The Room Podcast – Détails, épisodes et analyse

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The Room Podcast

The Room Podcast

Claudia Laurie and Madison McIlwain

Technologie
Business & Entrepreneuriat
Business & Entrepreneuriat

Fréquence : 1 épisode/14j. Total Éps: 140

Simplecast
Welcome to the Room. A series interviewing your favorite tech founders and funders. Our guests were in the room where it happened and they’re sharing their stories.
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S14E1: Nirav Tolia, Nextdoor CEO, on Building Community Platforms, Product-Market Fit, and the Future of AI in Local Networks

Épisode 1

mardi 17 mars 2026Durée 01:09:55

In this season opener of The Room Podcast, we speak with Nirav Tolia, the co-founder and CEO of Nextdoor, the neighborhood network designed to connect verified neighbors and strengthen local communities.

Nirav shares and refelcts the story behind building Nextdoor, one of the world’s largest hyperlocal social platforms, and reflects on the lessons he has learned scaling a product designed around real-world communities.

Before founding Nextdoor, Nirav was one of the first 100 employees at Yahoo, where he witnessed the rise of the early consumer internet and the power of network effects. He later co-founded Round Zero, an early startup studio that helped shape his thinking about entrepreneurship and product development.

In this conversation, Nirav discusses:

• Growing up in Odessa, Texas, as the child of Indian immigrant physicians, and how those experiences shaped his understanding of belonging and community
• Why he never planned to become a founder and how failure at Stanford University helped him find his strengths
• The early days of Yahoo and how the dot-com era influenced his entrepreneurial path
• The founding story behind Nextdoor and the challenge of building a platform designed for neighborhoods rather than global networks
• How founders can identify product-market fit, including his framework of building a “painkiller vs. vitamin” product
• The responsibility technology companies have when platforms surface bias, trust, and safety challenges
• Why Nextdoor prioritizes quality of interactions over pure scale and engagement metrics
• How Nirav thinks about the role of artificial intelligence in local communities, and why he believes AI should act as an advisor rather than a driver

Learn more about Nirav Tolia on LinkedIn and explore Nextdoor at nextdoor.com.

(03:51) Growing up in Odessa, Texas, and how early experiences shaped Nirav’s worldview
(07:31) Why Nirav never planned to become a startup founder
(09:51) Transitioning from pre-med to an English major at Stanford
(12:41) Lessons from failure and discovering personal strengths
(15:51) Joining Yahoo as one of its earliest employees during the dot-com era
(18:01) How the early internet shaped Nirav’s view of network effects
(20:51) Why Nirav left Yahoo at its peak to pursue entrepreneurship
(22:21) The story behind Round Zero and how it prepared him to build companies
(22:51) The founding story of Nextdoor and the opportunity in hyperlocal networks
(25:21) How founders know when to pivot versus persevere
(29:51) Identifying product-market fit and early signals of traction
(34:25) The “painkiller vs. vitamin” framework for product strategy
(36:25) Trust, safety, and moderation challenges in community platforms
(37:55) Lessons from addressing racial profiling and bias on Nextdoor
(40:25) How technology can help people become better neighbors
(48:55) Why Nextdoor prioritizes quality interactions over traditional network effects
(49:55) Nirav’s perspective on artificial intelligence and community platforms
(1:00:25) A woman who had a profound impact on Nirav’s life and career

For The Room Podcast in your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.
Follow us on Instagram 
Follow us on TikTok 
Check out our guide to podcasting here! 
Don't forget to subscribe to our channel on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Music!

Brought to you by Rippling and Perkins Coie.

WX Productions

From Stitch Fix to AI Search with Daydream Founder Julie Bornstein | Inside Summit 2025 [LIVE]

Épisode 4

mardi 23 décembre 2025Durée 36:03

Welcome back to another episode of The Room Podcast! This week, Claudia and Madison sit down with Julie Bornstein, founder and CEO of Daydream, a new AI-powered shopping platform reimagining how people discover fashion online. Julie is a two-time founder with deep roots in digital commerce, having previously helped build Stitch Fix and later founded The Yes, which was acquired by Pinterest. With decades of experience at the intersection of retail, technology, and consumer behavior, Julie has been at the forefront of how people shop as the internet — and now AI — evolves.

In this episode, Julie shares why search has always been the hardest and most important problem in e-commerce, and how generative AI finally unlocks a more human way to shop. She walks through the lessons she learned building algorithmic fashion at Stitch Fix, why inventory ownership limits personalization, and how The Yes shaped her thesis around intent-driven discovery. We also dive into founding Daydream after an acquisition unwind, the challenges of hiring the right early team, navigating retailer relationships without becoming an ads business, and what the future of shopping looks like when your stylist lives in your pocket. Tune in for a masterclass on consumer AI, founder resilience, and why being early — twice — doesn’t make it easier the third time around.

(00:00) Introduction
(05:20) Where did Julie grow up and how did it shape her view of the world?
(06:31) Did Julie always think she would become a founder?
(07:42) How did Julie’s early career in retail and e-commerce shape what she’s building today?
(09:59) How did Julie’s philosophy evolve from Stitch Fix to The Yes to Daydream?
(11:54) Why did Julie decide to become a founder again after selling The Yes to Pinterest?
(14:54) How does Daydream avoid getting squeezed between retailers and consumers?
(17:58) Who is Daydream’s core customer and why did Julie choose them first?
(18:45) Who was the first investor to say yes to Daydream?
(19:39) What unexpected challenges did Julie face early at Daydream?
(21:41) How is AI changing Daydream’s business model decisions?
(22:26) Should retailers rethink site architecture in an AI-driven search world?
(23:14) How can companies make products more discoverable in an LLM-first future?
(23:33) Does better AI indexing by retailers threaten Daydream’s value?
(25:48) How does Daydream think about LLM interoperability and model choice?
(26:44) How should retailers think about cloud providers in modern e-commerce stacks?
(27:57) Does Julie consider Daydream an AI-native company?
(29:23) What does the future of online retail look like?
(31:39) What advice does Julie have for new founders?
(33:44) Who is a woman in Julie's life that has had a profound impact on her and her career?

For The Room Podcast in your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.
Follow us on Instagram 
Follow us on TikTok 
Check out our guide to podcasting here! 
Don't forget to subscribe to our channel on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Music!

Brought to you by Perkins Coie and Mercury.*
*Mercury is a financial technology company, not a bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group and Evolve Bank & Trust; Members FDIC.

WX Productions

S13E3: Creating Longevity Drugs for Dogs with Celine Halioua, Founder of Loyal

Épisode 3

mardi 14 octobre 2025Durée 44:38

Welcome back to another episode of The Room Podcast! This week, we sit down with Celine Halioua, Founder and CEO of Loyal, a biotech company pioneering FDA-approved longevity drugs for dogs. From a childhood surrounded by rescue animals to an academic journey through neuroscience, health economics, and venture capital, Celine’s path to entrepreneurship is as winding as it is inspiring. Today, Loyal is leading the charge in redefining what’s possible in veterinary medicine—aiming not just to treat disease, but to extend healthy lifespan itself.

In this episode, Celine shares how her scientific curiosity about aging and her love for animals converged into a singular mission. She takes us behind the scenes on the founding story of Loyal—from a chance conversation around a campfire, to navigating the capital-intensive world of biotech, to winning over regulators and pet parents alike. Listeners will walk away with hard-earned insights about fundraising in uncertain markets, balancing ambition with operational discipline, and the importance of being both scientifically rigorous and soulfully driven when building something truly generational.

(00:00) Introduction
(05:00) How did Celine’s early upbringing in Austin shape her worldview?
(06:31) Did Celine always think she’d become a founder?
(06:49) What early research made Celine believe in longevity as a real field?
(08:51) How did Celine’s love for dogs intersect with her scientific passion?
(10:48) What was the aha moment behind starting Loyal?
(16:14) What was it like convincing early investors and team members to believe in Loyal?
(19:41) Who was the first person to invest in Celine and Loyal?
(21:29) How did Celine build trust with both regulators and pet owners?
(24:24) What’s a moment that didn’t go as planned, and how did Celine turn it around?
(30:47) Is it challenging to build a brand while the product isn’t ready to go to market?
(34:17) Is getting a drug for animals approved by the FDA different than a drug for humans?
(36:41) What did Celine consider when building her team at Loyal?
(40:21) Can Loyal’s work in dogs translate to longevity solutions for humans?
(42:34) Who is a woman in your life who has had a profound impact on you and your career?

For The Room Podcast in your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.
Follow us on Instagram 
Follow us on TikTok 
Check out our guide to podcasting here! 
Don't forget to subscribe to our channel on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Music!

Brought to you by Perkins Coie and Mercury.*
*Mercury is a financial technology company, not a bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group and Evolve Bank & Trust; Members FDIC.

WX Productions

S4E5: Startup Banking 101 with Vera Shokina of SVB

Épisode 5

mardi 14 septembre 2021Durée 28:32

In The Room with Vera Shokina

In this week’s episode of The Room Podcast, Madison and Claudia take a break from chatting with their typical founder or funder to cover a core need of every startup and fund: their bank. They are joined by Vera Shokina, Managing Director at Silicon Valley Bank where she covers U.S. banking and early stage international banking, helping VC funds and startups with all of their banking needs. From the founding moment of SVB, the bank has been focused on early stage technology companies and venture capital funds.

Vera walks us through the top tips for founders looking to establish a banking relationship, the process of getting a debt line, and how a bank like SVB helps out with remote work. Let’s open the door.

Season 4 is sponsored by our friends at SVB and Cooley. The episode is now live on all podcast streaming platforms, including Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

S4E4: Danielle Cohen-Shohet on the future of beauty and disrupting tech for hyper-local businesses

Épisode 4

mardi 7 septembre 2021Durée 30:55

Welcome to another episode of The Room Podcast! In this week’s episode, co-hosts Madison and Claudia chat with Danielle Cohen-Shohet, Co-Founder and CEO of GlossGenius. Danielle, a freelance hobbyist makeup artist, started GlossGenius when she knew that there had to be a better way to manage a business and engage with clients. From scheduling to booking and payments, GlossGenius meaningfully helps freelancers and small businesses in US salon and studio spaces.

In this episode, Danielle talks about building for a specific need and passion, developing a tech platform for hyper-local businesses, and where the beauty industry is going next. Let's open the door.

Season 4 of The Room Podcast is sponsored by our friends at SVB and Cooley. This episode is now live on all podcast streaming platforms, including Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

S4E3: Katherine Salisbury of Qapital on Disrupting Personal Finance

Épisode 3

lundi 30 août 2021Durée 29:21

In this week’s episode of The Room Podcast, Madison and Claudia sit down with Katherine Salisbury, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of Qapital, a mobile banking app designed to help incentivize people to save smarter. Qapital’s Chief Behavioral Economist Dan Ariely leverages science to propel people into better money habits. Since its inception in 2015, Qapital has helped millions of users collectively save over $2 billion.

This week’s key themes include navigating raising venture capital with an untraditional background, co-founding your business with your significant other, and when to make your product a paid product in the world of free. Let’s open the door.

Season 4 is sponsored by our friends at SVB and Cooley.

Key Theme 1: Navigating raising venture capital with an untraditional background

After graduating from Cornell Law, Katherine started her career as a lawyer in New York City before moving to Europe to found and run a sports management company focused on soccer. Without a background in FinTech, Katherine advises founders to just show up and put in the time and energy. It’s a learning curve to work out all the kinks, but you have to be willing to try, be embarrassed, and mess up.

Key Theme 2: Co-founding your business with your significant other

Co-founding Qapital with her significant other George Friedman, Katherine gives some tips on how to balance personal and work life. She says it’s sometimes easier to be on the same rollercoaster with a significant other as they share compassion for one another whether it be through the good or bad moments. Katherine also emphasises the importance of turning it off and knowing when to put work aside for the day.

Key Theme 3: When to make your product a paid product in the world of free

When deciding the pricing scheme for her product, Katherine and her team went to several pricing experts and ended up developing a lasting partnership with Simon Kucher. They tested different options out and were able to back up Katherine’s initial intuitions with detailed research.

Thank you so much for tuning into another week of The Room Podcast. Join us on Clubhouse on Wednesday, Sept. 1 at 1:30PM PST to hear directly from Katherine! New episodes launch every Tuesday at 7AM PST.

S4E2: Sydney Sykes of BLCK VC on transforming VC and building diverse communities for future founders & funders

Épisode 2

lundi 23 août 2021Durée 32:10

In this week’s episode of The Room Podcast, Madison and Claudia sit down with Sydney Sykes, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of BLCK VC. Founded in 2018, BLCK VC empowers and advances black venture investors by providing a focus community built for and by black venture investors. Out of Harvard undergrad, Sydney joined New Enterprise Associates as an investment analyst before moving on to e-commerce planning with Dolls Kill. Today, Sydney is also studying at Stanford GSB for her MBA.

This week’s key themes and insights include solving the problems you see in the world, the future of direct-to-consumer investing, and the integral role of a unique perspective and driving innovation. Let’s open the door.

Season 4 of The Room Podcast is sponsored by our friends at SVB and Cooley. Learn more about SVB’s Access to Innovation initiative here.

Key Theme 1: Solving the problems you see in the world

Blck VC is evidence that you have the ability to solve the problems you see in the world. Sydney took her lived experience and passion for building a better tomorrow into action. This passion to unlock more equity in who’s represented in venture led her to create her non-profit. Whether you’re thinking of starting a non-profit or a for-profit business that solves something you deeply believe should change; Sydney reminds us that you are empowered to build for that future.



Key Theme 2: Direct-to-consumer Brands and their Evolution

Having spent time in operations at Dolls Kill, a venture-backed DTC brand, Sydney has unique insights into the future of e-commerce. As an investor, Sydney is compelled by brands who are taking a more differentiated approach to finding and cultivating community with their customers. She specifically is interested if they’re providing a product or service that no one else is offering. Two driving questions Sydney shared when it comes to investing in DTC are What's different about what I'm building? Why is this going to take off in a way that works for venture capital?

Key Theme 3: The integral role of a unique perspective and driving innovation

Sydney believes the venture capital industry’s growth is dependent on unique perspectives and new ideas.

“If a venture capital firm continues to have the same perspectives for long periods of time, or doesn't bring in new networks or doesn't bring in something that gives them a competitive advantage, that firm will fall behind.”

She gives the example that lack of diversity in a firm leads to a massive ecosystem gap. Without any black investors, firms are missing 15% of consumers as well as the inability to relate to and fully understand some of their founders.

Thank you to Sydney for joining us in The Room! We will be back next week with a new episode on Tuesday, Aug. 31 at 7AM PST.

S4E1: Kara Goldin of Hint. Accidental entrepreneurship and growing a household CPG brand with the founder of your favorite water.

Épisode 1

lundi 16 août 2021Durée 48:35

Welcome to Season 4 of The Room Podcast! We start off this brand new season with Kara Goldin, Co-Founder and CEO of Hint. Hint is known for its healthy fruit-infused flavored water that brands itself as a better alternative to sugar-laden sodas and artificially sweetened drinks. Hint Water in a variety of fun and fruity flavors is found at any local supermarket. Today, Hint has also expanded its product line to sun and body items, including sunscreen and deodorant. Kara’s newest book Undaunted: Overcoming Doubts and Doubters is also available now for purchase.

In this week’s episode, Madison and Claudia chat with Kara on value-driven product development, building and growing a CPG brand, and accidental entrepreneurship by being undaunted. Let’s open the door.

S3E8: Heidi Zak of ThirdLove on fundraising, finding product-market fit, and the future of eCommerce and D2C

Épisode 8

mardi 22 juin 2021Durée 41:47

In the Season 3 finale of The Room Podcast, Madison and Claudia sit down with Heidi Zak, CEO and Co-Founder of ThirdLove, a multi-generational women's lifestyle brand focused on elevated essentials across bras, underwear, loungewear, and much more. ThirdLove’s products are designed to support women feeling effortlessly comfortable and confident. ThirdLove is also the third largest underwear and bra retailer in the world, which is a true testament to how its unique model truly disrupted how consumers shop for bras and other essentials.

This week’s key themes include what fundraising looks like for non-software businesses, finding product market fit and innovating on distribution, and the future of e-commerce. Let’s open the door.

Season 3 is sponsored by our friends at SVB and Cooley.

S3E7: The Future of Work with Frank Weishaupt of Owl Labs and Roy Hirshland of T3 Advisors

Épisode 7

mardi 15 juin 2021Durée 43:27

In this week’s episode of The Room Podcast, Madison and Claudia cover a relevant topic as the world begins to re-open and adapt to a life post-pandemic: the future of work. They are joined by two CEOs, Frank Weishaupt and Roy Hirshland, who are both innovating on the new normal as leaders of their companies. Frank is the CEO of Owl Labs, a video collaboration technology company that provides the inclusive meeting experience remote participants need and deserve. Roy is the CEO and Co-Founder of T3 Advisors, a global real estate firm that inspires companies to think more strategically about real estate and their workplace.

We discuss key insights and tactical advice surrounding the future of work, including the hardware and software tools needed to empower a hybrid work culture, leadership’s vital role as reopening brings transition, and multi-generational perspectives on navigating a crisis while empowering employees to thrive at work. Let’s open the door.


Season 3 is sponsored by our friends at SVB and Cooley. The questions today were researched through SVB’s Future of Work Report.


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