Village Global's Venture Stories show

Village Global's Venture Stories

Summary: Village Global's Venture Stories takes you inside the world of venture capital and technology, featuring enlightening interviews with entrepreneurs, investors and tech industry leaders. The podcast is hosted by Village Global partner and co-founder Erik Torenberg. Check us out on the web at villageglobal.vc/podcast for more.

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Podcasts:

 Web 3 Series: How Macro will Impact Crypto with Travis Kling | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3440

Travis Kling (@travis_kling) of Ikigai Asset Management joins Erik on this episode. Takeaways:- Bitcoin’s value proposition is the most challenged in the five years that Travis has been paying attention to it. It has underperformed in the market downturn and turned out not to be as much of an inflation hedge as people thought.- Bitcoin loves quantitative easing and hates quantitative tightening.- Travis figures that we are headed into a recession.- The single biggest driver for crypto will be the Fed.- Bitcoin is the only crypto that isn’t a venture bet.- There are a large number of risks heading into the Ethereum merge in Travis’s opinion. At the same time there are more institutional investors willing to buy than at any time prior.- Travis and team are captivated by play-to-earn and X-to-earn and think that it will reimagine human coordination over the next decade.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary on the latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 The Rare Earths Threat with Nathan Picarsic | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2312

Nathan Picarsic, co-founder of Horizon Advisory, joins Lucas Bagno and Ian Cinnamon on this episode of Solarpunk. Takeaways: - There are 17 rare earth metals that are of immense strategic importance. They are used in a vast array of everyday products like consumer electronics, medical devices, electric vehicles, and more.- China has a strong influence in this space. They have many mines but are even more dominant downstream — they control much of the processing of these metals and the manufacturing of products from them.- Nathan says there should be more awareness of the geopolitical risks associated with rare earth metals, there should be more investment in the space within the US, and the US should work with its partners and allies to help secure the supply chain.- China’s ambitions to control rare earth metals intersect with their Belt and Road initiative and their Made in China 2025 strategies.- Nathan says that the US needs policy changes to combat this threat, including changes to the tax code to incentivize investment, encouraging more domestic and allied materials in the supply chain, using the Defense Production Act, and monitoring market manipulation by China.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary onthe latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Web 3 Series: The Transformative Power of Smart Contracts with Joel Monegro | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3594

Joel Monegro (@jmonegro), partner at Placeholder, joins Erik on this episode. Takeaways:- Every financial asset is a contract between two or more people. The world economy is basically a set of contracts on a ledger.- A smart contract is like an API, but on-chain, so it can’t be taken down. In many cases, not even the developers can retract a smart contract.- Value capture and value accrual are two different things — capture is where the value is stored and accrual is where it is going. This is something that is often misunderstood about the fat protocols thesis.- The best way to think about smart contract networks is as nations. They enforce contracts the way nations do and in Joel’s opinion the ones that are most sovereign are the ones that are most decentralized.- Over time functionality and performance will come to be similar between networks and it is trust and governance that will differentiate them.- Joel expects 4-6 very large smart contract networks to emerge.- The core of decentralized social will be NFTs. The recent NFT craze reminds Joel of the ICO boom of 2017. Many were useless but there were lots of protocols and communities that remained.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary onthe latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Steve Blank on Rebuilding the Department of Defense | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3143

Steve Blank (@sgblank), creator of Hacking For Defense and author of 4 Steps To The Epiphany, joins Lucas Bagno and Ian Cinnamon on this episode of Solarpunk. Takeaways:- The secret history of Silicon Valley is that it emerged from the government’s desire to develop advanced technology and weapons in universities during World War II.- Stanford became a powerhouse in microwaves and electronics post-WWII. People were encouraged to leave to start companies, which kickstarted Silicon Valley.- The Department of Defense needs a radical redesign. Steve says the US can’t even keep pace with innovation in North Korea, let alone China.- The DoD was designed for a different world. China currently operates like Silicon Valley and the DoD operates like GM.- The “game is fixed” against small startups trying to sell to the government.- Steve says things typically don’t change unless there’s a leadership change or a crisis, and that the US is lying to itself about China and how fast it is advancing.- Billionaires like Peter Thiel, Palmer Luckey, and Elon Musk have accomplished “miracles” building companies in the defense space in spite of how the system is designed. Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary on the latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Antonio Garcia-Martinez on Why Ads are an Inevitable Part of Web 3 | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2141

Antonio Garcia-Martinez (@antoniogm), author of The Pull Request, joins Erik Torenberg and Ian Cinnamon on this episode. Takeaways:- The first version of ads on the web, banner ads, looked like ads in the newspaper, because often the new version of media looks like the last version of media — that’s skeuomorphism.- Apple’s app tracking transparency is breaking the model for Facebook and Snap.- Antonio says there won’t be a media ecosystem in Web 3 without attribution.- The advent of balanced and nuanced journalism decades ago was a luxury born of ads.- We will likely live in a Web 2.5 world for a while where incumbents won’t lose their fiefdoms but there will be new experiences and new spaces to conquer.- Web 3 is both private and public — Visa doesn’t post all your transactions the way on-chain payments reveal them.- The average user trades privacy for other things and as the scale of Web 3 grows, privacy will likely become less of a focus.Antonio’s posts on ads and Web 3:Attribution rules the world (and it'll rule Web3 too)https://www.thepullrequest.com/p/attribution-rules-the-world-and-itllEverything is an ad network: How to pay for Web 3https://www.thepullrequest.com/p/everything-is-an-ad-networkThanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary on the latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Web 3 Series: The Trillion Dollar Opportunity to Reshape Money with Avichal Garg | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3533

Avichal Garg (@avichal), founder of Electric Capital, joins Erik on this episode. Takeaways:- Downturns impact large companies much more than founders and early stage investors because the companies are so small relative to their total addressable market.- Managing your own psychology in a downturn is the most important skill for a founder in these times.- Crypto is like a platypus — it has properties of growth tech, a store of value, and commodities.- People in the US sometimes look at crypto and don’t see the use case but for those people around the world who are not on the US dollar, the use cases for crypto are clearer.- Crypto is an important technological breakthrough but more importantly is also a social science breakthrough: people are exchanging money for ones and zeros.- The transformation of money by crypto will start at the fringes rather than replacing conventional money all at once. It will start with young people, the wealthy, and the underserved.- An AI with a smart contract acting on chain managing a billion dollars in a non-jurisdctional way will be very disruptive.- In the future people will signal status in digitally, with NFTs rather than watches.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary onthe latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Web3 Series: The Next Chapter for DAOs, Gaming, and Crypto Communities with Jeff Morris Jr. | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2861

Jeff Morris Jr. (@jmj), investor at Chapter One, joins Erik Torenberg and co-host Ian Cinnamon. Takeaways:- Jeff realized the power of subscriptions during his time at Tinder. He says that digital goods are an even better version of subscriptions.- Web3 is almost entirely missing mobile usability.- Crypto apps could add a reputation layer to existing Web2 use cases, like dating apps.- People are still using Web 2.0 community products to create communities for Web3.- Web3 games need to move away from speculation and towards building genuine player enjoyment.- Seed investors need to be creative but also mindful of what other people will invest in. It’s important to understand business models and what is sustainable.- Corrections help to reset the whole ecosystem.- It’s hard to unseat the dominant marketplace, whether in Web 2.0 or Web3.- Crypto is big enough that even if you aren’t a crypto investor, you should be spending some time in the space.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary onthe latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Web3 Series: How Music Will Drive Web3 with Cooper Turley | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3132

Cooper Turley (@Cooopahtroopa) joins Erik on this episode. Takeaways:- Cooper believes that in 5-10 years music streaming will all be happening on chain.- Cooper cares much more about where culture is happening and where people are spending their time than about underlying technology.- DAOs need to prove that they can help people ship products better than private groups. They may not replace Microsoft but they can mobilize people around smaller niche categories.- Web 1 was the “read” web, Web 2 was “read and write” and Web3 will be “read, write, and own.”- Music has driven other platforms and it will drive Web3.- Music artists will have to be more like CEOs of a company rather than just creators.- Lots of crypto projects will struggle in a bear market when all they had to offer was profit, rather than underlying value.- Culture is becoming finance. There will be the advent of “patronage plus” which allows for someone to own the upside of something rather than just owning the experience.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary onthe latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Our Hypersonic Future with Hermeus’ AJ Piplica | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3099

AJ Piplica (@AJ_Piplica), founder and CEO of Hermeus, joins Lucas Bagno and Ian Cinnamon on this episode. Takeaways:- Every time there has been an acceleration in the speed of transportation in history, high GDP growth has followed.- A switch to hypersonic transportation would unlock $4T in growth.- In the future the key differentiator in air travel will be speed, rather than comfort.- It’s currently extremely expensive to do flight testing at hypersonic speeds — $5-10M for only a few seconds of data.- In the 40s and through the Cold War, there were new aircrafts released every few years, but since then the pace of innovation has slowed significantly.- Cost-plus contracts are very comfortable for companies and create perverse incentives.- We are in the midst of a techno-economic pursuit in hypersonic transport and whichever country gets there first gets to write the rules.- The immense amount of political strife in this country keeps AJ up at night but unity amongst smaller cohorts of people working on challenges at a global scale keeps him optimistic.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary onthe latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Building a World-Changing Labor Marketplace with Mike Shebat of Traba | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1762

Mike Shebat (@mike_sheb), co-founder and CEO of Traba, joins Erik Torenberg and Lucas Bagno on this episode. Takeaways:- There is a huge problem with meeting demand for workers at warehouses and fulfilment centres. There are 75% more jobs in those fields after the pandemic.- Mike worked in warehousing and helped scale UberEats so has strong founder-market fit. Traba’s mission of connecting people to work is very meaningful to him.- Mike met his co-founder Akshay through the On Deck Fellowship and they started working on projects together and did an extensive values questionnaire, both of which were very helpful when it comes to founder cohesion.- They have emphasized company values from day one and hired for people who share those values, which has paid dividends.- Mike recommends building trust with your existing investors by sharing challenges and how you plan to solve them. He recommends bringing your existing investors along for the ride into future rounds.- Mike calls Miami “Singapore and New York in Latin America” and loves the optimistic attitude of the people there.- When hiring, Mike looks for people with a high slope and asks them “what was something your manager wanted you to improve on a few years ago and what did you do to become better at it?”- Mike’s vision for a Traba mafia, akin to the PayPal mafia, some of whose members are backing Traba.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary on the latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 SBIRs, PORs, and Lobbyists with Peter Newell | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2631

Peter Newell (@PeterANewell), CEO of BMNT, joins Lucas Bagno and Ian Cinnamon on this episode of Solarpunk. Takeaways:- Peter was “handed the Ferrari of skunkworks” when he came to be in charge of the Rapid Equipping Force. It was a program that handled over a billion dollars to deploy new technologies.- He became more of an entrepreneur after his time at the REF and that led to starting BMNT.- Often times procurement in the US military is HQ-centric and product-centric and does not take into account the needs of the people on the ground.- The acquisition system that was built in the 1950s in the US presumes that the military can perfectly understand the problem and build a perfect solution for it. However, this takes much too long to deploy and isn’t suited for modern times.- A founder can’t go all-in on selling to government — they have to be able to build for both government and commercial.- Often times companies will receive indefinite delivery contracts where it is unclear how much money they will actually receive. You might land a budget with SOCOM but it’s hard to actually get the dollars out of Congress.- Hiring a lobbyist to educate you on the processes and people within the US government is a good idea but hiring a lobbyist to do business development for you is often not the right approach.- It’s best to invest in building networks in VC and at DoD before hiring consultants.- Not having enough people to do the advanced manufacturing that the US needs keeps Peter up at night.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary onthe latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Web3 Series: JD Ross and 3LAU on How Royal is Transforming The Artist-Fan Relationship | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2889

JD Ross (@justindross) and Justin Blau (@3LAU), co-founders of Royal, join Erik Torenberg and co-host Ian Cinnamon for this episode of our web3 series. Takeaways:- Royal stems from their vision to invest in talent early on.- Streaming increased by 60-70x in about 5 years from 2015 on.- The barrier to entry for artists is much lower — they no longer need a studio, they just need a laptop.- Royal is trying to enable the fan-artist relationship to be more of a partnership.- When fans own a part of an artist’s song, they are tied for life.- Justin has sold a ton of tickets in his career but he has zero idea of who those fans are and doesn’t have the ability to contact them. The data layer built into Royal helps artists connect with their fans.- In the future, music labels will become much more competitive for artists than they have been in the past.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary onthe latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Erik Torenberg on How Startups Can Help Save The World | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2802

Erik Torenberg (@eriktorenberg), co-founder and general partner at Village Global and co-founder and co-CEO of On Deck join Lucas Bagno and Ian Cinnamon on this episode of Solarpunk. Takeaways:- Startups are the most effective organizations for solving our biggest problems.- Startups disproportionately contribute to economic growth.- Governments and startups need to work together, not against each other.- China has the GDP per capita of Mexico but they have power because of how big their population is.- Increasing population should be an aim of the US government.- Humans are a naturally technological species and the only way out of our current problems is through technology, not without it.- People in Silicon Valley need to invest in storytelling and capturing hearts and minds. They have a new appreciation for how important politics is.- Ideas from Silicon Valley are being exported around the world —among them are giving without asking for anything in return, alignment via equity, and decoupling where you live from where you work. Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary onthe latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 Web3 Series: The State of Crypto in 2022 with Tushar Jain | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3414

Tushar Jain (@TusharJain_), co-founder and managing partner of Multicoin Capital, joins Erik on this episode to discuss:- The history of crypto over the last several years and the various moments that different technologies like Bitcoin, NFTs, tokens, and others have had.- What the world looks like if the predictions for crypto’s impact comes true.- Why Tushar thinks that Ethereum has gone past the point of diminishing returns to decentralization.- Why it’s so hard to predict which chains will win.- How crypto can help coordinate millions of people to accomplish big projects.- What we’ve learned about stablecoins in the last few years.- Why this is a “golden era of investing in crypto” and why we’re at a place that is equivalent to mobile in 2012.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary on the latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

 The Future Industrial Network with Hondo Geurts | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2849

James “Hondo” Geurts, former Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research, Development and Acquisition, joins Lucas Bagno and Ian Cinnamon on this episode. Takeaways:- What kept Hondo up at night was that there was a good idea out there that wasn’t passed on to him and thus wasn’t used on the battlefield.- A society can’t be secure without prosperity and can’t have prosperity without security.- The challenge for startups working with government is that the public is a fickle venture capitalist. They don’t like to fund things that don’t go anywhere.- It tends to be small and large companies (but mostly large) supplying the Department of Defense. The “middle has been lost.”- The DoD overvalues standardization.- Often in government, the user of the product is not the same as the buyer. Commonly startups make a mistake by not having buyer fit even if there is user fit for a product.- Government values past performance to a fault.- The United States, both via government and private enterprise, needs to build the industrial network of the future.- Commercial technology companies will be on the front lines of the next conflict and need to adapt features to make them resilient.Thanks for listening — if you like what you hear, please review us on your favorite podcast platform.Check us out on the web at www.villageglobal.vc or get in touch with us on Twitter @villageglobal.Want to get updates from us? Subscribe to get a peek inside the Village. We’ll send you reading recommendations, exclusive event invites, and commentary on the latest happenings in Silicon Valley. www.villageglobal.vc/signup

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