• 180 VCs rejected him—then a $60K billboard got him to $2M ARR in 4 months. | Isaiah Granet, CEO of Bland AI
    Apr 20 2026

    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

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    52 mins
  • She bet on a consumer app when every VC wanted B2B—then grew to $10M ARR. | Anada Lakra, Founder of BoldVoice
    Apr 16 2026

    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








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    52 mins
  • He raised a $10M seed with no revenue—then grew 30x to $30M in year two. | Bobby Samuels, Founder of Protege
    Apr 13 2026

    Bobby launched Protege in early 2024 to connect data holders with AI model builders. He raised a $10M seed with almost no demand pipeline. A year later, Protege jumped 30x to $30M in GMV and raised $30M from a16z.

    In this episode, Bobby breaks down how he built a 250-partner data network by leveraging prior healthcare relationships, why he flies from New York every week to close seven-figure enterprise deals, and why the "texting terms" litmus test tells you if a deal is real.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why ignoring a customer's "no" can be the best sales move you make.
    • How flying to see buyers weekly became the number one growth driver.
    • Why the gap between A and A-plus talent is worth blowing your budget for.
    • How Protege went from $1M to $30M GMV in a single year.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, AI data, enterprise sales, founder-led sales, data licensing, healthcare AI, a16z, B2B startup, Bobby Samuels, Protege

    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:03:01 Building the First Data Network
    • 00:06:12 Why In-Person Sales Changed Everything
    • 00:16:08 Going to Market with No Pipeline
    • 00:21:07 Ignoring the Lab's No
    • 00:27:40 From $1M to $30M in One Year
    • 00:34:55 Why A-Plus Talent Is Worth It
    • 00:38:28 The Moment of True Product Market Fit

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    39 mins
  • He ran Prime fulfillment for Amazon—then raised $20M to replace e-commerce with AI. | Maju Kuruvilla, Founder of Spangle
    Apr 9 2026

    Maju ran Prime fulfillment technology for all of Amazon — same-day, one-hour shipping, global logistics during the pandemic. He became CEO at Bolt. Then he walked away to start Spangle in a basement with a co-founder, convinced AI could replace e-commerce infrastructure as we know it.

    In this episode, Maju breaks down why 40% of e-commerce traffic loses its context the moment it arrives on a brand's site, how Spangle's AI dynamically rebuilds the entire storefront in real time for each visitor, and why he believes the future of commerce will be a battle between AI seller agents and AI buyer agents.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why 40% of your marketing traffic is wasted the moment it hits your site.
    • Why the future of e-commerce is a showdown between AI seller agents and AI buyer agents.
    • How he signed 11 enterprise brands in under a year with a free POC and rev-share pricing.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, e-commerce, AI commerce, agentic commerce, personalization, dynamic storefronts, conversion optimization, enterprise SaaS, Series A, Spangle, Maju Kuruvilla


    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:01:25 Amazon VP to Basement Startup
    • 00:06:23 Why AI Changes E-Commerce
    • 00:09:34 The 40% Traffic Gap
    • 00:17:43 AI Merchandising in Real Time
    • 00:23:17 Raising $50M for the Seller Agent
    • 00:33:12 Signing 11 Enterprise Brands
    • 00:37:17 The Moment of True Product Market Fit

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    42 mins
  • She got rejected by 22 VCs—then built 6sense to $100M+ in revenue. Now she's back for AI. | Amanda Kahlow, Founder of 1mind
    Apr 6 2026

    Amanda spent 16 years running a services business for Cisco and Intel. When she tried to productize her business, 22 VCs rejected her. That became 6sense, a $200M ARR company. After stepping aside as CEO and taking five years off, she's back with an AI startup called 1 mind.

    In this episode, Amanda breaks down why she always goes enterprise-first when everyone tells her to start small, how she used an AI clone of herself to pitch 60 VCs and raise 1mind's Series A in three days, and why she believes the entire sales process—SDRs, AEs, sales engineers—is about to be collapsed into a single AI "superhuman."

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why 22 VC partner meetings said no—and how one change fixed it overnight.
    • How she used an AI clone of herself to close a Series A in 3 days.
    • Why starting enterprise-first beats moving upmarket.
    • Why outbound AI email is a race to the bottom and what to build instead.

    Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, AI agents, AI sales, enterprise sales, 6sense, 1mind, finding pmf, B2B SaaS, AI enabled services, net dollar retention

    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:05:58 22 VC Rejections—Until She Found the Right Co-Founders
    • 00:08:49 Why She Always Starts Enterprise-First
    • 00:22:00 Five Years Off—Then the AI Wave Hit
    • 00:27:32 Why AISDRs Are a Race to the Bottom
    • 00:43:23 Using Her AI Clone to Raise the Series A
    • 00:49:52 The Moment of True Product Market Fit

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    52 mins
  • How this AI founder is on track to hit $50M ARR just 2 years after launch. | Tarek Alaruri, Co-Founder of Stuut
    Apr 2 2026

    Tarek already built a B2B software company to $30M ARR. But when the AI wave hit, he realized he could build a generational business by automating the manual world of accounts receivable. So, he left to start Stuut.

    In this episode, Tarek breaks down how he reached $1M ARR in a couple of months and is on track to hit up to $50M this year. He reveals how he pre-sold his first $65k contract with just wireframes, why he forces new customers to introduce him to five peers, and the brutal reality of finding message-market fit through hundreds of cold calls.

    Why You Should Listen

    • How to pre-sell a $65k enterprise contract before writing code.
    • The "Closing Discount" hack to generate 5 referrals from every new customer.
    • Why finding "Message Market Fit" is more important than your ICP.
    • How to spot and avoid early-stage startup "vultures".
    • Why scaling a B2B sales motion requires hiring misfits over pedigree.

    00:00:00 Intro
    00:01:41 Leaving a $30M Startup to Build with AI
    00:08:06 Finding Message Market Fit Through Cold Calling
    00:20:07 Pre-Selling a $65k Contract with Wireframes
    00:27:51 The Voice AI "Aha" Moment
    00:33:07 The Closing Discount Referral Hack
    00:37:18 The Brutal Reality of B2B Sales
    00:42:19 Hitting $1M ARR and Pacing for $50M
    00:45:05 Why Product Market Fit is Never Truly Found

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    47 mins
  • He launched a free product for enterprise customers—then grew to $12M ARR in 2 years. | Bhaskar Sunkara, Founding CTO of AppDynamics
    Mar 30 2026

    Description

    Bhaskar was employee #1 at AppDynamics, which was sold to Cisco for $3.7B. He and co-founder Jyoti found a way to change how enterprise monitoring tools worked. From tracking low-level code metrics that ops teams didn't understand to monitoring what the business actually cares about.

    In this episode, Bhaskar breaks down how that one insight won them Netflix and Priceline as early customers, why they ran production POCs that no competitor would dare try, and how a free download called AppDynamics Lite generated over 60% of their leads—in an industry where getting started normally took weeks of professional services and six-figure contracts.

    Why You Should Listen

    • Why selling to developers is operating on hard mode.
    • How one-day POCs became the killer enterprise sales weapon.
    • Why freemium disrupted an industry that required weeks of professional services to get started.
    • How they grew from $2M to $12M in revenue in just one year post launch.

    Keywords

    startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, AppDynamics, application monitoring, enterprise SaaS, B2B sales, finding pmf, freemium strategy, Cisco acquisition, production POC

    Chapters

    • 00:00:00 Intro
    • 00:11:33 Choosing the ICP
    • 00:20:37 Landing Netflix with Freemium
    • 00:28:44 Growing from $2M to $12M in Year Two
    • 00:30:10 The Free Download Strategy That Generated 60% of Leads
    • 00:32:04 Days from the NASDAQ Bell—Then Cisco Offered $3.7B
    • 00:41:28 The Moment of True Product Market Fit

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    45 mins
  • He raised $41M in one year to replace enterprise accountants with AI. | Yogi Goel, Founder of Maxima
    Mar 26 2026

    Yogi spent 20 years living the nightmare of enterprise accounting. As a senior finance leader at Rubrik, he watched highly paid professionals spend three weeks every month manually wrangling data into spreadsheets—a problem that caused mass burnout and multi-million dollar stock corrections.

    When ChatGPT launched, Yogi knew the technology was finally ready to solve the problem. In this episode, he breaks down how he left his executive track to found Maxima, how he landed massive enterprises like Scale AI and Rippling as early design partners, and why he managed to raise $41M from top-tier VCs like Kleiner Perkins and Redpoint before he even had a pitch deck.

    Why You Should Listen

    • How a 1st-time founder raised an $11M Seed and a $30M Series A in a year.
    • Why replacing accountants with AI is a bigger opportunity than replacing SaaS tools.
    • How to use the "Design Partner Playbook" to secure Fortune 500 customers.
    • Why charging for an MVP creates the friction you actually need to find true PMF.
    • The difference between selling "digital shelves" and selling "folded laundry" in the age of AI.

    Keywords

    startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, AI in accounting, enterprise SaaS, product market fit, finding pmf, raising seed round, raising series a, B2B sales, design partners

    00:00:00 Intro
    00:07:37 Leaving a CFO Track to Become a Founder
    00:11:52 Raising an $11M Seed Round from Kleiner Perkins
    00:20:07 The Design Partner Playbook
    00:22:34 Why You Must Charge Your Early Design Partners
    00:28:36 The Aha Moment for Product Market Fit
    00:33:20 Selling "Folded Laundry" Instead of "Digital Shelves"
    00:36:47 Raising a $30M Series A Pre-Emptively

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    44 mins