show Notes

This Week in Startups is brought to you by…

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Todays show:

Jason kicks off Ask Jason live! Six live guests ask questions on key topics, including prioritizing multiple founders (13:28), advice around moat for a startup (52:42), and whether not focusing on AI in a pitch will affect investment chances (1:02:38).

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Timestamps:

(0:00) Jason kicks off another Ask Jason with 6 live guests!

(1:13) Sean asks about investment firms changing how they invest early on.

(11:42) Squarespace - Use offer code TWIST to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain at https://www.Squarespace.com/twist

(13:28) Pierson of jellypod asks about prioritizing multiple founders for investments or accelerators

(22:54) OpenPhone - Get 20% off your first six months at http://www.openphone.com/twist

(24:47) Ann asks if they should raise venture capital to grow faster even though it means giving up some company ownership.

(32:01) Eppo. Accelerate your experimentation velocity with Eppo. Visit http://www.geteppo.com/twist

(39:56) Francis asks how to strike a balance between skepticism and enthusiasm when evaluating a company for investment, given that it's impossible to invest in every company.

(52:42) Hosum asks if explaining their startup's moat as current execution and future benefits after reaching product-market fit is enough to convince investors.

(1:02:38) Thom asks if not highlighting AI in our funding pitch will hurt our chances of getting investment.

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Send us your questions for the next episode of Ask Jason LIVE! http://www.thisweekinstartups.com/askjason

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LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasoncalacanis

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Thank you to our partners:

(11:42) Squarespace - Use offer code TWIST to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain at https://www.Squarespace.com/twist

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(32:01) Eppo. Accelerate your experimentation velocity with Eppo. Visit http://www.geteppo.com/twist

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Great 2023 interviews: Steve Huffman, Brian Chesky, Aaron Levie, Sophia Amoruso, Reid Hoffman, Frank Slootman, Billy McFarland

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Check out Jason’s suite of newsletters: https://substack.com/@calacanis

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Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_02: All right, everybody, welcome back to This Week in Startups.We're doing a live Q&A.Not easy to do this, but we're figuring it out.Before these shows, you can always submit that you want to be on live at thisweekinstartups.com slash ask Jason.So if you have questions, you want to be mentored, you have questions about your startup, fundraising, life in general, technology, et cetera, we want to make this interactive.So we don't want you to just submit your question.We want you to come live on the air. SPEAKER_06: This Week in Startups is brought to you by Squarespace.Turn your idea into a new website.Go to squarespace.com slash twist for a free trial.When you're ready to launch, use offer code twist to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain. OpenPhone.Create business phone numbers for you and your team that work through an app on your smartphone or desktop.Twist listeners can get an extra 20% off any plan for your first six months at openphone.com slash twist.And Epo.Experimentation is how generation-defining companies win.Accelerate your experimentation velocity with Epo. Visit getepo.com slash twist. SPEAKER_02: So we'll take our first question.Here we go.We have Sean here.Hey, Sean, what's your question for me? SPEAKER_00: Yes, Jason, long-time listener, first-time caller.So my question is this.We're going to get a lot of those.We're going to get a lot of those.My question is as follows.In light of the trend where some startups inspired by success stories like Zapier and MailChimp are aiming for sustainable growth from profitability with minimal external funding.How do you envision the future of seed stage investment structures, such as convertible notes and safes, adapting for startups that may not plan to raise subsequent funding rounds? SPEAKER_02: Yeah, it's a great question.So for people who know, there are companies that require very little capital and they can become sustainable.Zapier is one.And of course, you mentioned MailChimp.SurveyMonkey was like this.DistroKid was like this.Now, if they do, get to profitability, and it's been bootstrapped the whole way, you don't have investors to worry about.If you did happen to take seed money, and now your business is at scale, those devices are, there are two devices in early stage investing.One's called a convertible note. It's a loan with an interest rate, and then it converts at a certain agreed upon valuation or a discount to the next valuation of the company. And so in those cases, every two years or so, depending on how the documents are written in a convertible note, they convert into equity or the person can say, can I have my money back plus interest?And so that option is on the investor side.So the investors can't get screwed.The company grows really quick, Sean.And then the founder's like, oh, you know what?My company, you invested at a $5 million valuation.It's worth $50 million. I'll just pay your money back at five.That would be not cool to the investors. And there was a startup who did that.They changed the language to make it their option.That was really dirty.I won't say the name of the company, but that company came to me to pitch it later on.And I was like, you know what?This is a moral ethical issue.I don't want to be in business with these folks.Then on a safe... So there have been issues where safes have never converted.TopTal is the Y Combinator company. I think it was a YC company that used the safe created by YC.And YC knew that this was an edge case.It was a possibility, which is you never convert the equity.You just pull all the money out of the business.You build a giant business.And then those investors are screwed.And the TopTal investors got screwed really bad.And you know what?The person who's a general counsel of YC, if you look up a video, general counsel Y Combinator on safes, she explains it. She gets challenged like, hey, what happens in this edge case?And she says, in the next case, we don't think it's going to happen because you'll always raise another fund.Your point, what if you never raise another and you never actually do an equity round? those things can be hanging out there and they can be dangerous.What's more likely is the founder decides they just want to run the business for profits and then you have to have a negotiation.In 400 investments, this has happened three or four times where, so I'd say maybe it's one in 150, maybe three times it's happened, where the founder says, You have 6% equity J-Cal.We're accruing money on this loan.It might be like on a convertible note, 5% interest.So this $100,000 has turned into 105. Next year, it turned into 111.And it just keeps compounding over four or five years. And then finally you have $150,000 into the company at a modest valuation.And we have generally taken the position of, hey, we'll stay in it with you because we know you're going to sell it at some point, right?In all likelihood.But we've been asked to be bought out.And we generally don't want to get bought out because if the founder believes in the business that much, and then we can just say, well, pick a number and talk to your attorney, we'll just convert it. So if it's hanging out there as a safe or whatever, we know there's a cap on it.Let's just convert it.And so we have done that for tax purposes or whatever, or we just extend the note. So with convertible notes, you can just say, we'll extend it for another two years.And so every two years, we put in our database the date of this.It's a very mechanical conversation, I guess, but... It will keep happening when founders decide, I just don't want to, I don't need to do a series B, right?I'll just do seed and series A, or I'll do an incubator seed and then never raise again.I think with AI, we'll see it happen more often.For seed investors, I don't think it's a problem.For series B and C investors, I could see this being a very big problem because maybe some companies never raise money. Maybe they dilute 10, 20% in their seed round, never do a series A, or they dilute 30% between their series A and seed, they never raise a series B. And that would be delightful.So I'm excited about that potentiality as an investor. I like the idea of skipping funding rounds and then just going public, but you have a follow-up, I'm sure.Yes, sir.You've opened up a can of worms.This is a super can of worms for the venture business. SPEAKER_00: Let me ask you this then.At the seed stage, would it make sense to consider a preferred price round at a seed stage for companies that may be thinking in this option? SPEAKER_02: Yeah, you will incur additional legal fees.So doing a safe, if a lot of people I've heard founders doing safes without even consulting an attorney, they just fill out the form and collect the money.So some people do do that.I always think you should have a decent attorney and you could find solo practitioners who will only charge three or $400 per hour.Then there are the white glove, like top tier firms that might charge 800 to 1200 an hour in Silicon Valley. But they might do your priced round, which typically costs $20,000 or $30,000, I think, to do a full priced round.And that's why people tend to not do it.And then sometimes the VCs who lead that price round, they ask you to pay their legal fees.I don't think you should ever do that.I think that tradition is kind of gnarly. So I would never pay the investor's legal fees.I think everybody in the industry should just stop doing that. it just creates an unhealthy environment where just $60,000 is coming out of the startup after they raised their first two or 3 million.It's like, we don't want to just go in the startup.I'm not begrudging the legal folks, their fees.I just think lawyer, if the, if the, Founders are paying the legal fees of the venture capitalists.It just seems weird.The venture capitalists have money.They should do it themselves. Okay.So putting all that aside, it's just expensive.So instead of spending one to $5,000 closing year round in legal costs, you're going to be spending 30, 40,000.That's why people don't do this.So yeah. I think just stick with the safe and the convertible and you'll deal with it every two years.We put a conversion date in ours.So, you know, safes don't have a conversion date.I think we put in our side letter like, hey, it's got to convert by a certain point three years in or something two years in, four years in. Just so we have that conversation. So it's healthy.So it's not sitting out there.And the reason why, by the way, a lot of people, you didn't ask this, but people ask, why are VCs putting in the convertible note documents interest?It's not that they want to, they put the smallest amount possible.It's that in order for the government, the IRS, et cetera, to consider it a convertible note alone against future equity, it needs to have an interest rate and it has to be somewhat in reality.So it can't be 0.01%. If the LIBOR or whatever, then the Fed funds rate is 3%, 4%, 5%, 6%.It should be somewhere in that range.Nobody's getting rich off it either.But I do think startups are going to change over the coming years and be less capital intensive and more revenue per employee. So you've probably heard people talking about this billion dollar... you know, unicorn valuation company with one employee.I don't think that it was not fun to run a company with one people.And if you did get to a hundred million in revenue and a billion dollar valuation, we kind of fun to have a dozen people around to think about the business.So I do think we'll see a 10 person company hit a hundred million in revenue, 10 million per employee and be worth a billion.I do think we'll see that very soon, like in the next couple of years.So great question. SPEAKER_00: Shout out to Founder University, by the way, we just graduated the program. Absolutely outstanding.Kelly and Presh were phenomenal, and we had a fantastic experience. SPEAKER_02: That's great.We, for people who don't know, we run something, a founding university.We were doing it four times a year.It was kind of killing the team.So we're now doing it three times a year.So they have a little break in between them.We're doing a quarterly and we realized, oh my God, we're just starting the second we end.So let's do a quarterly three times a year.And we have a curriculum and we help people learn the best practices in today's market for starting companies. Except 200 people or 200 teams out of 2000 applicants. And then we wind up investing in 10% of those.So net net, we invest in 1% of them.And it's been a great joy to do it because we're meeting founders about half the people in the program.I don't know if you were in this group. are not even incorporated when they join.So we're really, we just graduated. SPEAKER_00: Yes.We just graduated your cohort seven yesterday, actually with a presentation to Bianca. SPEAKER_02: So very nice.Were you incorporated before you started or?Yes. SPEAKER_00: And we actually launched during founder university and along the way, all your videos and guides were exceptionally helpful as we went through that process.So it was worth the $500.In fact, you could keep it if I didn't need the money back, but yeah.Yeah. SPEAKER_02: No, no.We, um, and for people who will know, we charge $500 for it.If you come to all 12 weeks, we give the 500 bucks back and 94% of people complete the program.If we didn't charge the $500 and give the $500 back, I think we'd probably be at half that number.So it's a round trip.Some people do wind up saying, just keep the 500 bucks, put it towards, uh, you know, your team or whatever.And we're like, Oh, that's quite charming.But it's been a little bit of a challenge because 200 people giving 500 bucks is is like $100,000.And then Stripe is like, what are you doing? 100% of your customers or 90% of your customers get their money back.Like how terrible is your product?So we might need to like take the money in, pay the fees and then write a check back just to, you know, or give gift cards back or something.I don't know.It's a mechanical issue, but I love this.I wish there was a gym that you paid $500 a month And then they gave you $100 each of the first four times you did a workout.And then you just pay $100 a month.But if you didn't show up for a month, you pay the $500.That's the kind of gym with the right incentives. All right, great job and continued success with Pouncer AI.Well done.Thank you so much.Cheers. Check this out.We just built a new site.Instead of using a template like we normally would, I was prompted with a series of questions.Our preferred website structure and objective, that could be a new business model, whatever you're doing, the color palette, design elements, and font pairings.And within minutes, it generated a beautiful website for us that was ready to go live and custom for what we're doing.This sounds like science fiction, doesn't it? Well, this is the new Blueprint AI product from our friends at Squarespace.It's the their guided design system for building new websites and it's going to blow your mind because Squarespace is more than just a website builder.It's an all-in-one platform loaded with powerful tools designed to launch and grow your business online.They've put over a billion design combinations right at your fingertips so you can make something beautiful and bespoke to you.So you know this AI will get your brand online and this means you're going to have a unique online presence That's as unique as the brand and the vision you have.This is the use of AI that we've been waiting for.With Squarespace's Blueprint AI, your website gets up and running quickly.And it's completely custom. It's tailored to your business.So here's your call to action.I want you to try this.Squarespace.com slash twist for a free trial. And when you're ready to launch, you go to squarespace.com slash twist to get 10% off your first website or domain purchase.Squarespace is super affordable.It's super valuable.And when you partner with Squarespace, like I've done for a decade, you constantly get new product releases.This is one of the great product teams of all time over at Squarespace.I know them. And they launch incredible things like this blueprint AI that you got to see to believe squarespace.com slash twist squarespace.com slash twist. All right.That worked incredibly well.Let's take another interactive call-in show here from founders asking questions about their startups.Who do we have next?And if you want to call in, you can just go to thisweekinstartups.com slash join.Okay.All right.Jellypod, how are you doing?It's Pearson. Pearson Marks.Okay.Yes.You have a question for me.Let's get right to it. SPEAKER_05: I do.Yeah.So I'm Pearson.I'm the founder of JellyPod, which is a personalized podcast service that creates podcasts based on your newsletter subscriptions.And I'm a solo founder.And you're pretty vocal that successful venture-scale companies need multiple founders.Builder, designer, growth hacker, everything.And recently, people like Sam Altman have come out to say that they believe in the near future, there's going to be a billion-dollar single-person unicorn. Seems far-fetched, but, you know, complete one-man show.So my question is for you, why does your investment philosophy require multiple co-founders as an initial filter versus maybe like a tiebreaker? And what advice would you give to a solo founder? SPEAKER_02: Yeah, so, and this really wasn't my great insight, it was Paul Graham's, which is paradoxical that Sam is sort of promoting this one person unicorn.I think that's more the point he's trying to make is with AI, one person can be this maestro and generate 100 million in revenue, 50 million in profits, which is what it would take to be a unicorn.So it's a little fantastical.And if you did have that amount of resources, why wouldn't you have 10 people?Because it'd be more fun to work with 10 people and have folks really thinking about the design, really thinking about stuff and customer support, et cetera.It's just weird that you wouldn't have some number of people working because it's lonely.Most of the solo founder companies fail at maybe three or four times the rate of multiples.Why is this? Well, one person, there's this expression, if you wanna go far, go together.If you wanna go fast, go alone. So you will go fast as a solo founder.You don't have to have any tough conversations.But sometimes those tough conversations, should we be an enterprise company?Should we be a consumer company?Should we be advertising-based?Should we be subscription-based?You're going to just make those decisions unilaterally or maybe after consulting some consumer data.But essentially, the buck will stop with you. You'll make that decision.And so if you had two other folks there working with you, uh one of them was a developer you're the designer and the other person was a salesperson or a business head or you know mba you might have a more vibrant discussion and then if one of you quits well there's two more people to carry on the mission and if you quit the company's over so on a very practical basis the way investors look at solo founders is if this this is just you know it's a unicycle lose that wheel, that's it game over, as opposed to like, hey, we've got three or four of these, it's a trike, it's a car, it's got four wheels that we can lose a wheel and keep going.So it's really just about redundancy and downside protection.In our programs, I tell my team, if it's a solo founder, they better have incredible performance.That's higher than the people who have multiples, multiple co founders.So We probably accept into Founder University 5%, maybe, solo founders.And we try to work with them on, hey, why are you a solo founder? Most of the time, it's because they can't find co-founders.And then you have to ask yourself.So most of the time, they want co-founders.So out of 10, I'd say seven or eight want a co-founder.They just can't find one.Which then means either the idea is... not good enough for people to want to come on the adventure or the founder is not aggressive enough to convince people to come on this journey with them and quit their jobs or the founder is so small-minded that they think, I don't want to give somebody else 10 or 20% of the company.I want to own 80% of the company or 90% of the company.And we have had that conversation with folks.Yeah. All of those reasons together make it safer for angel investors, seed investors to invest after the product's launched and in multiples.So you're trying to create some downside protection for your fund so you have less zeros.If you want to have less zeros, invest post the product being in market and when they get their first paid customer and when you have two or three multiple founders. And you will see the number of zeros in your portfolio plummet.That's why people are doing it.So it's really just a portfolio management question. SPEAKER_05: No, absolutely.That totally makes sense.And so like for somebody who does have a launch product that has paying customers and, you Is that definition of a co-founder irrelevant?At what point does that no longer become a co-founder, but an early hire, initial founding engineer? SPEAKER_02: So I will look at that and think founding team.So do you have a founding team?And does that founding team have, let's say, one, two, three, four points of equity? In other words, enough skin in the game that they're going to stay at this company for five years, six years, because that consistency of talented people really does matter.So, yeah, if I was evaluating your company and you were at $100,000 in revenue, I'm just picking a number per year. And you had a CTO, a CTO, VP of engineering, whatever, your top tech person, and they had 4% equity.And then you had a top sales executive and you were selling ads, let's say, and they had 4%.You had a kick-ass UX designer and they had 4%.And then you had a chief operating officer, CFO, accounting type person, and they had 4%.Okay. four times four is 16%, and let's say you owned 70%, and then there was 10% or so in a employee stock option pool for the future, that would look good for me.Yeah, I would be okay with that.And because you would have a founding team, and you can explain it to investors, hey, listen, people have serious equity comp.They're not going anywhere.So yeah, I think that's totally fine to have a founding team.So after co-founders comes founding team.The thing is, people who are co-founders, like, you know, DoorDash had three or four, you know, I think they're all still with the company, right?And so when they have serious chunks of equity, 20, 30% of the company each, and it's hard to leave.It's hard to leave a company that's valued at a hundred million when you have 20% of the company, but you've only vested, you know, 8% of that, right? You got 12%, you got $12 million sitting there.You're going to stick around, right?So it really is just about incentives.And so your performance will have to be higher. Your ability to build a team and motivate them is going to be more challenged because they don't have the same equity.So you might get a second tier of employee.You won't get the co-founder level engineer.You'll get the next level.But maybe you convince somebody, hey, listen, I've already taken the risk out of the business.We're at a million dollars in revenue. You're not joining us. a pure startup here.We're profitable.We got a million in revenue.So 4% of this is a, you know, is a lot more than 20% of a white piece of paper startup.That's just, you know, a blank sheet.So great question.And I wish you well with it.Yeah.I like your idea. So you're taking a bunch of newsletters, And then you turn it into a podcast.So I know we were doing this.There was a company called Simply Audio or something.I forgot the name of it, but they took the launch ticker that we were doing.And every day they would have a voiceover person just read it.And that was like an interesting audio concept.But I think what you're doing is you're taking all of my newsletters.I put them, I forward them to one URL and then you use AI to read them to me.Is that how it works? Yes. SPEAKER_05: Pretty much, it distills the most important topics, deduplicates everything.So if like New York Times and somebody else talks about the same thing, provides both perspectives, you get a 10 to 15 minute long podcast every day about the news you actually care about. SPEAKER_02: Killer idea.Kind of do something like that.I have a product called Speechify.I'm not an investor in it.But like today, BlackRock's CEO did his annual letter. It's a 30-minute listen at 1.5 speed.I took the PDF.I took the BlackRock's yearly letter.I printed it to a PDF on my phone.I sent the PDF to Speechify, and then I listened to Barack Obama's voice speaking it to me while I was at the gym.And so that was like a really interesting format.If you could have, if Speechify just pulled in five interesting articles a day and made them audio, I would be really into that.So I think you have a really great idea.We were investors in a company swell that Apple bought. that would let you swipe between moments in podcasts.So it had a similar idea there.So yeah, Barack Obama and Gwyneth Paltrow are the voices on Speechify.They have two celebrity voices.It's pretty cool. I think The Rock too.Oh, Snoop Dogg on there too.Oh, so you examined this product.So I think you have a great idea.I could see people paying for business intelligence and as a newsletter owner and podcaster, I don't really have a problem with it too much as long as it's like very clear hey, we've summarized this story that Jason Calacanis wrote.You can see it at calacanis.com.I'm cool with it. SPEAKER_05: Absolutely.And I think the big thing too is you can also read the email, the full thing in the app as well.So you hear something that you're interested in, I'm going to go in the app and just reread it and just read all the details. SPEAKER_02: Is this app out?Can people go download it right now? SPEAKER_05: It is.It's on the iOS app store. SPEAKER_02: Great.Just search for JellyPod, like peanut butter and jelly.J-E-L-L-Y-P-O-D.Great job.Good luck with your app and great question.Thanks.Juggling multiple devices and apps to run your business is a mess.Open Phone is here to make it simple by simplifying your business communications with one easy to use app.Open Phone has rethought every detail of what a modern business phone should be.And here's the magic. It works through a beautiful, elegant app. on your phone, or you can just use it on your desktop, making it super easy to get a business phone number for your entire team.And you know how brilliant Open Phone is?My teams use it every single day.My sales team loves it.My ops team, they use it all day long.And here's the features that we love.You can create a shared phone number like customer support with multiple employees fielding all the calls and all the texts to that one number.At investment firm launch we pride ourselves on replying to every single call or email instantly and open phone is the number one rated business phone on g2 for customer satisfaction so here's your call to action super easy open phone is already affordable starts at just 13 bucks a month but twist listeners get an extra 20 off any plan for the first six months at openphone.com slash twist and if you have existing numbers with other services no problem open phone is going to port them over easy peasy lemon squeezy no extra cost Head over to openphone.com slash twist to start your free trial and get 20% off.All right.Well, we're cooking with oil now.This week in startups.com slash join.If you want to join us and ask a question, I'll take any question, by the way.People don't ask me too many life questions.It's always about startups and raising money, product market fit.Hey, that's my wheelhouse, but I'll answer questions about anything on this format.Doesn't mean we're going to include it in the pod. Next up is Anne. Let's get Anne on the line.By the way, I don't know your question.They are on the notes, Anne, but I don't specifically like to listen or prepare for the questions because I think it's better and more dynamic if I just get the question going in cold.Yeah, I want you to get my raw reaction without any prep. SPEAKER_08: Great.So I have a consumer app that is subscription based.We have enough capital to release an MVP, but it will be a small grassroots marketing effort.And I want to know if it's better to release the MVP and go with a smaller grassroots and we will be able to start bringing in revenue at that point, or wait for VC funding so that we can release with much higher velocity and give up points in the company. SPEAKER_02: Yeah, I mean, the further back you can push venture funding, the higher the valuation of the company will be.In other words, the higher VCs will be willing to pay for it.And the more you have to suffer with less resources.The good news is suffering and less resources tends to make teams build better product. So when you get the money in, let's say you were to raise $3 million.Now you'd be sitting there with your team.Okay, how do we allocate the $3 million?Oh, we should buy ads, we should do this, as opposed to right now where it's kind of pure, build a really great app, send it to a small number of people, and talk to them and see what they think of it really.And just focusing on product market fit is always a good idea.I think doing a private beta and getting some information is a good idea. Now, pragmatically speaking, people will say, you know, once you've launched the product, you're going to be selling performance as opposed to promise.There is some truth to that. If it's launched, you're going to start having conversations about how many minutes are people spending in it?How many people have downloaded it?How many, you know, for the first week's cohort, how many people used it in week three or four, right?And so you're going to get into some of those questions.So be careful, you know, that that's going to happen.So if you severely limit it, it's a test flight app. You say, we're only invited 100.Here's what we learned. Now we want to raise capital.We've eliminated a lot of the risk.We think of the 100 people we invited, these 30 got massive value.We studied those 30.It turns out they're all dual income individuals. individuals who are 35 to 45 years old with kids, and they don't have a problem paying $25 a month for this app, because it helps them solve these problems.You know, then that would be very impressive to me that you actually studied the customers.The experience we have as investors often is Hey, we built a bunch of features.We launched them. We don't know who's using the app.We put a hundred people into it.We invited some friends from our college or sorority or, you know, from our, you know, parents group or whatever.And you don't know anything about the customer.So just be prepared when you move to a beta, a closed beta, you're going to have to start having conversations about engagement usage and who are these people?How did you acquire them? And how are they using the app?And they might want to talk to a couple of them.Hopefully, your investors will want to talk.And so we always talk to, I have researchers, analysts, and associates who work for us, RAAs, we call them. And we will have them talk to your customers.So if you were to pitch us and get to the second or third round of conversations, we might say, hey, yeah, we want to talk to a couple of customers.Do you think you can put us on the phone with some of your customers?Or we can go do that. as a backdoor, like we can go find people on Craigslist or Reddit who use your product and talk to them directly.So all of those are possibilities. SPEAKER_08: sort of a middle ground that we were thinking of is doing a soft beta launch.We have about 100 people signed up right now to beta test the app.We've done a lot of customer interviews.A lot of people are really enthusiastic about the features that we have.So we were thinking of doing a soft beta launch and then really just testing the metrics and seeing how often we're using it, how often they're referring other people.So we wouldn't have a closed beta testing and just seeing how much people are inviting others without doing a full launch and then using those metrics for funding. SPEAKER_02: I think that's a good plan.Superhuman did a really good job of perpetually being in beta.In fact, when I use Superhuman, I'm still on test flight.I don't think you can openly get... So they're technically in beta, and I get my updates through the App Store, but I know that they've got lots of members, so I think they're probably pushing the envelope on this concept of keeping it in closed beta.But I like your strategy of trying to figure out how they're using it, how often they're using it, and that is what VCs want to hear. Before VCs doing series A's, there are angel investors and seed rounds, and there are accelerators.Are you aware of all that?And have you considered that as opposed to going directly to a VC?And have you run a company before this? SPEAKER_08: Nothing at this scale.I'm only a video production company and we produced a film.But thank you. SPEAKER_02: That's very hard to do.It is very hard to do.First time is very hard to raise venture.Sometimes going to an accelerator or raising a seed round from a seed fund. Will kind of make it easier to go to that progression because, you know, you got the stamp.Oh, I went to Techstars.I went to Y Combinator.I went to the Launch Accelerator.I went to Founder University.Some group of smart people picked me in the top one or two percent of the applications. I went through the program.I learned some things.And now we're raising a seed round.Oh, some seed fund pair launch program. First round, whatever, put 500K and a million in.We deployed it.Now we're ready for a $5 million, $3 million venture capital round.So you might want to think about hitting those milestones in your checkbook if you're new to the industry, because they do open a lot more doors, obviously. SPEAKER_08: Yeah, I've heard wonderful things about Founders University.So I'll be looking into that. SPEAKER_02: Yeah, I mean, it's a great thing to do and it's essentially free.You pay 500 bucks in week one or week zero.And if you come to all 12 weeks, I mean, if you had an excused absence, you know, if you missed one or two weeks, I'm sure they would not give you a hard time.Then we send you the money back.So we just do it so people don't burn the seats.But, you know, getting into an incubator accelerator is another way. to get 125K for 7% of the company and put another stamp in your passport that like, yeah, look, we went to Canada, then we went to Spain, and now we're ready to go to India.If you think of it like a passport and people open your passport and they're like, oh, look, I got some stamps in here.Okay, yeah, you've been to different places in the world.Oh, welcome to... You know, Dubai, I see you've been to these other places.So you build up a little momentum, I think, with those.But if you have product market fit, that's what you really have to work on.It sounds like also you're very good at talking to your customers.How do you talk to your customers?Explain to the audience how you like to interface with these customers.Do you have a Discord?Do you have a chat open with them somehow?Are you doing Zooms with them, surveys?How do you get feedback from your customers? SPEAKER_08: So it was social media groups on Facebook mainly.It's groups that I'm part of.I'm pretty much one of our target customers.So I'm very intimate with what the needs are of these people.And then we did a Google form interview and poll seeing which of our features they were most interested in, how often they would be using the app, what they would be willing to pay for it.And we got just incredible feedback from it. 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So here's your call to action.Experimentation is how generation-defining companies win.Accelerate your experimentation velocity with EPO. visit getepo.com slash twist.That's G-E-T-E-P-P-O dot com slash twist.You didn't mention your app or what you're doing.Is that because you don't want to tip your cards or because you don't want to use this as a marketing opportunity and you're worried about offending me?Because the first two people on had like logos and they were more than happy to talk about their products.Well, no, the second caller was more than happy to talk about his product.So are you keeping this stealth because you don't want to tip your cards or are you just trying to be gracious? SPEAKER_07: A little bit of both.Just a little bit of both. SPEAKER_02: You got me fascinated, by the way.Tell me more about the Facebook group.Tell me more about the Facebook group.Because I've heard this from many startups that there are these Facebook groups that are good places to talk about your product. SPEAKER_08: Facebook groups are actually a really interesting tool for grassroots marketing.It was something that I used when I was crowdfunding for our film because we crowdfunded our documentary.And it was the best way that I did it with zero marketing dollars because you become very intimately familiar with the people you're essentially asking for things from. So the app appeals to a very wide demographic of people, but our target first main audience will be women with children, with minor children.So one of the groups that I'm in is based somewhat on income level because it's a Peloton group.So it's working mothers of Peloton.And that's basically where I've been testing out some of the features and getting some feedback because that is somewhat the income level that we're targeting.And also... There's a large utility function to this app that appeals to parents.Parents, but our app is food related. And the people who go and buy the meals for the family are typically women.So I've got three children myself.So I am basically our target customer.And I'm very active in all of these groups.And it's just about kind of bonding with the people that you're going to sell to. SPEAKER_02: These are incredible insights for other listeners. If you really think, who is my ideal customer profile, you may hear that term, ICP, or your beachhead, or your first market.The beachhead, I think, means where you land your troops first, so it's got a lot of military references and startups, so everybody considers it war. And so your beachhead market, your first market, your ideal customer profile, what a clever idea.If you can afford, Peloton ain't cheap.That's like a $42 a month subscription. SPEAKER_08: It's not in the initial bike is an investment as well.So that was something of a demographic. SPEAKER_02: They're disciplined.Plus, they care about time.If you're a Peloton person, you really want to get an efficient workout.That's kind of the issue.It's at home.So this is like a really clever thing you've done.You found the adjacencies to a parent really would like to save time, money and is health conscious about meals. So really smart to think about.And this is where brainstorming about like what other products your customers use.So if you know your customers working on a product for inside.com, we did newsletters, business newsletters, but I've, I realize a lot of what, in talking to people who read newsletters or news junkies, like, what other products do they use all the time?They use Twitter all the time.They listen to podcasts all the time.Why is that?Why do news junkies... Who are these news junkies?And what do they pay for?Oh, they pay for New York Times.Oh, they pay for The Athletic.Oh, they pay for CNBC or Sirius... I pay for SiriusXM just so I can listen to CNBC, but I also pay for Hulu, so I'm not sure why I pay for the SiriusXM, but... It just always works with audio and the Hulu doesn't sometimes. So anyway, you start to get into what are the adjacencies, like what else did they pay for?And that's a super unlock.If you pay for Peloton, You're used to paying $600 a year for something that keeps you healthy and is efficient.Wow.Well done. SPEAKER_08: Yeah.And one of the things about this app is that it really reduces... What's your background? SPEAKER_02: Sorry, I just want to know more about you.What's your background?Are you a marketer? SPEAKER_08: I'm a social media video marketer and a film producer.So I've been doing that for the past 10 years.Released a feature documentary on Amazon Prime and had this really great idea for something that will reduce the mental load in my life, my husband's life, my team leader's life, all around.So... had the idea and decided I'm actually going to do it. SPEAKER_02: Awesome.Well, it sounds like you're figuring a lot of great things out.Many folks are really good at building product, but they're not good at studying their customers or understanding their target market.So I think that you've done that really well.And so congratulations and good luck with your startup.It sounds like, yeah, if you want to come to Foundry University, Kelly at launch.co, Kelly, K-E-L-L-Y at launch.co runs the program with Presh. And she's amazing.And yeah, or you can email me anytime, jason.calacanis.com.Thank you.Great job. SPEAKER_08: Can I just say, I read your book, Angel.That was how I became familiar with you.And I loved it.I was on vacation.I couldn't put it down.Found it in the library.I loved the book and then I bought it.So wonderful.I loved it. SPEAKER_02: It makes me want to write another book.It just takes six.I'm like halfway down with two books.It takes six months to write a book a year.You should write another one.Another six months of a year of promoting it.And I'm trying to do less and get focused on like some very small number of projects.But the book keeps calling me.I have another idea for it.But if I had it, there was another topic you'd want me to take on. What would it be? SPEAKER_08: You know, I think I'd like to expand on what you were talking about, the insights on the investor side.One of the things that I really loved hearing you say was, even if a founder isn't doing well, keep up the communication.You just want to hear from them.Even if they're sending you an email saying this is delayed, you want to hear it.And I think a lot of people are worried about failure and not meeting deadlines.And some people just want to hide under the covers and pretend that it's not happening.But just having that insight from the investor side of we understand S happens is just let us know.Um, so I think really expanding on that and bringing it into the current day.I love that. So I'll read any book. SPEAKER_02: Yeah.People like the anecdotes in the, in the story.Cause, uh, and the writing style, cause it was maybe they said they left a couple of times or, they couldn't believe the stories.So I have, I write down all the crazy.I go through as an investor.It's crazy.Like weird stuff happens.Like people screw each other or behave crazy.And I, you know, I basically write those down and then I make amalgamations of them. So I don't, to protect the guilty or innocent or however they perceive themselves, but I blend the stories together.So you don't have to worry about anybody getting singled, but singled out, but good luck with it.And yeah, You know, one of the things that gives me great hope that you're going to have a really good chance of success here is that you're listening to your customers and you know where to find them.A lot of people just build stuff and they don't go find those customers.You got to find those customers and talk to them.All right.Great job.Stay in touch.You're part of the family now. Yeah.And hopefully I'll see you at Foundry University.Yeah.You will.Thank you.Bye.Oh, wow.I just love doing this.So let's keep moving.Francis, how are you? SPEAKER_03: Doing great.How are you, Jason? SPEAKER_02: I'm well, I'm well.I know you're from Twitter. SPEAKER_03: Yes, indeed. SPEAKER_02: Tell me what your question for today. SPEAKER_03: My question for you is how you balance skepticism with enthusiasm when you look at a company. SPEAKER_02: Yeah, such a great question.So I like to be enthusiastic with the founders and really try to understand their vision. Because it's really hard to be a founder.And so one of the things we've added to our script, you know, our dialogue, when I'm training my young associates and researchers, how to interact with founders is to just say at the end of the conversation, hey, can I repeat your vision back to you to make sure I understand your vision? And I try to get them to say the word vision twice and to say the name of their company twice.So can I explain your vision for Uber Taxi one more time?Just so I make sure I understand your vision for Uber Taxi.Like literally saying the name of their company twice, saying vision, and then you reflecting back to them and saying it.So if you've ever... read anything about therapy or just making people feel heard um repeating it back to a person is incredibly powerful as a tool so i like to do that as a technique i think if you're an investor repeating back to the person your understanding of their business their challenges etc is incredibly powerful that nobody does it especially not arrogant vcs or investors who Over time, because you're writing the check, because you're judging people and trying to make a judgment and saying no to 99 and 1TS, you can get high on your own supply.So you really want to stay humble because nobody knows who's going to figure it out.You know, like somebody might figure out a rocket ship company or an electric car or... You know, Airbnb, you figure out weird things and the big outliers are often weird and hard to understand.So to your point, what I try to do is remember as an investor that cynicism is the coward's way out.It's really easy to be cynical.And what you want to focus on is not all the things that could go wrong.It's what could go right.It's not all the times people failed pursuing this, but why might this idea work now?You know, if you were to look at electric vehicles, man, they had failed for a long time. And but we did know there was not exactly Moore's law, but there were some laws around battery density, right?So eventually, batteries might become cheap enough, or the range might become high enough that, you know, a 50 mile to 100 mile electric car could become a 200 or 300 mile electric car instead of $200,000 in batteries, it could be 20,000 in batteries.And so I like to squint a little bit and just say, Yeah, it's Here's the obvious reasons why this isn't gonna work.What if Microsoft or Google decides to do it? What if you run out of money?What if customers don't want it?You could have all of those reasons.Those are easy.Everybody knows the reasons of why something might not work. If I said, hey, why might a restaurant not work?People would be like, the food sucks.The service sucks.The location is terrible.It's too expensive.The food quality is inconsistent.Whatever.There's too much competition. Okay, congratulations.You just pointed out all the obvious reasons of why something might not work out. Let's work on something more important.What could work out?Okay, well, your build Shake Shack as but one example. Okay, the world needs another burger joint.Well, we're going to try to do really high-end, high-quality meats, really great French fries, really great shakes, and we're going to just try to make it healthier and higher quality.And we'll see if a gourmet hamburger, people will pay twice as much as In-N-Out Burger for it.Sure enough, they will.And so some things went right with Shake Shack that helped scale that business versus McDonald's and In-N-Out. And so, yeah, cynicism is so easy.You kind of get through it so quickly. When you've done as many meetings as you and I have done with founders, the cynical takes are just so easy.They're so easy.And so I tend to look at what could go right.Now, that doesn't mean you can ignore how insane it would be to try to launch an Airbnb or an Uber competitor today.That market... has significantly deep-pocketed players.It's going to be really hard for a new entrant to displace Airbnb.They would have to have a really unique concept around this.And so you do need to study also what exits have occurred.We always get pitched on. I'll give you another example, and then I'll get your feedback on my answer.For example, there's never really been a great exit in the job space after LinkedIn. And one might argue LinkedIn, the jobs functionality of that was a byproduct of the original product, which was a social network for business.And if you listen to Reid Hoffman when he was on the show, you know, it's like one of these things where they just had... recruiters calling begging them to give them the ability to DM potential candidates, right?And they, they came up with a $5,000 a year product that because they would people were demanding it, but that wasn't the original product.Their product was a social business network, people could put their resumes and, you know, build a professional network that was different than MySpace. So you do need to look at why hasn't there been an exit, a giant exit in careers and job boards?And it's like, well, maybe it's just too easy to build a job board, you know, and like there's Indeed and there's Glassdoor and there's a long tail of all kinds of recruiting and job services.But there's really only been one giant exit. Yeah. And that was LinkedIn.So, you know, I do try to teach my team to be thoughtful about, has there ever been an exit here?And what can we learn from the past?And then you inevitably wind up with the question of, why now?What's changed?For LinkedIn, the why now was social networks, the idea that virality, which was like a new business concept, existed.And that's why they won, because they had a viral hook. you joined LinkedIn, you invited 10 employees or coworkers or partners, and I was one of them and I invited 10, you got a viral coefficient over 1.1 and the thing just explodes.Boom. Everybody who joins invites like, you know, more than one person.Okay.That's going to, that's going to speed up the process.So, um, yeah.What are your thoughts?And when you follow up questions?Yeah. SPEAKER_03: One thing that's interesting to me is how your own psychology could affect that.Like there's research that judges give out harsher sentences right before lunch because they're tired and they're cranky.Maybe in our context, it's the last deck I'm looking at in a day and I'm pretty much ready to go anyway.And so maybe sometimes I try to give that one a little extra attention because it would be awfully easy to dismiss it. SPEAKER_02: Human psychology definitely plays a part for investors, also for founders.Maybe they're just exhausted.They're tired of talking to investors.39 have said no, and the 40, it's going to say yes, but they come into it with a bad attitude.And it's like, wow, that person's got a terrible attitude.I would never invest in them.So... Yeah, I would be very aware of your own psychology going into these things, being well rested, coming with a prepared mind, being open minded, asking really insightful questions, and having a great thoughtful process as I, in any discipline you get into, I think you eventually will start to look at systems and processes and really try to optimize those I have really tried to think about systems and processes. both for podcasts that I do, events I do, and for investing in companies.I really think about that process in a very tight way. And that's really helped, I think, me become a better investor and find better companies and have less zeros and more companies that go on to future funding, right?So be thoughtful about your process and build a process that you like.That's the other thing.You know, if you know... You know, you have the energy for three calls a day and the fourth and fifth, you always screw up and just do two a day and have extra time and do two on the weekends, you know, and make up for it that way.So you do have to understand your own psychology.I like talking to people as my way of learning.And so people are like, you do a lot of podcasts.I'm like, that's my professional development.You know, people asking me questions here is making me better at my job. You asking me these challenging questions that the three calls before this, it's making me think. And I write notes and then those eventually get put into my businesses or the businesses we invest in.So figure out what process you like, right?Some people are introverts.They like reading.So just asking somebody to write a deal memo and send you a deal memo or you write a deal memo and then send it to the founder.Like I have friends who are introverted and they're like, I can't do this many meetings and I can't talk to as many people without being exhausted.Okay, great. So you like to write and you like to read?Yeah, I love reading. I love writing.Okay, hire an associate to meet with companies and have them write a deal memo for you with the questions.And then you ask questions back to the founders and you work on the deal memo together.I like that trend of deal memos for people who like to read and who like to write.So that's just but one example of like understanding your own energy, your own cynicism, et cetera.I'm hiring people for our fund who are incredibly good on Zoom. Like just really good at keeping a high energy level and really enthusiastic for 20, 30 minutes with a founder.And so I am optimizing for that because we have to do it, you know, 70 right now, I think introductory calls per week.And we have to get it to 100 by the end of this year to hit my goals. Think about that. Five people doing, you know, six people doing 15 to 20 meetings a week, four meetings a day, three meetings a day.It's a lot.It's a lot, lot for people to be able to do for us to hit our goals of investing in one or two companies a week. on average, 100 new names a week.Now we have programs, which make it a little bit easier.But yeah, I like your question a lot about cynicism and energy.I think it's really important.And understand yourself, right?And then build a team around you that compliments you.I can't say enough about that either. My management philosophy now is, I know I don't want to do accounting and legal and negotiations and stuff like that.So I just hire people who are great at that. And then I focus on podcasts and meeting with founders who hit a certain criteria at a certain sweet spot.So if they have their product launch, they got a couple of customers, they got two or three co-founders and their builders.Yeah, let me meet them and bring them to me.But I try not to waste time on people with ideas who are idea people who aren't building it because there's just too many people with ideas, not enough people building actual real products. SPEAKER_03: Infinitely many.Yeah. SPEAKER_02: It is a challenge, you know, and then people get to me through my network.Hey, can I meet with you and chew your ear?Can I bend your ear?Can I buy you a cup of coffee?It's like, I am not constrained by coffee right now or having my ear bent.I'm constrained by time with my family, skiing, my friends, and with the portfolio companies we currently have.So let's make it efficient for everybody here.And, you know, I'm a big fan of process and efficiency.So people want to meet with me first. That's the other thing when you get to a, when your firm gets bigger. And I'm like, you know what?I want you to meet a couple of the great people who work for me because I'm super proud of them.And they'll be helping you along the way in ways that I can't.So why don't you meet two people at the firm and then talk to me?And you can actually get more information on what it's like to work with us because they might be the ones answering your questions.If we do make an investment and we are in business, it may not just be me.So... You know, building a great team, I think, of support team around you is also important.Do you have a support team around you yet or are you just still doing it by yourself? So this is something to consider is, you know, who would that first hire be?How many investments are you doing a year? SPEAKER_03: Uh, probably eight to 12, I would say. SPEAKER_02: Yeah.I mean, you might get to the point where having an associate or a researcher, even part-time makes sense where, you know, they're sorting through your deal, follow writing deal memos, doing diligence.Like that's kind of the next step for you is to have like a partner in crime to really help organize stuff.And then it might become more enjoyable for you again.Yeah, definitely.Yeah.All right.Great talking to you.Let's take another caller.Yeah. Take care, brother. Wow, great calls from both sides of the table so far.All right, let's take another call.All right, here we go.Next up is 5x5.Hosam, right? SPEAKER_04: Yeah, that's correct. SPEAKER_02: All right, great.Awesome.You have a question for me?Let's hear it. SPEAKER_04: Thanks, Jason, for having me on.I'm Hosam, the co-founder and CEO of Quasium.It's a autonomous procurement management platform for construction companies.We're part of your... Well, the Foundry University Cohort 7.Awesome. SPEAKER_02: Just graduated. SPEAKER_04: Yeah, President Kelly.It was amazing. SPEAKER_02: What was the number one thing you got out of Foundry University?I'm curious. SPEAKER_04: One is to be pretty clear about the problem that we started working on.And... sort of distilled down to, you know, being clear on what we're working on at the beginning was a bit, it was a bit vague and we had to sort of go and talk to customers multiple times to figure out what was the, you know, what was the sort of the initial value propositions that we're offering.And the second thing was to move as fast as possible.And I think being in a community helped a lot.Third thing is, you know, I felt very comfortable asking questions. SPEAKER_02: Fantastic.What's your question for me today? And by the way, if anybody's listening, founder.university for more information. SPEAKER_04: So my question is, you know, we started working on our idea in mid-December and we launched in February.And we're currently making late discussions with about three customers.And as soon as we start closing in, three to four customers were about to start sort of raising.And I've been wrestling with the question, what is your moat?To me at this stage, It's execution and building a delightful product.I see in the long term, given that we're building an AI product, I'm not a big fan of Datalog, but we are unlocking the unstructured data that currently exists throughout the procurement process that no one has been able to tap into.And that, especially in the construction industry, where there's a massive difference between the gross margin and the net profit. And so it's mostly in the business operation optimization. SPEAKER_02: So your question is about a moat.For people who haven't heard that term, investors will sometimes ask, how defensible is the business?In other words, how quickly can somebody storm the castle, take the gold, and get across the moat, right?And then the defenses of a castle tend to be the arrow slits, the drawbridge, right? The moat, the water around it, it's hard to seize the castle and take the gold, right?And so you have to answer that question to investors.A lot of times they just ask it because it's a common question and they want to see your thoughtfulness.Your answer was great.Data. We have data that other people don't have that's going to accrue to us over time. That's going to give us a massive advantage.You know, for the first three people doing construction and logistics, we have to put all this data in, we get it, but we know the price of bricks.We know the delivery time of bricks.We know who makes the best bricks.And when the next person, when the fifth person comes in, we've already had three people who've ordered bricks and we've studied their data and we know who to send them to.And we know who not to send them to when they procure bricks. And you just think, you know, when we hit 500 people, what we're going to know about bricks and the cost of bricks and the travel time of bricks.And we're going to just keep learning from our customers.We put all that into our algorithm.In the same way, you know, anybody could build TikTok, but could they build the TikTok algorithm? And could they study users and have that data advantage?Of course they couldn't.So, you know, and Tesla's got an incredible advantage with data as well.They drive, you know, they put... the self-driving hardware into every single car, whether they pay for it or not.They collect data from every single car.Google has Google Maps on your phone.They collect data from Google Maps and Waze in real time.They've got all that data.So explaining a data advantage and other giant companies that have the data advantage, that's how you explain a moat. And you can just say, listen, yeah, the moat, When we have five customers, it's going to be like somebody spilled a bottle of water.And then when we have 500 customers, it's going to be like a little stream that you can step over.When we get to 5,000 customers, you're going to have to jump in the water with the alligators and swim across.It's going to be hard.So although the moat is very, very tiny right now, it's kind of like a bathtub moat. It's going to be a giant moat, and most people will not be able to swim across it.And there'll be plenty of alligators in there and IP protection and data.So you kind of answered your own question.The data is such a great answer for a moat. Because there's so many examples of people having a data moat.Google has a data moat, right?Yeah. So when people talk about AI, they're like, open AI has got this advantage.And then people are like, yeah, but Google's got the data from YouTube.They've got the data from your Gmail.And then, you know, oh, well, Microsoft, you know, what's their mode?And it's like, they've got a lot of desktops using Windows.And when they want to give people Copilot, I have a Windows, I got a new Dell Latitude 16 over here.It's awesome. Shout out, Michael Dell.You know, I've loaded Windows and the Copilot popped up.And I'm like, oh, so everybody with Windows now has Copilot. They don't know what chat GPT is, but Copilot's explaining to them that you can ask a question there and get an answer.So pretty huge advantage.So I like your answer of the data mode because you don't have a distribution mode yet. SPEAKER_04: You will when you have a lot of companies. I appreciate it.No, my worry was that at the moment that, you know, the multis doesn't currently exist and I don't have any defensibility at this point.So if someone were to start working on the same idea, how am I going to be different?Like what's going to distinguish us? SPEAKER_02: The other thing is like how motivated are people to go after your idea?If you're doing like a construction business, like... Who's motivated to go after this?How fast are they gonna go?You've got a fast team with no legacy business.You don't have to worry about existing revenue streams or getting approval.You can test things, you can make mistakes.Nobody's even paying attention.So that's the other nice thing is nobody's paying attention and you can just zip, zip, zip and build this.So most investors are gonna understand this. And if they do tell you like the moat and the defensibility of the business, is the reason they don't invest.They're probably lying and they're just using that as an excuse.So you'll know that you have a moat problem when you go talk to a customer and they say, oh, there's a, we already have a solution for this.We're using Acme and we had, we used to use Delta and you're the, this other product, Gemini, like what we already have, like two solutions, right?Yeah. Like, is that happening to you when you go to customers, they tell you we've already solved this problem? SPEAKER_04: Yeah, I mean, totally.So the first thing that they say, we already have an ERP system or we use, you know, another procurement software.And what we come in and say is we save you a lot of time automating your procurement process.So currently we're automating the process of the bid analysis.We receive multiple offers and you see them in different unstructured PDF formats.So to do that, you normally have to go through all of these documents and then consolidate them. SPEAKER_02: So they don't have a way to do that comparison without you.No. So they don't have a solution for that.They have a solution that collects data, but it doesn't analyze data.So it sounds like you have no competitors for that feature, right?And so people draw these nice quadrants, four quadrant charts. I encourage you to do that as an exercise with your team and with your customers.Hey, where would you put us in this four quadrant?What's unique about us?And it's like, oh, you analyze and normalize the data from a deal to save me money, you know, and my ERP system doesn't do that, right? Or my other procurement system doesn't do that.And so, you know, you pick the X, Y axis. you know, in those quadrant competitive charts to benefit you, right?And so I think making sure you understand what is truly unique about your offering is the other piece and then leaning into that and really, you know, you can take the existing features and make those free and then sell that piece.So that's saying like, You can do this, the same question, you can turn on your competitor.So if they're charging for like this ERP system and it's easy for you to build, you can build that and give it away for free and then just upsell people on the analysis part.So this is what like Google did to Outlook and to other folks.They made Gmail free and gave massive storage.Before that, you would pay for your email. There was no such thing as free email.Email was a paid service.Gmail was like, you know what? Let's just give it away for free with like, you know, whatever, a hundred gigs, five gigs, whatever the first offer was.And people were like, oh, I'm just going to move to Gmail.They took a massive audience.Then they did Google Docs and that was super cheap and free. And then if you wanted your corporation, your own domain name, you paid a little bit more for it.But they really went after Microsoft's business in a very aggressive way.So I would also think about that, not just your moat. Think about other people's moats and how you can drain those moats and how you could sabotage their castle and make their castle crumble and you just swoop in and take all the gold, right?Yeah. SPEAKER_04: Yeah.Interesting.Yeah. SPEAKER_02: Turn it around.All right.Great job.And keep us informed on your progress and stay in touch with Kelly.Yeah. I'll talk to you soon.Thanks, Jason.Bye.Great.I think we have time for one more. This is working out great.If you want to be on the next episode, thisweekinstartups.com slash ask Jason.Thisweekinstartups.com slash ask Jason.Follow me on Twitter, x.com slash Jason or Instagram, instagram.com slash Jason.And then follow me on LinkedIn.Just type in Jason Calacanis.You'll find me. All right, Tom, welcome to the program.You have a question for me. SPEAKER_01: Yes, I do.Good to see you, Jason.Good to see you, Tom.So CEO, co-founder, creating eventual.app, an easy way to help families, friends, and colleagues share critical information they need to share in emergencies. And also, shout out to what Sean O'Reill said, can't say enough good things about Founder University.Another Founder University attendee. SPEAKER_02: I like it.Another graduate.Amazing.We're hitting a lot of people with this.I mean, we've done seven cohorts with 200 plus teams, so it's starting to add up.I think 2,000 people have gone through the program, so... Really proud of the team over there.Yeah.So what's your question for me? SPEAKER_01: Not my first startup.And, you know, as a longtime entrepreneur, our current app uses a lot of machine learning and generative AI in some pretty unique ways.But to me, this is just a fundamental technology.It's going to be included in virtually every product.So I kind of roll my eyes a little bit at everybody's pitches.Nowadays, it seems like we're trying to position themselves as an AI company or an AI this or an AI that. So my question is, when we're out seeking pre-seed, seed funding in this current climate, how much is it going to hurt us for not making AI a big part of our pitch, that we're not an AI company, we're a product that uses AI? SPEAKER_02: Yeah, so... I think most investors are realistic about what's an AI-enabled business, a business that could not exist without machine learning and AI, and what's a product or service that has features that obviously benefit from AI.So I would assume when you're talking to investors a high degree of knowledge and that they've met with dozens and dozens of folks, and I would always tell them the honest truth about it. hey, you know, AI is helping us with customer support.It's helping us here with, you know, this feature of the product.But in all honesty, you know, we're not an AI first company.We're not making AI tools.We're making a tool that solves this problem.And right now, Operationally, we use AI to lower our customer support and delight our customers with better customer support. And we sort information and normalize data with an AI tool.We use this tool.And in the future, we think there could be these three features.So you can just tip them down the roadmap.If AI could solve certain problems, how would that affect your business?But it's going to be in the mix.So I would be thoughtful about... How do we run the company better using AI?How does the product better using AI?And then what are the future AI opportunities? I think you're kind of required in 2024 to be able to answer those three questions.And I would be prepared to do so. SPEAKER_01: Yeah.I'm old enough.I'm dating myself here.I'm old enough to remember when Esther Dyson, an industry pundit, famously got up at the very first multimedia industry conference and told them that there should not be one because it's going to be in everything.AI is going to be in everything.Yeah. SPEAKER_02: Yeah, I mean, it's like saying cloud computing today.You'd be like, we're a cloud company.It's like, oh, so you're not going to make people buy servers and rack them in their data center in their office because they don't even have an office or a data center.So it's going to be assumed, but I think I would say today it's a really great thing because when you're talking to investors, they're really trying to figure out What's it going to be like to be in business with you, right?Am I going to have thoughtful conversations with you over the next decade about growing this business?And when bad things happen, are you going to be a great leader and you're going to be able to discuss things that are hard?Are you going to be able to have hard conversations, you know, about... any number of topics distribution layoffs hiring firing raising money pivoting and so you know the the ai discussion is but one chance for you to show your potential future investors and for you to see how smart they are like if they're stuck on like some weird issue like defensibility you know, to a level that makes no sense, or they're focused on AI to a level that doesn't make a lot of sense. You could maybe eliminate them from the running as an investor.Like this person doesn't get what we're doing.They, there was somebody who wanted, I've told the story countless times, but they wanted Travis to make Uber into an enterprise software company for cab companies.And they were insistent that this was a better model.And I was just like, you know, in my mind, like, wow, this is a really famous venture capitalist who's really smart, and this is the stupidest take I've ever heard.Like, they want to convince Travis to make an enterprise software company, and the whole point is the cab companies were taking 50% of every dollar, they weren't earning it, and you could cut that down to 25% with Uber's take, and then the prices could get lowered and more people could afford to get a ride-sharing ride because you were making it more efficient.Oh, and you didn't have to have a dispatcher because... the app did the dispatching.So you got rid of another person in the whole system who was mucking it up and making it more miserable. And they want to, you know, enable the cab companies.The cab companies were the enemy.The cab companies were the You know, the piece of the puzzle that needed to be removed because the medallion holders were taking too much.The take rate from the medallion folks was too great.They had people in indentured servitude, basically, with these... You know, in New York, the medallions were worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.They were owned by lawyers and... business speculators who would then rent them back to you know folks at unreasonable rates so yeah i think be ready to talk about it be ready to have a great discussion it's your chance to ask them what do you think we should use it for what are you seeing is there anything we're missing i wish people would ask me those kind of questions you know in an investor meeting because then it would signal oh this founder um is willing to listen you know well yeah willing to listen or they're they're Wearing other smart people in the marketplace about what they should do.That's what smart people do all the time. You know, like they're querying smart people.That's why I do this podcast because I get to query smart people about the market. You know, more information.All right, listen, continue your success.Good luck with the product.Can people find more information about your product if they want to check it out?Eventual.app.Eventual.app.There it is.All right, everybody. If you want to be on the next episode of Ask Jason, go to thisweekinstartups.com slash Ask Jason.And my team will get you on live.We're probably doing this every like the first Tuesday of the month or something or the second Tuesday.And so we do it during the day. We'll give you a Zoom link.You get queued up in the Zoom, the Zoom Zoo, and zip, zip, zip.We have you on.We make some great content.We learn from each other.And so tell your friends about This Week in Startups. Take this episode, if you made it to this point, and just share it with a friend who is a founder and say, hey, you might learn something.And that's why we're all here is to learn.See you all next time, This Week in Startups.Bye-bye.