Doug Erwin sits down with Tristan Pollock, Managing Director of Generator’s Electrify Nevada program, to talk about Reno’s growing startup ecosystem, Nevada’s strategic advantage in energy and hard tech, and why the region is positioned for a new wave of founder growth. They cover Tristan’s path from startup founder to accelerator operator and investor, the role of AI in entrepreneurship, and how Nevada can turn speed, infrastructure, lifestyle, and deep-tech talent into a durable startup flywheel. Show notes In this episode of Growth Pioneers, Doug talks with Tristan Pollock about the next phase of Reno’s startup ecosystem. Tristan shares how his journey from Minnesota to Silicon Valley, 500 Startups, climate investing, and global accelerator work eventually brought him to Reno. Now leading Generator’s Electrify Nevada program, he is focused on helping energy, battery, manufacturing, industrial AI, and hard-tech founders break into Nevada’s ecosystem faster. The conversation explores why Nevada has become such a compelling place for founders: proximity to Silicon Valley, fast permitting, major industrial infrastructure, lithium and geothermal strengths, renewable energy, the Tahoe/Reno lifestyle, and a growing base of startup success stories like Positron, Redwood Materials, Ampersand, and SendCutSend. Doug and Tristan also dig into AI’s impact on founders, fundraising, outreach, and company building. Rather than treating AI as just better prompting, they talk about it as a new operating layer for entrepreneurs: helping people research, build, automate, and scale faster than ever before. The episode closes with a broader conversation about optimism, social impact, the future of work, and why curiosity may be the most important entrepreneurial skill in a period of rapid technological change. Key themes • Reno’s ecosystem is moving from potential to sophistication. • Electrify Nevada helps founders speedrun market entry into Nevada. • Nevada’s edge is strongest in energy, batteries, mining, manufacturing, logistics, hard tech, and industrial AI. • AI is changing how founders build, raise capital, find customers, and operate. • The next regional win is building a self-reinforcing startup flywheel: talent, capital, exits, reinvestment, and local founder density. • Optimism and curiosity matter in a moment where technology is changing faster than institutions can adapt.