AI for Founders with Ryan Estes

aiforfounders.co

AI for Founders is where 47,000+ founders learn to build and scale with AI. Hosted by Ryan Estes, a Denver investor, creator, and founder, the show breaks down real strategies from top operators and AI visionaries. AI-ready data, zero-dependency workflows, founder-led distribution, and the tools driving revenue for today’s fastest-growing companies. If you’re a technical or non-technical founder who wants to work smarter, scale faster, and stay competitive, this podcast is your weekly unfair advantage.

  1. The Asset Class Quietly Making Millionaires

    2 GG FA

    The Asset Class Quietly Making Millionaires

    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ The Anti-AI Asset: How Nathan Jameson Builds Fortress Wealth in a Market Obsessed With Hype Nathan Jameson sits outside Philadelphia with a human skull (replica) on his desk and a fundamentally different worldview than the founders currently torching runway chasing the next model update. While Silicon Valley places hundred-x bets and watches whole categories get absorbed in a Tuesday release, Nathan quietly compounds mid-teens IRRs on assets everyone else finds unsexy. Mobile home parks. RV parks. Self-storage. The stuff nobody brags about at dinner. His firm, arxventures.com (Latin for fortress), was born in 2016 after Nathan spent his early career in land development and home building, including a front row seat to the carnage of the Great Recession, when a single webpage tracked the thousands of home builders filing for bankruptcy week after week. That scar never left him. It shaped an investment philosophy built around one question most founders are too busy to ask themselves: are you building something that depends on attention, or something that compounds without it? The frameworks Nathan uses to answer that question are the real meat of this episode. The Recession-Resistant Asset Framework Target mid-teens IRRs over the life of the investment, yielding a high 1x to low 2x equity multiplePrioritize assets with meaningful depreciation to offset gains from other investments, including tech exitsRequire a roughly one-third higher return from any non-real-estate asset to match the tax-adjusted return of manufactured housingRefuse to over-leverage, so the investment never goes "poof"Make the first and largest commitment from the family office before inviting outside capitalThe Supply-Demand Imbalance Thesis Demand for affordable housing is through the roof because a home can be bought for $75K to $150K with lot rent plus utilities of $500 to $1,000 a monthSupply of new manufactured housing communities is effectively zero nationwide, particularly in the NortheastEveryone wants affordable housing. Nobody wants it near them. That imbalance is the opportunityFocus on regions where the right to build is hardest to secure, not the "smile states" where supply catches up fastThe Cave People Problem (Citizens Against Virtually Everything) Municipal meetings are dominated by the loudest opposition, not the silent majority coaching little leagueDown-zoning acts as an uncompensated takingMunicipalities in Pennsylvania have been known to sue their own zoning hearing boards to block reasonable parking reductionsBureaucracy plus "we just want to wait it out" is why real estate is notoriously slow to adaptThe AI Disqualification Stack Use Claude (primary) and ChatGPT to sift deal flow and kill bad deals before human underwriting time is wastedRun non-negotiables as an automated first pass: property in a regulated floodway, aging private infrastructure like a 60-year-old wastewater treatment plant, missing financialsLeverage Claude's Excel integration for reporting and formatting that used to require an Excel whizBuild outbound lists and mailing campaigns to find park owners who don't live on-siteThe Density Argument A half-acre lot is not open space, it's someone's private propertyTrue open space preservation requires building as densely as possible where you do buildAggregate green space into shared pocket parks rather than scattering it across suburban lawnsAutonomous vehicles will eliminate most parking requirements, and municipal planning is nowhere near readyhttps://www.arxventures.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/nathan-jameson/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://kitcaster.com/application ⁠⁠⁠

    53 min
  2. The Searchable Life: When Memories Get a Database

    5 GG FA

    The Searchable Life: When Memories Get a Database

    Bob Matteson grew up around a father who quietly carried a piece of history with him for decades. The dad attended Game 6 of the 1945 Cubs vs. Tigers World Series. Bob never knew. The story surfaced only after his father passed, dug up secondhand from his mother. That single missing thread, a baseball game his dad never spoke about, planted the question that would become a company: what happens to the memories we never bothered to capture in context? Years later, Bob became a father himself. He noticed his behavior had quietly shifted. He was photographing everything. His daughter's first laugh. The eggs his babies ate at their tiny breakfast table. The vaccine band-aid from her first pediatrician shot, kept in a box because it felt right to both him and his wife. He looked at the chaos of his camera roll, looked at his pre-kids and post-kids self, and realized the camera roll was not a memory system. It was a graveyard. Then he did something most founders never do. He waited. He sat with the idea for months. He let himself fall in love before spending a single dollar of someone else's money. Only after he was fully committed did he raise pre-seed capital, mostly from friends, family, and operators who believed in his vision. The original Relivable was a consumer-facing memory app. Then six months ago, a venue showed him something he wasn't expecting. The hotels and resorts he was meeting with kept asking if they could use Relivable internally for sales. They couldn't find good content to show prospects. They couldn't personalize the pitch for a black-tie wedding versus a casual buffet party. So Bob took a step back, did the research, and built a second product. Relivable became B2B2C overnight, with consumer reach distributed through every venue partnership. The seed round closed this spring. The cap table now includes hotel operators, event planners, and the celebrity event planner whose team is actively giving product feedback. The conviction is clear: today's couples have had iPhones their entire adult lives. They expect instant gratification, personalization, and AI-driven curation. Hotels know this and have no idea what to do about it. Bob does. The "Fall in Love First" Capital FrameworkBob's discipline around when to take outside money is a masterclass in founder accountability: Spend your own capital during research and validation. Losing your own money is acceptable. Losing someone else's is a contract.Only raise pre-seed when you are fully committed. The investor relationship is a formal promise to do your best for an outcome.Use the pre-seed period to validate, not to scale. Mistakes are expected. Communicate them."Graduate from pre-seed" by hitting three markers: conviction in product, paying customers (even if not product-market fit), and a validated go-to-market strategy you can execute on.Use seed capital to go faster, not to do more. Speed is the moat when AI compresses build cycles to weeks.The Distribution-on-the-Cap-Table FrameworkBob built two cap tables this way and it has become his signature move: First checks should come from operators inside your target customer base. They give you access to what they control plus their peer network.Diversify stakeholder types. For Relivable, that meant venue owners, venue operators, event planners, and the celebrity-tier event planner whose team becomes a live focus group.Cap table relationships compound. The introductions you get from a strategic investor are worth more than the check.One investor type is not enough. Distribution requires hitting the category from multiple angles.https://www.relivable.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/bobmatteson/ ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://kitcaster.com/application ⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://ryanestes.info⁠⁠⁠

    47 min
  3. The Truth About Lying to Your Doctor

    5 GG FA

    The Truth About Lying to Your Doctor

    Stephen Rouse didn't set out to pick a fight with Google, OpenAI, Amazon, and Microsoft. He just noticed something broken. Every founder in his orbit was tracking their body through a circus of apps that refused to speak to each other. A Whoop on the wrist. A Garmin for skiing. MyFitnessPal for food. Epic MyChart for labs. Strava for runs. Six logins, zero clarity. Meanwhile, the 21st Century Cures Act had quietly opened the door: third parties could now legally pull patient medical records directly from hospital EHRs. Stephen and his co-founder Amit Shah had already spent years building exactly that infrastructure at their previous company, Protocol First, which was acquired by Roche Pharma via Flatiron Health after becoming the first FHIR app to extract patient health data from Epic hospitals for FDA clinical trial submissions. So they built Savva. A unified health intelligence layer that pulls in your medical records, your wearables, your labs, and your meds, then lets you run them through Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok, Llama, Falcon, Mistral, and Med Gemma like a round table of second opinions. For ten dollars a year. Stored locally on your device. Not sold to insurers. Not uploaded to a cloud that gets monetized in a bad quarter. Not harvested when the CEO decides he wants a bigger house in Tahoe. The philosophical core of the episode is trust. Stephen argues that people lie to their doctors because the incentives are broken. Admit you smoke a cigar on the golf course and your life insurance premium jumps three hundred dollars a month. Admit you had seven vodka sodas last night and it lives on a clipboard forever. But you'll tell the AI. Because the AI already has the data, doesn't judge you, and isn't reporting back to your payer. When healthcare finally gets a system that sees everything and costs nothing, the entire concierge medicine model starts looking expensive by comparison. The Unidentified Data Principle — Most apps say encrypted, in transit, at rest, de-identified. Stephen goes one step further. No accounts. Nothing tied to a person.Local device storage, not cloud storage.App grows on your phone as records accumulate, not on their servers.If acquired tomorrow, there's no data sitting there to monetize.The business model physically cannot pivot into data harvesting. The Round Table of Second Opinions — Instead of marrying one model, let the user poll them. Ask the same health question to Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok in sequence.Each model has different training data, different personality, different blind spots.Cost is distributed: roughly 12,000 questions a year across all models for ten dollars.Replaces the "I don't trust that doctor, I want a second opinion" loop with a two-second model switch. The Blue Collar Infrastructure Play — How Savva got to 314,000 connected healthcare institutions without venture capital. Direct EHR integrations instead of Health Information Exchanges like Commonwealth or Health X.No middleman API fees to bleed unit economics.Wearables pulled through Apple HealthKit instead of direct Whoop, Garmin, Oura APIs.Free ingestion on both sides, which is what makes a ten-dollar price point survive. The Global Footprint Thesis — The reason the price is ten dollars a year is not marketing. One hundred million people in the West have access to modern EHRs.A billion people in underserved regions do not, and will not in our lifetimes.An EHR build costs hundreds of millions of dollars and takes a decade.Savva works without an EHR: upload a document, it treats it as a visit, and chronological history emerges.The ten-dollar price is designed to be swallow-able in Dar es Salaam. ⁠https://www.savva.ai⁠ https://www.linkedin.com/in/rousestephen/ ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://kitcaster.com/application ⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://ryanestes.info⁠⁠⁠

    50 min
  4. Fix the Thing 70% of Americans Are Ignoring

    6 GG FA

    Fix the Thing 70% of Americans Are Ignoring

    The Will You Don't Have Is Already Costing You Most people think estate planning is something you do when you're old, wealthy, or both. David Rosati spent 15 years as a corporate and M&A lawyer watching that assumption wreck families. The paperwork gets avoided. The conversations never happen. And then someone dies, and suddenly everything that should have been simple becomes a courtroom fight. So he built something to fix that. Succession Wills is a flat-fee online will builder, starting at $79.99, designed to give regular people the legal document they need without the lawyer bill they've been dreading. David is one half of a fully bootstrapped two-person team. They launched in January. They have no investors and no office. And they rebuilt their entire front end, from scratch, in a matter of days, using AI. That's not the wild part. The wild part is how they're using AI inside the product itself. Framework 1: Deterministic Logic Plus Conversational AI Most online will builders are wizard-based forms. You fill in fields, answer dropdowns, and a document gets generated. The problem is that approach assumes you already know what you want and understand every question being asked. That's almost never true. David describes the traditional lawyer experience as a back-and-forth conversation. A lawyer asks questions, interprets answers, explains concepts, offers examples, and gently redirects when you're overthinking something. That's the experience Succession Wills is trying to replicate. Their solution is a split architecture: The will itself is generated by a fully deterministic system. Every line of text that could appear in the final document was authored by David and his co-founder Nick. No AI is drafting legal language.The AI layer sits on top of that system as a trained conversational guide. It walks users through the process, answers questions in plain language, and surfaces the right prompts at the right moment.The result is something closer to having a lawyer in the room than clicking through a form. Framework 2: Perfect as the Enemy of Good (Applied to Estate Planning) David has a clear take on how to actually get a will done: stop waiting until it's perfect. The biggest threat to completing a will isn't complexity. It's the emotionally loaded questions, like who gets Dad's guitar, that cause people to stall and never finish. His advice: Get the document done first. "All my stuff goes to my kids equally" is a legally valid will.Sentimental and specific bequests can be handled in a separate non-binding rider that doesn't tie the executor's hands if circumstances change.Succession Wills offers lifetime platform access for one flat fee. You can revise whenever life changes, without paying again.The core insight is that a will should be a living document, revisited after major life events, not a one-time ceremonial act. Framework 3: The LLM-as-Wireframe Method David has developed a practical framework for how founders and individuals can use AI responsibly in legal contexts without replacing professional counsel entirely. Use an LLM to draft a first version of any agreement: partnership, NDA, employment contract, prenup.Treat that output as a wireframe, not a final document.Bring that wireframe to a lawyer. The expensive part of legal work is the blank-canvas drafting. Show up with 80% done and you've cut the billable hours significantly.This is a reframe most founders haven't considered. AI doesn't replace the lawyer. It dramatically reduces what the lawyer has to do, which reduces what you pay. https://www.successionwills.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-rosati-aa8b91100/ ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://kitcaster.com/application ⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://ryanestes.info⁠⁠⁠

    52 min
  5. Legal AI: Why Lawyers Are Finally Free to Think

    15 APR

    Legal AI: Why Lawyers Are Finally Free to Think

    Devansh walked into the legal tech market and saw a graveyard of point solutions. Word doc plugins. Document hosting tools. Niche contract reviewers. Each one promising to make attorneys more efficient, and each one adding another tab to an already fragmented workflow. That is the problem Irys was built to eliminate. Devansh, co-founder of Irys and creator of the AI Made Simple newsletter, reaching over 1.5 million people monthly through what his community calls the Chocolate Milk Cult, did not set out to make a better legal AI tool. He set out to rebuild the infrastructure underneath legal work entirely. The Fragmentation Problem Most legal AI today is what Devansh calls a system prompt wearing a trench coat. A niche product wraps a general-purpose model, calls itself a legal AI, and charges per word or per page for the privilege. The result is that small and mid-sized law firms get overwhelmed trying to stitch together 10 point solutions, none of which talk to each other and none of which understand the full context of a case. Irys attacks this from the foundation. Built ground-up as a full end-to-end legal platform, not a wrapperProcesses unlimited documents without vector search limitationsBuilds entity maps and relationship graphs across the entire document setFlags contradictions, jurisdictional mismatches, and contextual gaps that RAG-based systems missDelivers a transparent, auditable thinking trace so attorneys can verify every recommendationRuns 50 to 60 argument simulations and identifies which ones are likely to succeed The Three Categories of Hallucination Devansh breaks legal AI hallucinations into three categories: Citation hallucinations. The AI cites a case that does not existApplicability hallucinations. The case exists, but the jurisdiction, domain, or context makes it inapplicableContext hallucinations. The AI misses a relationship between documents, where one document modifies, contradicts, or conditionally applies to another The third category is the most dangerous and the hardest to catch with traditional vector search. Irys addresses it with a self-updating knowledge graph that links entities, propositions, and assertions across the entire document set. The Democratization Mission Devansh grew up watching legal inaccessibility cause real harm. In India, civil cases carry a 10-year backlog. In New York City, tenants get bullied by landlords because they cannot afford to fight. His co-founder, a former Big Law attorney, had lived the inefficiency from the inside. Their shared conviction is that there is no technical reason legal work has to take this long or cost this much. That is why Irys is free to sign up. That is why Devansh open-sources parts of the stack, including latent space reasoning work he believes will define the next generation of AI reasoning models. That is why the platform is being positioned not just as a tool for firms, but as infrastructure for justice. https://www.irys.ai/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/devansh-devansh-516004168/ https://substack.com/@chocolatemilkcultleader ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://kitcaster.com/application ⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://ryanestes.info⁠⁠⁠

    50 min
  6. Neuro Spiritual Sovereignty - 10 Years and Zero Shortcuts

    13 APR

    Neuro Spiritual Sovereignty - 10 Years and Zero Shortcuts

    Most founders obsess over the wrong leverage point. Not the funnel. Not the product. Not the team. The voice in your head running all three. Dr. Dhruva Gulur grew up in Juneau, Alaska, the child of a schizophrenic mother, a father with full narcissistic personality disorder, and a brother struggling silently with addiction. He watched his family fracture in real time and absorbed it all without language to process it. What he built instead was architecture, behavioral scaffolding that helped him survive, but later threatened to bury him. He made it to India. Got seven scholarships into medical school. Became a doctor. And then, quietly, began drowning. Sixty pounds of weight gain. A $300,000 gambling debt. A hundred thousand dollars in credit card debt. A cocaine-induced manic episode. Three months in a dual-diagnosis rehab center in Warrior, Alabama. He had everything society said meant success. And he hated himself. What followed was not a redemption arc powered by willpower or a mentor or a morning routine stolen from a podcast. It was ten years of radical solitude, daily writing, rapping through emotional honesty, and the systematic reconstruction of identity from the inside out. It produced a framework he now calls Mind Hygiene, and a philosophy of self-reliance he calls Neuro Spiritual Sovereignty. He calls the outcome Structural Density: a life so internally clean that your files are labeled, your fridge matches your mind, and you operate from full presence rather than constant cortisol. Framework 1: The ACES Framework Dr. Dhruva's daily writing practice follows the ACES structure: A: Accept your awareness around any event without trying to fix, suppress, or reframe itC: Compassion expressed through doing something you do not want to do, forging health through action not feelingE: Empathize with yourself and others involved in the situationS: Soften and Alchemize by turning resentment into purpose, and easing the process so it does not feel like sufferingThis replaces FACES (Fixing, Avoiding, Controlling, Escaping, Suppressing), which is how most people handle difficult emotions. Framework 2: Neuro Spiritual Sovereignty The journey from fixed mindset to sovereign self moves through three stages: Fixed Mindset: External validation required, cortisol constantly elevated, dopamine sought through substances, food, attentionAcceptance Mindset: Beginning to observe without judgment, writing to engage the prefrontal cortex, reducing amygdala activityConsecrated Mindset: Full self-reliance, surrendering to higher purpose, 60 to 70% emotional baseline of well-being without external inputFramework 3: Structural Density A state in which the internal and external environment are aligned and uncluttered: One tab open at a timeLabeled files and clean digital environmentsDiet free of inflammatory foodNo emotional dependency on others for baseline stabilityMission-driven financial consecration (donating 70% of speaking fees, 30% of book sales)Framework 4: Mind Hygiene A four-year retrospective observational study on 4,000+ patients using 90-second writing reflections every 90 minutes for 90 days produced measurable improvements across five domains of health: Spiritual Health: Clarity of mission and purposeMind Health: Awareness and self-compassionPhysical Health: Reduction of inflammatory behaviorFinancial Health: Consecration of resources toward higher purposeExecutional Health: Single-task focus, delayed gratificationThe neuroscience backing it: writing by hand engages the prefrontal cortex, decreases amygdala activity, stabilizes serotonin, and has been shown in multiple studies to improve immune function. https://dhruvamd.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/dhruvamd/ ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://kitcaster.com/application ⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://ryanestes.info⁠⁠⁠ https://www.createaloop.org/

    51 min
  7. Peptides, and the Future of Human Performance

    11 APR

    Peptides, and the Future of Human Performance

    Dr. Ian Ellis, Founder of voafit.com | Precision Dosing, Peptides, and the Future of Human Performance The story starts in an emergency room. Dr. Ian Ellis spent almost a decade watching the same patients cycle through with the same problems, receiving the same treatments, never actually getting better. Just bailing out the pool, he says. That disillusionment became the seed of something bigger. When Dr. Ellis was prescribed semaglutide in 2022, he experienced what millions of people experience every day: real weight loss with a catastrophic tradeoff. Thirty pounds gone. But the body composition scan told the real story. He had lost twice as much lean mass as fat. Same body fat percentage. Just a lighter, weaker version of himself. The drug had done what it was designed to do. The problem was the dosing. That realization sent him down a research rabbit hole that ended with the founding of his concierge practice and an app called My Level, designed to help patients find their minimum effective dose of GLP-1 medications, not the maximum tolerated dose. The results at his clinic have been remarkable: faster weight loss than clinical trials, on half the medicine, with zero desistance due to side effects. Key Frameworks: The Precision Dosing Model: Standard GLP-1 protocols escalate doses on a fixed schedule regardless of individual response. Dr. Ellis argues this is backwards. The goal is to find the lowest dose that suppresses appetite just enough to create a 500-750 calorie deficit, not to eliminate hunger entirely. Think dimmer switch, not on/off toggle.The Appetite-as-Physiology Framework: Willpower is not a weight loss strategy. Dr. Ellis compares appetite suppression to sleep deprivation. You can fight it for a day or two, but biological drives increase in intensity until they become inevitable. The solution is not discipline. It is solving the physiologic problem.The Nutrition Hierarchy on GLP-1s: Because appetite is suppressed, what you eat first matters enormously. If you fill up on carbs, you will never reach protein and plants.The Cost-Convenience-Quality Triangle: You only get two. Cheap and convenient equals low quality. Convenient and high quality equals expensive. Inexpensive and high quality means you are cooking it yourself. There is no fourth option.Peptides as Information Systems: Peptides are strings of amino acids that act as keys for specific biological locks. Their safety profile is relatively predictable because they bind to one receptor and produce effects that follow logically from what that receptor does. GLP-1 receptor? Suppresses appetite and slows gastric motility. Overdose? Stomach stops working. Predictable. Manageable.The 15% Body Fat Sweet Spot: Evolutionary biology has calibrated human attraction toward function, not aesthetics. Studies show 15% body fat consistently ranks as most attractive across populations because it signals strength, capability, and survivability. Single-digit body fat is not optimal health. It is a performance liability.https://voafit.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/voafitmd/ ⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://kitcaster.com/application ⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://ryanestes.info⁠⁠⁠

    58 min

Descrizione

AI for Founders is where 47,000+ founders learn to build and scale with AI. Hosted by Ryan Estes, a Denver investor, creator, and founder, the show breaks down real strategies from top operators and AI visionaries. AI-ready data, zero-dependency workflows, founder-led distribution, and the tools driving revenue for today’s fastest-growing companies. If you’re a technical or non-technical founder who wants to work smarter, scale faster, and stay competitive, this podcast is your weekly unfair advantage.

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