Explore every episode of the podcast Future Ventures: Scaling with Clarity
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Robert Stanley — Why Home Is the Next Healthcare Infrastructure Layer | FV Podcast Ep. 47 | 17 Jun 2026 | 00:53:43 | |
Robert Stanley isn't a healthcare lifer. He spent most of his career in technology — running IT projects for big banks, telcos, and airlines — before moving into home care about a decade ago and building one of Ontario's established providers. That outsider's vantage point is exactly what makes this conversation worth your time. Where insiders see a system to optimize, Robert sees one that's structurally broken: wired to reward visits, procedures, and ambulance rides, with almost nothing that pays anyone to prevent the crisis in the first place. The math behind his urgency is hard to argue with — Canada's population of 82-year-olds peaks around 2051, and demand only climbs from here. His idea is called Comprehensive Healthcare at Home: continuously monitor at-risk seniors and send a nurse or therapist when something seems wrong — often weeks before it would lead to an emergency room visit. But what makes CHA different isn't just the technology. It's how he set it up. Robert launched the care company first and treated it as a testing ground, so the technology became part of routines his clinicians already trusted, rather than being added on top. That's the key difference because most healthcare trials fail not because of the idea itself, but because they don’t fit into the busy schedule of overworked clinicians. For entrepreneurs facing a slow, regulated market, this is a lesson in earning the right to make changes. Topics Covered
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About Robert Stanley Robert Stanley is the Founder and CEO of CHA Group, the parent company of State Home Nursing Care Services and CHA Technology. After a long career in technology delivering large-scale IT projects, he moved into home care a decade ago. He built one of Ontario's established providers before turning his focus to predictive, technology-enabled care. Today, he's pioneering Comprehensive Healthcare at Home, a model that combines AI-powered monitoring with clinical response to keep vulnerable seniors safe, independent, and out of the hospital. This podcast has been brought to you by the Capital Intelligence Platform: capital.futureventures.ca | |||
| Greg Miles — Why Women's Health Has Been Ignored for Too Long | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 46 | 16 Jun 2026 | 00:59:20 | |
Greg Miles is the founder and CEO of Milestone Gyno-Mics, a biotech company developing the first AI-powered, non-invasive blood test for endometriosis. He is one of the first bioinformatics PhDs in the U.S., with over 15 years of experience in genomics, diagnostics, and AI. He left a 10-year job at Agilent to focus on this project. His motivation is personal: he lost both grandparents to leukemia that was diagnosed too late, and he watched a loved one struggle for 12 years seeing many doctors before finally being diagnosed with endometriosis by a surgeon. This conversation matters because endometriosis affects more than 1 in 10 women, is the leading cause of infertility, and is invisible on imaging more than 95% of the time — leaving most women on a decade-long diagnostic odyssey. Greg's thesis is blunt: endometriosis behaves like cancer (a recent paper found it shares all eight hallmarks), so we should detect it like cancer. The result is a clear-eyed look at why women's health has been underfunded and overlooked, how AI changes the math on early detection, and why the next major breakthrough in medicine may be diagnosis, not treatment. Key Topics Covered
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About the Guest Greg Miles is the founder and CEO of Milestone Gyno-Mics, a biotechnology company developing a non-invasive, AI-powered blood diagnostic platform for women's health. One of the first bioinformatics PhDs trained in the United States, he brings more than 15 years of experience across genomics, diagnostics, and artificial intelligence, including a decade at Agilent. His mission is to collapse the years-long diagnostic delay women face for conditions like endometriosis — starting with a single blood test. | |||
| Stanley Wei — AI That Actually Gets Things Done: The Future of Autonomous Agents | FV Podcast E. 37 | 20 May 2026 | 00:57:16 | |
Stanley Wei is the Founder and CEO of Pine AI, an autonomous agent platform that doesn't just answer questions — it picks up the phone, fills out the forms, and gets things done on behalf of consumers. Pine negotiates bills, cancels subscriptions, files complaints, resolves disputes, and navigates insurance claims autonomously. Before launching Pine, Stanley held leadership roles at Gore and invested in AI through Hillhouse Capital, watching the space evolve from the early deep learning era through the DALL-E inflection point that convinced him AGI was no longer a question of if, but when. This conversation is important because Stanley is developing a seldom-touched part of the AI stack: the unstructured, voice-based interface between agents and the physical world. Most AI products operate in digital spaces, like drafting or querying databases, but Pine trains proprietary voice models on real phone calls. This enables agents to interrupt naturally, manage silences, negotiate, and complete tasks. Understanding this reveals the future of consumer AI and how to compete against giants like OpenAI and Anthropic. Key Topics Covered
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Links Pine AI: https://www.19pine.ai/ Stanley Wei on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stanleywei Future Ventures Corp: https://ca.linkedin.com/company/future-ventures-corp About Stanley Wei Stanley Wei is the Founder and CEO of Pine AI, an autonomous AI agent that takes action on behalf of consumers in the physical world — from negotiating bills to managing insurance disputes. Before Pine, he held leadership roles at Gore and was an AI investor at Hillhouse Capital, where he tracked the field through the deep learning era and the generative AI inflection point. He started Pine in 2024 out of personal frustration with the chores of being an international operator, splitting time between the US, Singapore, and the UK. | |||
| Stan Christiaens — The Billion-Dollar Problem Behind AI | Future Ventures Podcast Episode 37 | 20 May 2026 | 00:55:53 | |
Stan Christiaens is the Cofounder and Chief Data Citizen of Collibra, one of the companies that helped define the modern data governance category. What began in 2008 as a spinoff from a semantics research lab at the Free University of Brussels has grown into a global platform used by some of the world's largest enterprises to manage data trust, lineage, governance, and increasingly, AI oversight. Eighteen years in, Stan has a vantage point most operators do not — he has watched governance get sidelined every 5 to 10 years by the next shiny technology, and he has watched the same data problems resurface every time. This conversation matters because AI has changed the math. Companies that treated data as exhaust instead of as an asset are now discovering that their AI ambitions are bottlenecked by foundations they never built. Stan and Maxim get specific about what those foundations actually look like, why the Chief Data Officer role is at an inflection point, and why the iceberg of unstructured data — roughly 80 to 90 percent of an organization's information — is suddenly the biggest question on every data leader's desk. If you are building, advising, or selling into enterprises right now, this is the conversation about why data discipline is no longer optional. Key topics covered
Three key insights You cannot fix data after the fact. Organizations that treat data as a byproduct for years and then suddenly need AI cannot retroactively make that data useful — they have to start treating it as an asset first, which is a cultural shift before it is a technical one. The model is not the problem. No matter how smart the frontier LLM gets, it will not make the right decision without the right context at the right time. The work is building the harness around the model — the responsibility, processes, and curated context — not chasing the next model release. Patience is the entrepreneur's hardest skill. Plan for a 10-year journey, not a three-year sprint, and make sure your business ambitions and your life at home stay in harmony — because the overnight successes everyone admires were a decade in the making before they looked obvious. Links
About Stan Christiaens Stan Christiaens is the Cofounder and Chief Data Citizen of Collibra, which he helped spin out of a computer science research lab at the Free University of Brussels in 2008. Over 18 years, he has built Collibra into one of the defining companies in the data governance category, working with many of the world's largest enterprises on how they organize, trust, and use their data. He is a recognized voice on the intersection of data governance, AI, and enterprise transformation. | |||
| Neeraj Singh — Building Sustainable Software in the Age of AI | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 36 | 19 May 2026 | 00:54:19 | |
While most of Silicon Valley argues over whether SaaS is dead, Neeraj Singh is quietly running the experiment that might answer the question. He's the founder and CEO of BigBinary, a 15-year-old remote-first software consultancy, and Neeto, a growing suite of affordable alternatives to the bloated enterprise tools founders begrudgingly pay for every month. NeetoCal goes head-to-head with Calendly at $30 a year — less than a single month of the competition. NeetoSign takes on DocuSign. NeetoForm takes on Typeform. The product list keeps growing, and the marketing budget stays at zero. This conversation matters because Neeraj has spent his career doing the opposite of what most founders are told to do. He went remote 15 years before the pandemic forced everyone else into it. He refuses VC money and refuses to "go all in." He treats Slack as a place where nothing important should happen. He keeps engineers on the bench instead of maximizing utilization. He prices like a commodity in markets the gurus call winner-take-all. And he's still in business — profitable, growing, and building. For any founder rethinking pricing, team design, or what sustainable growth actually looks like in an AI-saturated market, this conversation is a different lens on what works. Topics Covered
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About Neeraj Singh Neeraj Singh is the founder and CEO of BigBinary, a remote-first software consultancy he's been running for close to 15 years with a team of senior engineers based in India. He's the creator of Neeto, a growing suite of affordable SaaS products built to replace the bloated, overpriced tools founders are stuck paying for — NeetoCal, NeetoSign, NeetoForm, NeetoTicketing, and more. A longtime Ruby on Rails open-source contributor, Neeraj writes and operates in public on LinkedIn, X, and through Neeto's customer support — where every reply still comes from him or his team, not AI. | |||
| Hubertus Hofkirchner — The Future of Money and Trade Infraestructure | FV Podcast Ep. 35 | 19 May 2026 | 01:01:48 | |
Hubertus Hofkirchner has spent four decades operating at the intersection of trade finance, technology, and monetary theory. He started his career at Citibank International in Vienna, designed a securities system that rolled out across smaller city banks throughout Europe, and later served as Director at Kreditanstalt Investment Bank. As a serial entrepreneur, he built one of the first online brokerages for Central and Eastern Europe, founded what he believes was the first true options exchange (sold to a British bank in 2008), and famously took over Austrian telecom operator Telering as a loss-making vehicle hemorrhaging hundreds of millions per year — turning it around and selling it to T-Mobile for €1.5 billion in 2005. This conversation is important because Hubertus isn't just another crypto supporter promising big changes from the sidelines. He's an Austrian-school economist and ex-investment banker who knows the traditional banking system inside out. Now, he's creating open-source tools to bring back something the world quietly lost in 1913—a peer-to-peer credit system that allows global trade to happen without banks acting as gatekeepers. With the Bitcredit Protocol now live, founders and investors should understand what's being built, why it’s happening now, and what it could mean for trade, investing, and the future of money. Key Topics Covered
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About the Guest Hubertus Hofkirchner is the founder of Bitcredit Protocol, a Bitcoin-native trade finance protocol focused on rethinking trust, credit, and global commerce infrastructure. A serial fintech entrepreneur, he is the former CEO of Austrian telecom operator Telering (acquired by T-Mobile for €1.5 billion) and an economist focused on the intersection of monetary systems and trade finance. He leads monthly seminars at the Hayek Institute in Vienna. | |||
| Dave Hertig — High Tech, High Touch: The Future of CEO Performance | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 34 | 18 May 2026 | 01:02:10 | |
Dave Hertig has spent his career watching CEOs up close — first as a business journalist who interviewed more than 100 of them for UBS alone, then as the founder of Boom, where he now focuses on CEO performance under pressure. Along the way, he developed a conviction that became the spine of his work: the people the rest of the company looks up to have blind spots like everyone else, but those blind spots carry outsized consequences. Get the CEO right and the whole system compounds. Get it wrong, and no strategy, market, or product can save you. This conversation matters because most of what's written about CEO performance is written for the Fortune 500 — the leaders who get six-month onboarding handlers, custom briefing teams, and curated executive networks. The CEOs running companies between 50 and 1,000 staff are running on a fraction of that support, often with no one in the building willing to push back on them honestly. Dave has built a system to fill that gap, and the principles behind it apply whether you're leading 30 people or 3,000. Key Topics Covered 1. The blind spots that quietly shape every CEO's decision — Why "why aren't more people like me?" is the most common — and most dangerous — pattern Hertig sees in founders and hired CEOs alike. 2. Hire for your weaknesses, not against them — The Steve Jobs / Tim Cook arc as the definitive case study in pairing vision with execution, and why trying to fix a weakness rarely beats hiring around it. 3. The adversarial gap — Why genuine pushback is the single hardest thing for a CEO to get inside their own company, and what happens to the people who try to give it. 4. Accountability vs. outcome in the eyes of investors — The distinction between what a founder can control (input), partially control (output), and never guarantee (outcome) — and why integrity and transparency matter more than hitting the number. 5. The CEO Sparring System — How a boxing-inspired protected room lets CEOs stress-test Board decks, investor pitches, firing decisions, and press interviews before they go live in the real world. Three Key Insights Judgment is more important in the AI era, not less. AI can help analyze data, compare options, and speed up decisions. It can even imitate emotional understanding. But it can't develop real emotional intelligence, read a room, or replace the human responsibility that leaders have. The polished answers from large language models make a CEO's judgment more challenging — and more valuable — than ever before. Authenticity is not the same as showing everything you are. The strongest CEOs Hertig has worked with put on a "uniform" when they walk into the role — measured, deliberate, strategic about what they say — while still ensuring the job genuinely matches their strengths and what gives them energy. That gap is professionalism, not inauthenticity. A progressive CEO wants to keep growing — personally and commercially. The CEOs worth working with are still curious, still hungry for pushback, still aware that their business sits inside a larger system. The ones who have hit a personal ceiling and stopped growing are the ones whose companies stop growing too. Links
About Dave Hertig Dave Hertig is the founder and CEO of Boom, where he focuses on CEO performance under pressure and works with leaders of medium-sized businesses navigating high-stakes moments. He is the creator of the CEO Sparring System, a boxing-inspired format that gives CEOs a protected room to pressure-test their most important pieces of work before deploying them in the real world. Before founding Boom, Dave spent years as a business journalist and content strategist, interviewing hundreds of CEOs across industries — work that gave him the pattern recognition behind his current focus on identity, judgment, and the human side of executive leadership. | |||
| Omar Sahyoun — AI-Powered Commerce and the Reinvention of Main Street | FV Podcast Ep. 33 | 18 May 2026 | 00:48:06 | |
Omar Sahyoun has spent two decades building at the edge of where consumers, technology, and physical commerce meet. He co-founded TeamBuy and DealFind, two of Canada's earliest daily-deal platforms that collectively scaled past 4 million members. He moved into fintech as a senior operator at Ariel and Purpose Financial, helping bring same-day digital lending into the mainstream. Today, as Managing Partner at Brand-FX, he runs three operating companies — Shoply (SMB commerce for retail and hospitality), Wack Jack (a 15-year-old Canadian consumer marketplace), and Go CXM (a CPG platform serving brands like Monster Energy, with one engagement spanning 30,000 sales reps). What I like about Omar's perspective is that he refuses to pick a side in the AI debate. He's not predicting that AI agents will eat retail, and he's not romanticizing the corner store either. Roughly 70% of commerce still happens in a physical location with a real person — that's the number he keeps coming back to —, and his bet is on making that experience smarter, not replacing it. Shoply gives a single restaurant or small retailer the same kind of personalization engine that used to require an Amazon-sized budget. Go CXM helps CPG brands finally talk to the customers their retailers have always controlled. If you're building, advising, or investing anywhere in consumer commerce right now, the conversation is worth your time — Omar has strong opinions about where the AI dollars are being wasted. He's earned the right to have them. Key Topics Covered
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About the Guest Omar Sahyoun is the Managing Partner at Brand-FX, a family-office-backed group that's building three companies in consumer technology, CPG, and retail. He co-founded TeamBuy and DealFind, helping Canada's first daily-deal marketplaces grow to over 4 million members. Omar also held leadership roles in digital lending at Ariel and Purpose Financial. With a background in accounting and management consulting from McGill, he's lived and built businesses in five countries and is now based in Toronto. | |||
| Andrew Ackerman — Where Venture Capital is actually Betting | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 32 | 18 May 2026 | 00:58:10 | |
Andrew Ackerman has sat in nearly every chair around the startup table. He's a serial entrepreneur, an angel investor, a venture capitalist, an accelerator operator at Dream Adventures and Reach Labs (the venture arm of the National Association of Realtors), an adjunct professor at NYU, and the author of The Entrepreneur's Odyssey — a story-driven guide to building startups in the real world. He's invested in more than 70 companies, most in PropTech and ConTech, and is currently building a holding company that buys construction services businesses and rewires their economics with proprietary AI. This conversation matters because Andrew has watched the same mistakes kill startups for two decades, and he can name the exact link in the chain where each one snapped. He's also one of the few investors willing to tell a founder their go-to-market is identical to the eleven other decks on his desk that week — and explain why that's not actually their fault. If you're building a company, raising capital, or investing in either, this episode is a masterclass in how to test your assumptions before they bankrupt you. Key Topics Covered A startup is a chain — one bad link, and you've got nothing. Andrew explains how investors figure out which link to test first instead of guessing at random. What it's like to read 1,000 pitch decks in two months. When a dozen near-identical startups show up, Andrew explains how he picks the team that will eat the rest. Construction is less productive than it was 50 years ago. We get into the manufacturing comparison that's been quietly making things worse, and why AI is finally rewriting who captures the value. The index card trick that kills bad features before you build them. Andrew walks through the prototyping exercise that costs about three bucks and a stolen bank pen. Why did Andrew write a story-driven book instead of another bullet-point business read? Plus, the reason Genesis comes before the Ten Commandments — and why founders should care. Three Key Insights Founders are always fundraising — the only variable is allocation. Spending ten to twenty percent of your time on relationships when you don't need money is the difference between raising on warm intros and grinding through eighty percent of your week on cold outreach when you do. The three dimensions of pain determine whether you have a business. Intensity (hammer-on-thumb versus hangnail), prevalence (does anyone else actually have this problem), and frequency (once a lifetime or once a week) — score high on all three, and you have a venture-scale opportunity. Score on two and you're working harder than you need to. A new technology or rule change doesn't give you a unique idea — it gives the same idea to a dozen other founders at the same time. Andrew's seen it happen over and over. The team that wins isn't the one that thought of it first. It's the one with a sharper go-to-market, better people, or the guts to do the opposite of what the other eleven decks on his desk are doing. Links
Guest Bio Andrew Ackerman is a serial entrepreneur turned venture investor who has spent two decades advising startups, accelerators, venture studios, and corporate innovation platforms. He has invested in more than 70 startups, previously helped build Dream Adventures and Reach Labs for Second Century Ventures, teaches entrepreneurship at NYU, and writes extensively on venture capital and innovation. His new book, The Entrepreneur's Odyssey, is a story-driven guide to building startups in the real world. | |||
| John Cowan — Founder-Aligned Capital in the Era of Autonomy | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 031 | 15 May 2026 | 00:58:25 | |
John Cowan was about to do what he'd done a hundred times before — make the calls, set the meetings, walk a young founder into the venture capital fundraising process. In a split second, he backed out. He couldn't morally send another kid into a system he knew was rigged against him: four cycles of dilution, ratchets, protective provisions, career death. Six or seven months of thinking later, he came back with an essay called The Theory of Venture Reciprocity, a new investment instrument called the SAFER, and a firm — Nextwave Partners — built to do venture differently. This conversation is for founders who've ever felt like they were just performing instead of truly pitching when talking to a VC. John explains how the industry has shifted from focusing on funding new ideas to prioritizing the size of the fund, what founder-friendly capital really looks like in real life, and where he's placing his bets for the next ten years. If you're raising money, advising, or managing investments with $3 million to $50 million in revenue, this hour will be one of the most honest and helpful you'll have this week. What we covered
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About the guest John Cowan is the General Partner at Nextwave Partners, a venture studio and investment firm focused on the era of autonomy and the machine economy. He's a 25-year founder, CEO, and strategist who has raised millions in venture capital across his career and become one of the more vocal critics of the traditional VC model. He's the author of Venture Capital 2.0: Building, Financing and Scaling Startups in the Post Power Law Era, with a second book on financing the machine economy due out shortly. | |||
| Sam Hasty — Building Venture-Scale Returns While Solving Planet-Scale Problems | FV Podcast Ep. 030 | 15 May 2026 | 00:52:36 | |
Sam Hasty, partner at Active Impact Investments — Canada's top climate tech seed fund — has supported early entrepreneurs in energy, logistics, farming, materials, and resilience over eight years. He started as a Memphis math teacher, helped launch a nonprofit accelerator funded by the Steve Jobs family, and studied rural entrepreneurship in Poland with a Fulbright before his first angel investment. This conversation is important because the climate tech scene has shifted in two years — Series B funding declined, and generalist investors' interest waned. However, Sam argues the situation is nuanced. Active Impact recently closed a $110M Fund III, their best, with five founders achieving nine-figure exits. The discussion covers how they evaluate founders, why many climate failures aren't tech-related, and where the next decacorns might emerge. These are some highlights of the talk:
Three insights worth sitting with:
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About Sam Hasty Sam Hasty is a Partner at Active Impact Investments, Canada's largest climate tech seed fund, where he focuses on infrastructure and carbon solutions innovation. He is a Fulbright Scholar with eight years of venture capital experience and a portfolio spanning energy, logistics, agriculture, advanced materials, and climate resilience. Before venture, he taught seventh-grade math in Memphis and co-founded a nonprofit accelerator backed by major foundations and the Steve Jobs family office. | |||
| Joyce Shin— Why AI Will Make Leadership More Human, Not Less | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 29 | 14 May 2026 | 00:48:23 | |
Joyce Shin, founder of The Human Edge and ex-head of design operations at Dropbox, helped scale teams and systems there. Trained in neuroscience and raised across Texas, Ohio, Seoul, and Tokyo, she studied resilience and effectiveness, first after a traumatic brain injury and later professionally in tech. She left Dropbox to ask: in AI everywhere, what makes us human? She created the PEARLS framework—six skills in thinking, creativity, ethics, and leadership—areas AI can't replicate. This is her first public sharing of PEARLS. Many see AI as just a tool, not a way to rethink business. For startup founders building better teams, this chapter offers valuable insights. What we covered
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About Joyce Shin Joyce Shin is the founder of The Human Edge, an advisory practice that helps founders, CEOs, and organizations build the capacities AI cannot replicate. Before founding The Human Edge, she was head of design operations at Dropbox, where she scaled teams and systems through IPO growth, acquisitions, and the shift to remote work. She holds a degree in neuroscience and brings a uniquely cross-disciplinary lens to leadership, organizational design, and the future of human work. | |||
| Jan Poetsch — Turning Power Into Profitability | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 45 | 12 Jun 2026 | 00:53:51 | |
Jan Poetsch spent almost twenty years working on some of the world's most complicated energy projects. He then realized that the biggest hidden opportunity in industrial energy was right on the income statement: the power bill. His career took him from a small town in Germany to offshore platforms with Shell, the Sakhalin II project in Russia, and the LNG Canada supply chain. These big projects taught him where the money often leaks out unnoticed. In late 2023, he started Arder Energy to target one of the biggest costs that most industrial companies still ignore. The timing of this conversation is hard to overstate. Alberta just logged 34 straight hours of $0.00/MWh power — a market record — while data centers alone are about to add a load equal to six years of normal demand growth. The operators still treating electricity as a passive flow-through cost are about to get caught flat-footed. Jan makes a sharp, practical case for why power is now a strategic lever rather than a line item, and what the smartest industrial players are already doing about it. Key topics covered
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About the guest Jan Poetsch is the founder and CEO of Arder Energy. He helps industrial companies and investors turn their energy costs from a regular expense into a strategic advantage. Before starting Arder in 2023, he spent nearly 20 years working in global LNG and energy roles at Shell and PetroChina. He has experience working in Europe, Russia, and Canada on projects like Sakhalin II and LNG Canada. He combines business strategy with hands-on experience in industrial engineering, finance, and operations. | |||
| Shahin Nabavian — The Future of Mobility, Operations & Intelligent Infrastructure | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 028 | 14 May 2026 | 00:47:37 | |
Shahin Nabavian, a computer scientist turned venture builder, has worked across operations, infrastructure, and transformation for the past decade. His experience includes a London-based financial startup, venture-building at Shell's maritime division, work at The Economist Group, and founding edtech startup Super Savvy Education. Now, he leads Team CMV (CentricMind Ventures), focusing on emerging technologies like infrastructure enabling companies to use LLMs effectively. Their main venture, Go-User, applies this to people services. The conversation is important because much of what is called' AI adoption' is actually just deployment without ROI. Shahin has observed companies of all sizes misusing chatbots, wasting tokens, and ending up with chaos. He can also explain why this happens in simple language. If your company earns $ 3m-$50 M and you're exploring AI's ROI, this episode is for you. Topics Covered
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About the Guest Shahin Nabavian is the Founder of Go-User and a co-founder of Team CMV (CentricMind Ventures), where he builds AI-native systems for fast-growing companies. He holds a PhD in computer science and has spent over a decade building and supporting ventures across financial services, energy, publishing, and education — including work with Shell and The Economist Group. His current focus is on the infrastructure layer that turns organizational data into something AI can actually reason over. | |||
| Dr. Sylvain Charlebois — Inflation, Supply Chains, and the Reinvention of Grocery | FV Podcast Ep 27 | 08 May 2026 | 00:41:08 | |
Dr. Sylvain Charlebois, the "Food Professor," is the Senior Director of Dalhousie’s Agri-Food Analytics Lab, lead author of Canada's Food Price Report, and a prominent researcher in food supply chain management. He’s the go-to expert for food inflation stories and provides data that guides grocery executives. With 20 years studying Canada's rising food costs, he argues that debates wrongly blame big corporations or stores, overlooking factors like trade barriers, slow regulations, retail crime, and recycling policies that lack proper cost analysis. Sylvain’s data helps differentiate between factors influencing prices and those making headlines, offering valuable insights for food producers, agtech investors, and sector analysts to better interpret news. Topics Covered
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About Dr. Sylvain Charlebois Dr. Sylvain Charlebois is a professor and Senior Director of the Agri-Food Analytics Lab at Dalhousie University, where he leads research on food supply chains, consumer behavior, and food economics. He is the lead author of Canada's Food Price Report, co-host of The Food Professor podcast, and one of the most-cited researchers globally in food supply chain management and traceability. His work bridges academia, industry, and policy — making him a go-to voice on the forces shaping the future of food, grocery, retail, restaurants, and agriculture. | |||
| Tim Fung — Why Human Skills Still Win in an AI World | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 025 | 08 May 2026 | 00:58:36 | |
Tim Fung, Founder and CEO of Airtasker, leads one of the world's top local services marketplaces. Since launching in Sydney in 2012, it’s now a publicly listed company operating across Australia, the UK, and the US, facilitating over a billion dollars in jobs for flexible income. Tim is a prominent voice on the future of work and the gig economy. He experienced what most founders only theorize: raising $1.5M in 2012 when "startup" wasn't common in Sydney, and navigating many trials before success. He took Airtasker public and now, as a CEO, admits the company has fewer employees than four years ago, despite revenue growing five to six times. His insights are very relevant, especially for those building marketplaces, navigating IPOs, or integrating AI into non-software businesses. Key Topics Covered
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About Tim Fung Tim is the Founder and CEO of Airtasker. He started the company in Sydney in 2012 with his co-founder Jono Lui, after the two of them caught the startup bug while working on the founding team at Amaysim, a mobile SIM card business. The idea came from something pretty ordinary — Tim asked a friend with a truck to help him move apartments, and started wondering why people defaulted to friends and family for that kind of work when there were so many people out there who actually wanted to earn income. More than a decade later, Airtasker is publicly listed, operating across Australia, the UK, and the US, and has facilitated over a billion dollars in job opportunities. Tim is one of the more grounded voices on marketplaces, the gig economy, and the future of work — partly because he's been at it long enough to be skeptical of easy answers. | |||
| Michael Allen Feinman — Selling the American Dream | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 026 | 08 May 2026 | 00:43:53 | |
Mike Feinman is the Managing Partner at Texas Business Brokers, a top M&A advisory firm for the lower mid-market and main street. His career began at PepsiCo's Taco Bell division and includes leadership at Yum! Brands across 16 countries. He has facilitated millions in sales across manufacturing, restaurants, services, and tech. He entered brokerage unexpectedly—an ex-Pizza Hut colleague asked him at Starbucks in 2014 what he'd do with the four and a half days a week he wouldn't be running his three restaurants. Mike works where founder vision meets buyer reality, often telling founders the truth before the market does. Many overestimate their business’s value and transferability. His role is to narrow that gap years before a sale. If you're 3-5 years from an exit or building without planning for one, this episode is essential before your accountant. Four Key Topics Covered
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Guest Bio Mike Feinman is the Managing Partner at Texas Business Brokers, advising on lower-mid-market and Main Street deals across multiple states and industries. Previously, he held senior roles at PepsiCo and Yum! Brands, led restaurant operations, and built training and service organizations in 16 countries. He is a father of three, grandfather of four, active musician, and loves helping founders turn their businesses into their dreams. | |||
| Sarah Romanko — How Grit, Brand, and Deal Flow Win | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 024 | 07 May 2026 | 00:47:26 | |
Sarah Romanko, an investor at Geek Ventures, backs immigrant-founded AI and robotics startups. She entered venture without traditional credentials, relying on persistence like cold outreach, online events, and paying it forward. Her approach shapes how she evaluates and supports founders. This conversation reveals how an early-stage investor thinks—what prompts a "yes" or "no"—and how founders misprice opportunities. She questions the media narrative around fundraising, explains why some founders shouldn't raise venture capital, and discusses AI's new moat. For founders considering fundraising or rethinking it, this episode offers a tactical, straightforward guide from someone who reviews pitch decks daily and invests early. Topics Covered
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About the Guest Sarah Romanko invests at Geek Ventures, focused on pre-seed and seed AI and robotics companies founded by immigrants to the US. Her path into venture was unusual — no traditional banking or consulting background — and she credits sheer persistence, cold outbound, and a habit of paying it forward for getting her in the door. She speaks regularly at industry events, mentors founders through programs like Startup Grind and Founder Institute, and writes openly about democratizing access to capital. | |||
| Nikola Borisov — Why the Real AI Battle Isn’t Training—It’s Deployment | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 023 | 06 May 2026 | 00:57:34 | |
Nikola Borisov is CEO and co-founder of DeepInfra, offering open-source models like DeepSeek, Llama, Kimi, GLM, and GPT-OSS via APIs. He previously scaled IMO Messenger to over 200 million users, handling up to a million new users daily with cheaper self-built infrastructure. A Northwestern CS grad and Bulgarian programming veteran, he learned that distributed systems succeed at the margins. This conversation is crucial because AI inference—execution—is the silent battleground of the AI economy, yet few discuss the compute layer, which now limits access outside big labs. Nikola applies his hyperscale infrastructure knowledge to compute-intensive workloads. For those in AI, understanding this layer is vital. Topics Covered
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About the Guest Nikola Borisov is the CEO and co-founder of DeepInfra, an inference-only AI cloud that hosts open-source models like DeepSeek, Llama, and GPT-OSS for developers and enterprises. Before DeepInfra, he led backend infrastructure at IMO Messenger, scaling the platform past 200 million monthly users on infrastructure his team built and ran themselves — at a fraction of what comparable cloud-native competitors were spending. He's a computer science graduate of Northwestern University with over a decade of experience building distributed systems at scale. | |||
| Grant Blaisdell — Turning Space into an Investable Asset Class | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 022 | 05 May 2026 | 00:58:06 | |
Grant Blaisdell, CEO of Copernic Space, is developing space's financial infrastructure by tokenizing payloads, satellite data, computing, and lunar rights, turning space into a liquid market. A serial entrepreneur and blockchain pioneer, he cofounded Coinfirm, the first AML platform for crypto, and created the first AML solution for ERC tokens during the ICO era. His grandfather, a space pioneer, helped Poland reach space. The space economy exceeds $600 billion, mostly driven by private activity, yet many lack understanding of how value is created. Maxim and Grant discuss building standards, marketplaces, and liquidity for this future asset class. If space seemed outside your reach, this episode offers a reset. Key Topics Covered
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About the Guest Grant Blaisdell is the Co-founder and CEO of Copernic Space, building the financial infrastructure and marketplace for the space economy. Previously, he cofounded Coinfirm, a leading analytics and compliance platform that pioneered AML for crypto and was the first to enable AML for ICO-era ERC tokens. A third-generation space entrepreneur and blockchain pioneer, Grant operates at the intersection of capital markets, digital assets, and one of the largest emerging asset classes of this century. | |||
| Kurt Winter and Kevin Salquist — Why Essential Businesses Win in a Volatile World | FV Podcast Ep. 021 | 01 May 2026 | 00:48:56 | |
While most of private equity is chasing the same overheated deals with the same recycled playbook, Kurt Winter and Kevin Salquist are doing the opposite. As Partners at Big 7 Partners, they buy the industrial businesses nobody talks about at conferences — fasteners, gaskets, threaded rod, the components that quietly hold American infrastructure together. The companies are usually 30+ years old, founder-run, profitable, and operating in unmarked buildings you'd drive past a hundred times without noticing. That's the point. The contrarian discipline is what makes this episode worth your time. Kurt spent 30 years as a manufacturing operator. Kevin spent 30 years in capital markets — trading, market making, the works. They've built something that doesn't look like normal PE: hold periods of 10–15 years, little to no leverage, deal-by-deal instead of a blind pool fund, and they won't pay more than 4x EBITDA. With so much dumb money chasing the same deals right now, their approach is a real counterweight. Tangible businesses. Sleep-at-night returns. A playbook that just keeps compounding while the rest of the industry is sprinting for the exit. Topics covered
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About the guests Kurt Winter is a Partner at Big 7 Partners and a 30-year manufacturing executive who spent his career inside U.S. industrial businesses — proudly domestic at a time when most of the industry was offshoring. Kevin Salquist, also a Partner at Big 7, came up through capital markets over three decades, working as a market maker, sales trader, and in cap intro before moving into PE. The two of them run Big 7's acquisition and operating playbook across niche industrial manufacturers in the U.S. | |||
| Juho Risku— From Founder to VC: How to Win at the Seed Stage | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 020 | 30 Apr 2026 | 00:55:21 | |
Juho Risku, after 30 years across different roles, founded Butterfly Ventures, a unique venture capital firm. Previously, he was a serial entrepreneur in Silicon Valley, raising capital and nearly going bankrupt. Now, he leads a leading Nordics investor in deep tech and hardware with over 100 portfolio companies and multiple funding rounds since 2012. This conversation reveals Juho’s honesty about tough truths: why he doesn't support single founders, why deep tech teams face delays (not technical issues), and why the Nordics—17 times more startup value per person than Europe—are overlooked. It provides insights for deep tech founders, European investors, and due diligence. Topics Covered
Key Insights 1. Get the order right, not the decimal. Butterfly scores every company across the same dimensions, before investment, right after investment, and then every quarter. What Juho cares about isn't whether the market is $2.4B or $ 2.1 b. It's whether this deal sits in his top three or top five at any given moment. Most VCs spend their time on the wrong question. 2. No solo founders. Period. In 13+ years and 100+ deals, Butterfly has never written a check to a single founder. When a strong technical founder shows up alone, Juho's team will often help them find a commercial co-founder first, then come back to the deal. He treats team composition as data, not vibe. 3. Customers before polish. Juho's frustration with deep tech founders, particularly Finnish ones, comes back to the same point. They won't talk to customers until the product is "good enough," so they don't talk to customers. The honest version is that customers don't need polish; they need to know whether the product solves their problem. Founders who figure this out early hit revenue faster. The ones who don't, don't. Links
About the Guest Juho Risku co-founded Butterfly Ventures in 2012 and is a Partner. The fund invests in early-stage deep tech and hardware companies, mainly from Nordic and Baltic universities. Juho was an entrepreneur for years before becoming an investor, building a web tech company in the late 90s, filing a patent for browser modification, and running a Silicon Valley operation. He lives in Finland, has been involved in over 100 portfolio companies, and meets 300-400 founders annually. | |||
| Scott Finkelstein — Why Personalized Sales Will Kill the Sales Playbook | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 019 | 29 Apr 2026 | 00:56:34 | |
Most founders try to scale revenue by adding tools. Scott Finkelstein argues they're solving the wrong problem. After four decades in sales, $6 billion in career deals, and a stint as Chief Revenue Officer at PeopleFax, Scott has seen the same pattern destroy growth-stage companies again and again: founders hit a million in revenue, panic, and hire a VP of Sales to fix what's actually a systems problem. The fix doesn't stick because there's no engine underneath — no repeatable cadence, no clear ICP, no honest read on what's working. In this conversation, Scott unpacks the engine metaphor that runs through everything he teaches at Sales Scalers, his Austin-based AI sales coaching platform. He and Maxim get into why most sales methodologies are 85% the same, why founders should bring go-to-market in on day one (not after the product is built), and how the best salespeople he's ever worked with treat selling as a listening exercise rather than a pitch. If you're a founder trying to move from founder-led sales to a scalable revenue engine — or you've already made the wrong hire and you're trying to figure out what broke — this one is for you. Topics Covered
Key Insights The engine beats the tool stack every time. A junky engine that only goes 10 miles an hour will still grow your business exponentially if you run it consistently and score yourself against it. Most founders don't have a junky engine — they have no engine at all, and they're trying to add fuel. Honesty in outreach beats warm-up. Three months ago, Scott rewrote his cold messages to lead with something like "Hey, I know you're busy, so let me get straight to it — yes, I'm selling something." He started getting more no's. He also started getting more actual replies, including a LinkedIn message on a Sunday from someone saying they were finally ready to talk. The people who said no said it because he respected their time enough to be direct, and a no with engagement is worth more than a yes you had to trick out of someone. Bring go-to-market in on day one. Scott told a story about being on a panel where someone asked when founders should start thinking about go-to-market, and he said day one. The tech guy on the panel pushed back. Scott's answer was that you're building because you think you know what the world wants, but you don't actually know — you have to go find out. Five conversations with the right people, before you write the spec, will save you from building two months in the wrong direction. Links
About Scott Finkelstein Scott Finkelstein is the founder of Sales Scalers, an AI-powered sales coaching platform built on the idea that systems should adapt to how each salesperson actually sells. He has spent more than four decades in sales across investment banking and SaaS, including | |||
| Jeremy Funk — The New Rules of Growth in the AI Era | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 44 | 11 Jun 2026 | 00:50:03 | |
Jeremy Funk has spent more than two decades doing the one thing most people in tech were told to stop prioritizing: building real relationships. As founder and CEO of Funk Futures — a fractional sales, recruiting, and marketing firm rooted in the energy sector — he's earned a reputation as one of the industry's premier "super connectors." His value, as he puts it plainly, is the people in his phone who actually pick up when he calls. Based in Boulder County, Colorado, and a veteran of 85 cold calls a day early in his career, Jeremy built his business on a single non-negotiable pillar: authenticity. This conversation is important because Jeremy is using an innovative approach. As AI handles more outreach, skills like listening, curiosity, and real connection become the most valuable. For entrepreneurs trying to get big clients, build a sales process, or stand out in a world full of chatbots, Jeremy gives honest, simple advice on doing business the human way. It's part sales tips, part life lesson on building careers and raising kids in a tech-driven world. Key Topics Covered
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About the Guest Jeremy Funk is the founder and CEO of Funk Futures, a fractional sales, recruiting, and marketing firm that helps innovative companies — particularly in energy — accelerate sales, recruit top talent, and expand their market presence. A Brandeis University graduate with more than 20 years in technology and energy sales, he's recognized as one of the industry's premier connectors and a trusted advisor to founders and executives. He lives in Boulder County, Colorado, with his wife and three kids, where he's a die-hard Boston sports fan and host of multiple podcasts. | |||
| Stan Sirakov — From Underdog to Alpha | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 018 | 28 Apr 2026 | 01:00:10 | |
Stan Sirakov, a General Partner at LAUNCHub Ventures with 15+ years of venture experience, has invested in 150+ startups since 2012, mainly in regions with limited institutional VC. He founded a fintech marketplace in 2007 and helped launch Bulgaria's first incubator in 2009. His expertise covers Bulgaria, Romania, Croatia, Estonia, Greece, Poland, and more. This conversation is vital as the venture landscape shifts: the US-only focus fades, and overlooked regions produce global winners like UiPath, Wise, Rimac, Eleven Labs, Telerik, and Outfit7. Topics Covered
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Guest Bio Stan Sirakov is a General Partner at LAUNCHub Ventures, an early-stage fund in Central, Eastern, and Southeastern Europe. He founded a fintech marketplace in 2007, survived the 2008 crisis, and helped launch Bulgaria's first startup incubator in 2009. After fifteen years and 150+ investments, he's a leading seed investor in the region, focusing on diaspora founders, technical teams targeting US enterprise markets, and Series A funding critical for early-stage startups. | |||
| Ivar Skårset — The Rise of Renewable Fuels | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 017 | 27 Apr 2026 | 00:46:29 | |
Ivar Skårset, CTO of ENEnergy, is tackling the overlooked challenge of replacing fossil fuels in sectors that can't run on electricity. Coming from the Norwegian oil industry, he sought renewable fuels for heavy industry. Twenty years later, the issue persists: electricity makes up 20% of global energy, while 80% involves industries and vehicles that don't electrify quickly or cleanly. ENEnergy believes renewable fluids and lignin can help because they fit existing infrastructure. This discusses how the technology works, why Australia's Top End is ideal for testing, and why capital, not science, is now the main barrier. What we covered
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About Ivar Ivar Skårset, CTO and co-founder of ENEnergy, has nearly 20 years developing renewable fluid alternatives and lignin-based coal substitutes to decarbonize heavy industry. Starting in Norway's oil and gas sector, he believes energy solutions must work within existing systems. Based in Norway, he leads ENEnergy's technical strategy and partnerships with industrial offtakers and capital partners. | |||
| Mike Solow — Rethinking How Beverage Brands Scale | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 016 | 24 Apr 2026 | 01:03:26 | |
Mike Solow is the co-founder of 99 Proof, a boutique investment firm supporting and scaling emerging beverage alcohol brands. With over two decades of experience, he has advised more than 200 entrepreneurs in business development, sales leadership, and capital strategy. Mike works at the intersection of operators and investors within one of the most competitive and often misunderstood consumer categories. This is a good time to look at the beverage alcohol industry because it's going through big changes. Private equity investment has dropped for the first time in ten years, and revenue values have fallen from double digits to around six. Things like new health treatments, rising food costs, and catching up after COVID-19 have shifted the industry. For those starting or investing in consumer brands, Mike’s tips for handling these changes are very helpful.
The story of 99 Proof: Mike’s path from a stressful sales job to creating a company that connects family offices with alcohol entrepreneurs who have different views. Competing with industry leaders: Why small brands succeed by focusing on a specific niche and positioning themselves as attractive acquisition targets, rather than competing directly with major players. The post-COVID reset: The impact of restocking, inflation, and an influx of new founders, and why the industry is contracting rather than declining. Valuation outlook for 2026: The transition from 10-15x revenue multiples to approximately 6x, the end of inflated exit comparisons, and the need for founders to demonstrate value through tangible results. Authenticity makes brands more appealing. Today’s consumers are selective—supporting certain celebrities, caring about charity work, and preferring founders to keep the core brand qualities in-house while only outsourcing specific tasks. Key Insights The era of unlimited marketing budgets is gone. Previously, brands could quickly grow by spending heavily on advertising. Now, investors want companies to be more careful with their money and to demonstrate steady progress toward profits. As a result, strategic buyers are adjusting how they value businesses to reflect these new priorities. Taking things slowly and growing steadily is usually better than jumping into many markets at once. Founders often overlook how expensive it can be to enter multiple areas. Successful brands concentrate on building a strong local presence, test their message in one area, and then carefully expand into nearby states. Authenticity should come from within the company. The founding team needs to own the brand’s values, message, and identity. Even if manufacturing, distribution, and execution are outsourced, relying on outside firms for brand storytelling can make the brand seem inauthentic, since consumers are very aware.
Mike Solow is the co-founder of 99 Proof, a boutique investment firm focused on backing and scaling emerging beverage alcohol brands through equity, debt, and real asset structures. He brings over two decades of experience across business development, sales leadership, and capital strategy, having advised more than 200 entrepreneurs in one of the consumer's most competitive categories. Mike operates at the intersection of operators and investors, helping founders not just raise capital — but deploy it in ways that actually drive growth. | |||
| Simon Zadek — Why Climate Risk Is the Next Trillion-Dollar Market | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 015 | 24 Apr 2026 | 01:02:46 | |
Simon Zadek has over four decades shaping sustainability in capital, policy, and markets, from the 1992 Rio Summit to ethical businesses like Ben & Jerry's and The Body Shop, battles over global supply chains, advising Chinese regulators, and senior roles at the UN and G20. He founded AccountAbility and NatureFinance to measure corporate accountability and how markets view nature. Now, as Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Morphosis, he focuses on adaptation as the key capital question of the next decade. 🎯 Key Topics Covered
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👤 About the Guest Dr. Simon Zadek is Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Morphosis, a Swiss-based transformative adaptation solutions business that channels private capital into businesses serving low- and middle-income households in vulnerable regions. He is the founding CEO of NatureFinance, the founder of AccountAbility, a Senior Fellow at the Paulson Institute, a member of the Club of Rome, and a Senior Advisor to the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures. He has served as Sherpa for the G20 green finance work track under the Chinese, German, and Argentinian Presidencies and has held senior sustainable finance advisory roles in the Executive Office of the UN Secretary General. | |||
| Ben Klepacki — The Business Case for Fixing Methane at Scale | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 014 | 22 Apr 2026 | 00:51:46 | |
Ben Klepacki is the co-founder and CEO of WestGen Technologies, a Calgary-based hybrid power company that reduces up to 99% of methane venting at oil and gas sites while improving economics. A professional engineer, he started on Canada's largest wind farm but shifted focus from alternative energy to oil and gas after realizing fixing the existing system could have a greater climate impact. WestGen's flagship, the ePod, was sketched on a flight from Grande Prairie and now powers well sites across North America for clients like Painted Pony, Petronas, and Shell. Ben's journey was never easy. It began with a software startup that failed before he launched WestGen, and continued with a 2019 launch, funded entirely with his own money. The prototype from that launch was sold at cost to Painted Pony, but then oil prices plummeted into negative territory, and everything began to unravel. After a funding round, he was nearly out of cash by June 2024. And that’s when he made a decision: to return to WestGen, where he managed to turn a profit again.
Ben Klepacki is the co-founder and CEO of WestGen Technologies, a Calgary-based hybrid power generation company serving oil and gas producers across North America. A professional engineer by training, he spent his early career in wind and hydro before moving into oil and gas as a well pad design engineer, where the idea for WestGen's ePod was conceived. He led the company through near-bankruptcy, a management buyout, and a return to profitability. He now publishes weekly energy updates on LinkedIn every Friday. | |||
| Amit Jain — Building Startups That Survive the Global Market | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 013 | 21 Apr 2026 | 00:52:59 | |
Amit Jain has 20 years of experience building and scaling companies across Europe, Southeast Asia, India, and beyond. As Managing Partner at StartupBay, a Singapore-based accelerator with a presence in the Czech Republic, he has helped many founders enter global markets. He previously held leadership roles at Vodafone, developing SME and global strategies and founding ventures. His corporate and operator experience shape his view on building internationally competitive companies. This conversation is key because most founder advice on 'going global' is too abstract or US-centric. Amit covers common mistakes, capital flow in 2026, the regulatory gap between Europe and Southeast Asia, and 'deep tech' investment realities. If you're a founder, deep tech developer, or investor reconsidering your approach, this episode offers a practical, operator perspective from someone active across four continents. 3 Key Topics Covered
3 Key Insights
Reach out to Amit on LinkedIn, or learn more about StartupBay and our work at the links below. StartupBay: https://www.startupbay.tech/ Amit Jain on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/amitj00/ Future Ventures Corp: futureventures.ca Capital Intelligence Platform: capital.futureventures.ca Amit Jain is Managing Partner at StartupBay, a Singapore-headquartered accelerator and venture studio he co-founded in 2016. StartupBay started as an early-stage accelerator, moved into venture studio work, and now runs a global market entry program for founders scaling into Southeast Asia, Europe, and beyond. Before StartupBay, Amit spent years at Vodafone leading SME and global business strategy, with stints building and running his own ventures in between. He splits his time between Singapore and the Czech Republic, and spends a lot of it on planes, meeting founders in person. | |||
| Vincent Kuiper— Scaling Foodtech Beyond the Pilot | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 011 | 20 Apr 2026 | 00:59:12 | |
At 16, Vincent Kuiper received a €50 brokerage account from his father for his birthday. He become interested in finance, studying quantitative finance and accounting. He then became an equity analyst at a private bank in Amsterdam, spent three years at H2 Equity Partners, where he explored 35 to 40 niche industries and managed a buy-and-build program. After earning an MBA at IE Business School in Madrid, he has a strong financial background for someone in early-stage food, focusing on unit economics before storytelling. Gota Ventures, co-founded by him and Cristina De Mendietta during their MBA, combines Cristina's industry expertise with a network of 56 angels, family offices, and businesses across 15 countries. They invest $150K to $500K in early-stage food tech and CPG companies, leveraging her family's international trading business of ingredients and retail products. What Vincent Unpacks
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About the Guest Vincent Kuiper is the Founding Partner of Gota Ventures, an early-stage food tech and CPG investment syndicate supporting the next generation of food and consumer brands across Europe and beyond. Originally from Amsterdam and now based in Madrid, he has 13 years of investing experience, including public equity analysis and private equity at H2 Equity Partners, as well as angel investing through Gota. He publishes a weekly Substack exploring successful CPG exits and their patterns. | |||
| Ankit Anand — Investing Before the Market Understands It | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 010 | 16 Apr 2026 | 00:58:35 | |
Ankit Anand doesn't fit the typical venture capital mold. He started his career as a physics teacher in India, moved to Europe to work on gravitational wave research at ETH Zurich, co-founded a medical technology company, and only then — after years of operating and angel investing — ended up as Founding Partner at Riceberg Ventures. Today, Riceberg backs breakthrough deep tech companies across space, cybersecurity, AI, life science, and frontier industries — often writing the first check before a company is even incorporated. This conversation matters because Ankit brings a rare lens to early-stage investing: the discipline of a trained scientist, the scar tissue of an operator, and a global perspective that spans Europe, India, and the United States. For founders raising capital — or investors thinking about how to back hard technology — he offers an unusually clear framework for how to separate breakthrough companies from noise, and why the VC game is fundamentally a trust business, not a finance one. Key Topics Covered
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About Ankit Anand Ankit is Founding Partner at Riceberg Ventures. He came to venture the long way — teaching physics in India, then doing gravitational wave research at ETH Zurich on the LIGO project, then co-founding a medical technology company in Europe. Riceberg writes first checks into deep tech founders, often before the company is even registered, and invests globally out of offices across Europe, India, and the U.S. | |||
| Debneel Mukherjee — Inside a Global VC Playbook | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 009 | 15 Apr 2026 | 01:01:16 | |
Debneel Mukherjee is the kind of investor most founders never get access to — a former CPA turned self-taught coder turned operator turned venture capitalist, now running Decacorn.VC from Singapore, with roughly 85% of his portfolio deployed in the United States. His career spans nearly three decades across banking, fintech operations, and global private tech investing, and he's built a track record that includes early bets on companies such as Palantir, Mapbox, ThoughtSpot, BioCatch, and SpaceX — well before most of those names became consensus trades. He currently holds two portfolio companies in the S&P 500. The reason we wanted Debneel on the show is simple — he doesn't invest the way most VCs do, and he'll tell you exactly why. He won't touch institutional money. He doesn't limit himself to what's within driving distance. And he's not interested in markets that already exist. His whole thesis is built on first principles: find the bottleneck, find the founder crazy enough to solve it, and then get out of their way. Most investors talk about being contrarian. Debneel actually built a fund around it — from Singapore, into the US, with the patience to hold through the storms that shake everyone else out. Key Topics Covered
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Guest Bio Debneel Mukherjee founded Decaco | |||
| Robin Smith — Moving from B2B SaaS to Tech Enabled Services | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 008 | 13 Apr 2026 | 01:01:32 | |
Robin Smith, a 20-year enterprise software veteran, has worked through all ownership models—bootstrapped, venture-backed, private equity, and public. Most recently, as COO of a PE-backed portco with 1,000+ employees, he led over €200 million in acquisitions during an 18-month roll-up. Now in his mid-40s, he left that world to pursue entrepreneurship through acquisition and found that AI is rewriting the playbook for buying mission-critical software businesses. What makes this conversation worth your time is where Robin is standing right now. He knows how PE deals actually work — from the inside, not from a pitch deck. He watched AI gut the economics of traditional SaaS in real time. And he's acting on it, building Stayd as a B Corp roll-up of holiday home agencies in the UK with a thesis that most of the market is still sleeping on. He doesn't sugarcoat the deal that fell apart, he's blunt about where software valuations are headed, and his thinking on outcome-based pricing is ahead of the curve. This is one of the more honest conversations we've had on the show. 5 Key Topics Covered
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Guest Bio Robin Smith is the Managing Partner of Corinium Capital and the Founder of Stayd, a B Corp roll-up of | |||
| Emilia De Stasio - The Democratization of Wealth Through Art | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 43 | 10 Jun 2026 | 00:57:33 | |
Emilia de Stasio spent years working in finance at places like the European Central Bank and Moody's, but she later turned her focus to a market that has very little data. As a long-time art collector, she often found it hard to get reliable information to decide if a piece was a good buy. Frustrated by this, she co-founded Artscapy, a platform that aims to bring clarity, organization, and data to an industry that's usually known for being secretive and exclusive. This conversation is important because Emilia is in a unique position. She understands both how to build a portfolio and weigh risks versus rewards, but she also cares about art genuinely and refuses to let the financial side ignore the human aspect. Her approach offers a straightforward guide for anyone wondering if art has a place in a serious investment portfolio, how to include it without getting burned, and what it takes to shake up an industry that's been resistant to change for many years. For founders and investors, it also teaches how to create a strong data advantage and use AI to generate real value. Key topics covered
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About the guest Emilia de Stasio is the co-founder and COO of Artscapy, a platform that makes it easier for people to buy, manage, finance, and invest in art. She has experience working at the European Central Bank, Moody's, and family offices that invest in alternative assets. Emilia is passionate about collecting art and wants to make the art market more open, understandable, and based on data. | |||
| Kim Anders Odhner — Where the Smart Money in Food-Tech Is Going | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 007 | 10 Apr 2026 | 01:02:13 | |
Kim Anders Odhner is the Managing Partner for Europe and Asia at Unovis Asset Management, a leading alternative protein investment fund. Before relocating to Amsterdam, Kim spent 25 years in Southeast Asia, developing expertise in emerging-markets private equity — backing early-stage companies, staying involved post-investment, and understanding food systems across diverse economies. He co-founded the New Crop Capital Trust with Chris Kerr and has been investing in food tech since the sector's early days, with investments in Beyond Meat, Oatly, Mosa Meat, and Aleph Farms. This conversation is important because the food tech investment scene has changed significantly. The 2021–2022 hype has cooled, early-stage funding is scarce, and the idea that "build it and they will come" has been tested — often unsuccessfully. Kim combines frontier-market investing discipline with deep food-system knowledge that cuts through the noise. Whether you're a food tech founder, an investor, or just wondering how we'll feed 10 billion people by 2050, this episode provides clarity. These are some of the key topics covered:
Some of the insights from our talk were:
Links & Resources: Learn more about Kim and the organizations mentioned in this episode:
About the Guest Kim Anders Odhner runs Unovis Asset Management's Europe and Asia practice. He backed companies like Beyond Meat, Oatly, and Mosa Meat before most investors knew alternative protein was a category. Before Amsterdam, he spent 25 years doing private equity deals across Vietnam, Hong Kong, and Singapore — and he's now raising Unovis's third fund to back food tech companies at the growth stage. | |||
| Dr. Henry Erdley — Turning "Undruggable" Cancer Targets into Precision Therapies | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 006 | 07 Apr 2026 | 00:56:55 | |
Dr. Henry Erdlei is a physician-scientist pushing the boundaries of cancer immunotherapy. An alumnus of Charité Medical School and a researcher at the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine in Berlin, Henry has dedicated years to engineering immune cells to hunt and destroy tumors — and he is now applying that expertise to GoCART Therapeutics, a biotech startup developing a modular CAR-T cell platform that could revolutionize cancer treatment. His work sits at the crossroads of biology, engineering, and AI-driven drug design. This conversation highlights CAR-T therapy, a highly effective cancer treatment not yet available for 70% of cancer types. Targeting antigens on vital tissues like the brain and bone marrow is risky, but GoCART's 'AND gate' system requires two antigens for activation, enabling it to target 'undruggable' cancers. Henry discusses the science, business plan, funding, and his views on drug regulation in straightforward language. KEY TOPICS COVERED 1. The Undruggable Antigen Problem: Why 70% of cancer types can't be treated with current CAR-T therapy — and how the best tumor markers are also found on tissues you can't afford to destroy. 2. GoCART's AND Gate: Dual-Antigen Recognition. How GoCART's modular system needs two antigens on a cell for activation, allowing precise tumor targeting without collateral damage. 3. AI-Driven Peptide Engineering at Scale: How machine learning enabled GoCART to analyze 180,000 trimeric sequences computationally — a process that would have cost over €200M in laboratory work — and reduce it to 20 validated candidates. 4. The Platform Business Model: Why GoCART is building the "operating system" for CAR-T therapy — a single universal cell product with swappable binders — and how partners can develop and sell binders on the platform. 5. Rethinking Drug Regulation: Henry's argument that the orphan approval pathway should become the standard: provide treatments to patients after Phase II with informed consent, conduct Phase IV surveillance on the market, and significantly reduce costs. KEY INSIGHTS 1. The real challenge in cancer immunotherapy isn't whether CAR-T cells are effective — it's that most of the best targets for treatment are also found on healthy tissue, meaning the therapy could destroy vital organs along with the tumor. GoCART's dual-recognition system eliminates this limitation. 2. Personalized medicine doesn't have to mean creating a new drug for each patient. By modularizing the system — one universal CAR-T cell, many interchangeable binders — GoCART provides patient-specific treatment on an industrial scale, with the potential to reduce costs from $800K to just a few thousand over time. 3. The current Phase III clinical trial requirement adds hundreds of millions in costs and years of delay before patients can access treatments that are already proven effective after Phase II. Moving to a market-while-monitoring model could deliver effective therapies to patients more quickly, generate more comprehensive real-world data, and lower drug prices overall. LINKS
GUEST BIO Dr. Henry Erdlei is the Co-Founder of GoCART Therapeutics, a Berlin-based biotech startup developing a modular CAR-T cell platform to advance precision cancer immunotherapy. He is a physician-scientist trained at the Charité Medical School and the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine (Helmholtz), where his research focused on engineering immune cells for tumor targeting. | |||
| Oded Agam — The NextLeap Ventures Model for Deep Tech Investing | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 005 | 01 Apr 2026 | 01:02:46 | |
Oded Agam | NextLeap Ventures — Deep Tech Investing, the Intel AI Miss, and Building Innovation Ecosystems Oded Agam is one of those rare investors who has actually built what he now funds. With 35 years spanning Israeli startups, Fortune 50 strategic planning at Intel, and early-stage deep tech investing through NextLeap Ventures, Oded brings an operator's lens to every deal. He led Intel's Strategic Technologies Group — the unit responsible for identifying and incubating transformational technologies — and drove strategic planning for product lines generating over $30 billion in revenue. When he left Intel in 2017, he called four former colleagues and started a venture fund. This conversation matters because Oded doesn't deal in theory. He walks through how NextLeap narrows nearly 1,000 startups down to three investments per cycle, why he pitched a $300 million AI program to Intel leadership in 2014 that could have changed the chip industry's trajectory, and what founders consistently get wrong in a pitch. Whether you're raising capital or refining your investment thesis, this is a masterclass in disciplined deep tech investing from someone who has sat on both sides of the table. Key Topics Covered
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Guest Bio Oded Agam is the Managing Partner and Founder of NextLeap Ventures, an Israeli-based early-stage deep tech venture fund with 26 portfolio companies and three successful exits — including acquisitions by Synopsys, Nano Dimension, and Dell. Before founding NextLeap in 2017, he spent over 11 years at Intel, leading strategic planning for product lines generating more than 80% of Intel's global revenue and heading the Strategic Technologies Group. | |||
| Charles Cormier — Inside the New Founder Playbook | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 004 | 01 Apr 2026 | 00:23:06 | |
EP004 — Charles Cormier on Systems, Cold Email, and Why Most Founders Get Fundraising Wrong Charles Cormier is a founder who doesn’t wait for permission. As CEO of RaasRocket and founder of GTM Ventures and the Podbuyer podcast network, he’s learned that fundraising today is just as much about the systems you build as the people you know. In this episode, he sits down with Maxim Atanassov to unpack why traditional approaches like warm intros and VC lunches often fall flat—and what to do instead. His take is simple, practical, and grounded in real outcomes, all shaped by a first-principles, energy-efficient way of working. We dig into how capital markets have shifted: hype alone is no longer enough to get you funded, and a lot of founders haven’t caught up. Charles has worked with hundreds of founders on fundraising and go-to-market strategy and keeps seeing the same patterns show up again and again. Here are a few of the most interesting things we cover:
3 Key Insights These are some of the key insights from our talk:
About Charles Cormier Charles Cormier is a serial entrepreneur, CEO of RaasRocket, and founder of GTM Ventures and the Podbuyer podcast network. He helps founders raise capital and speed up their go-to-market efforts through systems-driven cold outreach, strategic podcasting, and first-principles thinking. | |||
| Paul Claxton — From Combat Tours to Term Sheets: Paul Claxton on Founders, Capital, and AI | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 003 | 30 Mar 2026 | 01:04:29 | |
From Combat Tours to Term Sheets: Paul Claxton on Founders, Capital, and AI Guest: Paul Anthony Claxton, Managing Partner, Digerati Investments
Paul Anthony Claxton didn't follow the usual route into venture capital. He served four combat tours in Iraq as a United States Marine — including leading a command intelligence center where he observed the early days of drone warfare — before enduring six years of corporate layoffs, building a bootstrapped company to $20K MRR in three months, and eventually moving into early-stage investing. Today, he manages Digerati Investments, a $60 million AI-focused seed and Series A fund based in Southern California. This conversation is worth your time because Paul operates at a rare intersection: operator empathy, military-grade discipline, and a genuine sophistication around capital strategy that most early-stage investors don't bring to the table. He's not interested in hype. He's interested in founders who understand what they're building, why they're raising, and whether venture capital is even the right tool for their business — a conversation most of the industry is still too afraid to have.
1. Mental toughness is the true competitive advantage. The Marine Corps taught Paul that the toughest challenges are conquered brick by brick — with speed, intensity, and relentless focus on the smallest details. That same approach guides how he evaluates founders today. 2. Venture capital is not the default answer. Many founders assume that starting a company requires raising VC. Paul argues that understanding the complete capital stack — debt, ARR financing, venture debt, angel investment — and knowing why you're choosing VC is one of the most crucial hard skills a founder can develop. 3. AI is in its foundation-building phase — and most of what's out there won't survive it. Paul's view: the companies being built between now and roughly 2030 will serve as the foundational layer of the AI era — the next Googles and PayPals. Everything else driven by hype, lacking genuine utility or real-world impact, will fade away.
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| Ray Fitzpatrick — Why Most Startups Don't Get Funded (And What to Do About It) | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 002 | 30 Mar 2026 | 00:48:43 | |
Ray Fitzpatrick, Founder & CEO, Profitual Ray Fitzpatrick spent ten years writing checks to startups as Director of Investments at NBIF — New Brunswick's pre-seed venture capital fund — and observed the same issue recurring across hundreds of companies. Founders excelled at developing products but struggled to grasp their own finances. This wasn’t due to laziness, but because no accessible tool existed for non-finance professionals to use effectively. That's the challenge Profitual aims to address. This discussion extends far beyond the product itself. Ray is a CPA and a serial entrepreneur managing three businesses at once, with firsthand experience on both sides of the investor table. His insights into fundraising, co-founder relationships, cap table design, and what financial literacy truly means for a scaling founder are rooted in real-world experience — not just theory. If you're building a company and have ever felt nervous when your investor asked about burn rate or runway, this is for you. Key Topics Covered
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About Ray Fitzpatrick Ray Fitzpatrick is the Founder and CEO of Profitual, a financial forecasting and reporting platform for startup founders and SME operators without a finance background. A CPA, Ray spent a decade as Director of Investments at NBIF, participating in over 200 financings and helping build a portfolio of 75 startups in New Brunswick. He's also a co-founder of Quantified Accounting and Devil's Keep Distillery, dedicating his time to developing Profitual and mentoring future founders. | |||
| David Kofoed Wind- From EdTech Exit to AI Agents: Scaling on Your Own Terms | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 001 | 30 Mar 2026 | 00:55:59 | |
From EdTech Exit to AI Agents: Scaling on Your Own Terms with David Kofoed Wind Guest: David Kofoed Wind ·(Founder of Agentwork) David Kofoed Wind has accomplished what most founders only talk about — building two companies from scratch, taking them through Y Combinator, scaling them responsibly without overextending on headcount, and selling one of them. He's a mathematician with a PhD in machine learning, a former CERN collaborator, and someone who has been seriously considering AI since he was thirteen. Now he's back in the game with Agentwork, a company rethinking how work gets done when AI and humans work together side by side. This conversation is valuable for founders trying to understand where AI genuinely fits into their operations — not just the hype, but the real substance. David speaks plainly about what has changed, what stays the same, and why pursuing headcount growth was never a smart move. He has been working at the forefront of this shift longer than most, and his insights on distribution, moats, and the future of digital work are based on hard-earned experience rather than speculation. Topics covered
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About David Kofoed Wind David Kofoed Wind is the founder of Agentwork, a human-in-the-loop AI platform designed for business teams that need complex work done reliably and at scale. He previously co-founded Peergrade and Eduflow, both Y Combinator companies that grew through product-led growth and were ultimately acquired by Mountiverse. David holds a PhD in machine learning and brings a rare combination of deep technical fluency and operator experience to every problem he addresses. | |||
| Dave Guttman — From Terminal Diagnosis to 9-Figure Exits | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 42 | 09 Jun 2026 | 00:55:27 | |
Dave Guttman has spent more than three decades building, scaling, acquiring, and exiting businesses — racking up multiple 8- and 9-figure outcomes along the way. But the thing that shaped how he operates wasn't a deal. At 24, fresh off an acceptance to Wharton, three doctors misdiagnosed him and told him he had six months to live. He survived, and the experience rewired his definition of success from accumulation to impact. That shift is the throughline of this conversation. Why this one matters: Guttman is rare in that he speaks fluently in both registers founders actually need — the hard mechanics of raising capital, building budgets, and engineering an exit, and the harder questions of what you're scaling toward in the first place. He's blunt about where most founders go wrong (no financial model, raising too little money, mistaking confidence for competence), candid about AI as both a force multiplier and a genuine risk, and refreshingly unsentimental about legacy. If you're scaling a company and quietly wondering whether the climb is worth it, this is a conversation worth your time. Key Topics Covered
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| Samir Musayev — How Inmigrants Drive Canada's Entrepreneurial Future | FV Podcast Ep. 41 | 08 Jun 2026 | 00:53:41 | |
Dr. Samir Musayev has built a career helping businesses think well beyond their home turf. As Commercial Account Director at Export Development Canada (EDC), he works hands-on with Canadian companies navigating the messy reality of global trade — financing, risk, and the practical mechanics most founders badly underestimate. Originally from Baku, Azerbaijan, and now based in Calgary, he brings an international lens shaped by years in finance and business development across borders. He also hosts the Global Nomads podcast, where he unpacks entrepreneurship, leadership, and the stories of people building companies across borders. This episode explains why many Canadian companies want to start exporting but often don't follow through. The reasons are usually different from what founders expect. Samir says the main challenges are not money, but lack of knowledge, paperwork problems, and thinking export is just a one-time effort instead of a long-term plan. With tariffs changing the Canada–US relationship and the need to diversify, this episode offers practical advice for any founder wanting to expand beyond Canada. Key Topics Covered
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About the Guest Dr. Samir Musayev is a Commercial Account Director at Export Development Canada. He helps Canadian companies get funding, reduce risks, and grow into international markets. Originally from Baku, Azerbaijan, now living in Calgary, he has experience in finance and trade, helping businesses expand across borders. He also hosts the Global Nomads podcast, where he talks with entrepreneurs and professionals who are building their lives and businesses around the world. | |||
| Nicola Redi — Why Europe’s Deep Tech Moment Is Just Beginning | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 40 | 22 May 2026 | 00:50:18 | |
Italy is known for sun, food, and culture. What it isn't known for — and should be — is being one of the top research nations on the planet. Nicola Redi has built his career on closing that gap. As Managing Partner at Obloo Ventures, one of Italy's leading deep tech VC firms, he spends his days translating breakthroughs in AI, quantum, aerospace, and computational science into companies that can actually scale. With nearly three decades spanning venture capital, corporate innovation, and research commercialization — including 15 years inside multinational corporations — Nicola sees the entire pipeline from lab bench to market in a way few investors can. This isn't just an Italian story. Europe and Canada both produce world-class research, then watch a lot of it get commercialized somewhere else — usually the US. Nicola is direct about why that keeps happening and what would actually have to change to stop it. He's also clear-eyed about where the real money in deep tech will be made next, and how to tell that apart from whatever everyone happens to be hyping this quarter. If you're building, operating, or investing, that filter alone makes this one worth your time. Key Topics Covered
Key Insights Technology is a small part of the job. One of Nicola's founders — a top bio-robotics researcher — came back years after launching his company to admit the technology was only about 5% of the work. Market adoption, team-building, and execution are where companies actually win or lose. The real value is in the specifics. The categories everyone's talking about are usually overpriced just because everyone's talking about them. What Nicola actually gets excited about is deep tech aimed at narrow industrial problems — simulating new materials, running predictive maintenance through digital twins, and quantum built for one specific job. That's where the valuation reflects what a company can really do, not just the hype around it. Government's most powerful lever isn't incentives — it's buying. Nicola argues the biggest shift isn't more grants or funds-of-funds, but governments and corporations acting as launch customers for startups. As competitive pressure rises, the relationship between incumbents and early-stage companies is becoming a matter of survival: either you engage, or you get left behind. Links & Resources
About the Guest Nicola Redi is Managing Partner at Obloo Ventures, one of Italy's leading deep tech venture capital firms focused on translating frontier science into scalable companies. He brings nearly three decades of experience across venture capital, corporate innovation, and research commercialization, with deep roots in scientific entrepreneurship and 15 years inside multinational corporations. His work sits at the intersection of advanced research, industrial transformation, and venture creation across AI, quantum computing, aerospace, biotech, and computational science. | |||
| Tom Milar — The Infrastructure Behind Startup Ownership | FV Podcast Ep. 39 | 21 May 2026 | 00:47:34 | |
Tom Milar has spent over a decade building infrastructure for private companies — first through incorporation services out of Hong Kong and Las Vegas, and now through Eqvista, a valuation and equity management platform serving 23,000 startups. After a successful acquisition, Tom took five of his most important team members and set out to fix a problem he kept running into himself: founders were managing ownership and valuation off static PDFs and Excel sheets, working from data that was already months out of date by the time it landed. Eqvista's answer is a real-time valuation engine that now values $4 trillion in assets and gives founders, employees, and investors a live look at what their company is actually worth — like a stock ticker for private companies. This conversation matters because valuation sits underneath almost every consequential decision a founder makes — raising, hiring, issuing equity, planning an exit — and most founders are working with a number that's stale, opaque, or both. Tom brings a rare combination of product obsession and financial discipline to the table, having bootstrapped Eqvista to scale on roughly half a million dollars rather than chasing rounds. For any founder thinking about their cap table, their next raise, or how to give their team real liquidity, this episode is a clear-eyed look at where private markets are heading. Key Topics Covered
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About Tom Milar Tom Milar is the Founder and CEO of Eqvista, a platform for company valuation, equity management, and private-market liquidity serving 23,000 startups. Originally from the Czech Republic, he moved to Asia in 2009 and built incorporation-services businesses before launching Eqvista with a core team carried over from a prior successful exit. He is a product-first founder who scaled the company through bootstrapping, freemium adoption, and a real-time valuation engine that now values $4 trillion in assets. | |||
| Mathew Jackson — Building Circular Systems That Scale | Future Ventures Podcast Ep. 12 | 20 May 2026 | 01:13:23 | |
Matthew Jackson is the co-founder and Chief Commercial Officer of Alimentary Systems, a New Zealand company rethinking how the world handles organic waste and sewage. An Edmund Hillary Fellow with a track record of building and scaling high-growth ventures across global markets, Matthew has helped drive billions in market value creation — including bringing Netflix to New Zealand and triggering a wave of industry convergence that reshaped the local media landscape. But what makes this conversation matter isn't the resume. It's the way Matthew thinks about impact, risk, and the responsibility of building something that outlasts you. This episode switches between two styles, which makes it interesting. First, it honestly tells the personal story of the founder — his childhood, losing his father at 15, studying process philosophy, and the daily habits that help him stay steady during tough times. Then, it explains one of the smartest business ideas we've discussed: a system that turns sewage and industrial waste into fertilizer, energy, and carbon credits, all at a lower cost than landfills. If you want to see what real product-market fit looks like — where investors, cities, residents, and the environment all benefit — this is a good place to start. Some of the key topics covered in this episode were:
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About the Guest Matthew Jackson is the co-founder and Chief Commercial Officer of Alimentary Systems, where he's building circular waste-to-energy infrastructure across global markets. A four-time founder and Edmund Hillary Fellow, he has helped generate billions in market value, from pioneering media access in New Zealand to advancing climate-positive sanitation technology. He works closely with Indigenous communities on water security and is driven by a single conviction: that the best ventures make an impact and return the same thing. | |||