Investing in Startups

Joe Magyer

Investing In Startups explores the strategies and stories of leading early-stage venture capitalists. The show is for VCs, angels, founders, operators, and the startup-curious. Whether you're a seasoned pro or just dipping your toes into startups, this podcast is your guide to navigating this dynamic ecosystem. The show is hosted by Joe Magyer, Founder and Managing Partner of Seaplane Ventures.

  1. FEB 18

    Episode 50! Venture Strategy, Real Work, & The Myth of Overnight Success with Seth Levine

    Seth Levine is a Partner at Foundry Group, a longtime early-stage firm investing in both startups and emerging fund managers. We talked about the art of working with founders, short-term-ism, knowing your own competitive advantage, why AI will create more jobs than it disrupts, and the myth of overnight success. Here's the longer of what we covered:   Doing the real work with founders and GPs – Seth explains why his favorite part of Foundry is deep, collaborative problem-solving with CEOs and emerging managers, not formal board meetings, and why he sees himself as “in the influence game,” working for founders rather than controlling them.   Fund size is fund strategy – He walks through why Foundry chose not to become a perpetual, multi-generational platform, and how everything from check size to reserves, board work, and follow-on strategy has to flow from the true size and intent of the fund—not from chasing a bigger AUM number.   What LPs miss about emerging managers – Drawing on Foundry’s long history backing funds, Seth argues most LPs behave like asset allocators who over-weight pedigree, underwrite theses too superficially, and don’t dig hard enough into a GP’s real edge, philosophy, and personal “why” for running a firm.   Under-explored fund models he loves – Seth highlights niche yet powerful strategies: Arthur Ventures’ “under-the-radar” B2B SaaS approach, roll-ups of orphaned 2019–2020 vintage funds, and hybrid revenue-based vehicles that blend debt-style payback with equity upside for founders.   If he were starting fresh today – From a pure performance standpoint, he’d run a much more diversified early-stage book with lots of initial positions and minimal follow-ons—Taleb-inspired barbell thinking—and, in a wilder alternate life, maybe build a Series A or growth platform in Saudi Arabia to ride frontier-market upside.   Capital Evolution & fixing capitalism, not ditching it – Seth shares the origin story of his new book, his evolving view on when companies should (and shouldn’t) wade into politics, the shift from shareholder primacy toward broader stakeholders, and why medium- to long-term thinking and greater economic dynamism are essential.   AI, entrepreneurship, and why venture’s glamor is BS – He’s long-term bullish and short-term cautious on AI, seeing it as a huge unlock for productivity and entrepreneurship far beyond tech—but also a source of disruption that needs thoughtful retraining and policy.    Investing in Startups is hosted by Joe Magyer and produced by Seaplane Ventures.

    55 min
  2. FEB 6

    E49: AI Agents, Unlocking Human Potential, and Not Giving Up with Hyperspell

    Conor Brennan-Burke and Manu Ebert are the co-founders of Hyperspell. Hyperspell provides a memory and context layer to AI agents is one of our portfolio companies at Seaplane Ventures. I (Joe here) was trying to explain to some friends at a BBQ recently Hyperspell what did and learned pretty quickly that most people aren’t familiar yet with AI agents. Given that and the sudden explosion in interest in AI agents, I thought it would be great for listeners to have Conor and Manu to come on to talk about AI agents, the evolution of AI, context, Y Combinator, and how Manu once bought a .AI domain name via fax machine.    From chatbots to true agents – Conor breaks down where tools like ChatGPT stop and AI agents begin, and why the key shift is agents taking actions autonomously across your tools, not just answering questions.   Why context is the real bottleneck – Manu and Conor share how building their own “chief of staff” agent led them to Hyperspell, a memory and context layer that plugs into tools like Slack, Gmail, and Notion so agents can actually understand your customers, org chart, and tech stack.   The three bottlenecks to agent adoption – Manu explains why verification, capability, and context each limit what agents can do today, and why decoupling these layers (rather than relying on a single big lab) gives companies more flexibility and avoids platform lock-in.   Why workers aren’t using AI (yet) – Conor reacts to studies showing most desk workers rarely touch AI, and argues that fear, bad framing (“AI will replace you”), and lack of personalized context are holding back adoption despite models already outperforming humans on many benchmarks.   AI as global leapfrog, not just US office automation – Manu highlights under-discussed upside: primary care in Africa, McKinsey-grade advice for small businesses, tailored guidance for farmers, and always-on tutors that could reshape opportunity in developing markets.   Let machines be the cogs, not people – The pair paint a future where AI agents handle status updates, follow-ups, and information shuffling inside big orgs, freeing humans to do creative, high-leverage work instead of feeling like dehumanized “TPS report” machines.   Building SuperMe and all-star AI teams – Conor shares a favorite customer use case: cloning experts (or even yourself) as agents using your own docs, email, and notes, so a solo founder can effectively “hire” an AI team of world-class operators and advisors.   YC, rejection, and founder stubbornness – Conor and Manu talk about finally getting into Y Combinator after nine applications between them, why persistence is a superpower for founders, and how YC has shaped Hyperspell’s trajectory.   Investing in Startups is hosted by Joe Magyer and produced by Seaplane Ventures.

    31 min
  3. 12/17/2025

    E45: Access, Picking VCs, and Tough Love with Superclusters' David Zhou

    David Zhou is an investor in emerging managers, an angel investor, a blogger, and the host of the Superclusters podcast. We talked about how LPs can size up emerging managers, how VCs can stand out, portfolio construction, and which of sourcing, picking, and winning is the most important. We also explored:   + Why David thinks that “access beats picking (then winning)” for most emerging managers—and how check size changes that calculus.   + Follow-ons: when “all or none” makes sense, how signaling risk compounds past Series B, and why selling by Series C can be clean for seed managers.   + LP incentives in the wild: marks scrutiny for new managers vs. “ignorance is bliss” for existing ones—plus how TVPI vs. IRR targets shape decisions.   + The tough-love playbook behind “Dear Emerging Manager” and “Dear LP,” and why sloppy valuation methods and survivorship bias mislead GPs.   + Differentiation framework: sell the market → the strategy → then you; use “flaws, limitations, restrictions” to confront the elephants in the room.   + Fund design realities: reserve strategy, fund size vs. dilution (esp. in hard tech), and why some LP minimums are a built-in constraint.   + Context from fresh market data: median seed at ~$20M and AI capturing a huge share of early deals—what those trends mean for formation and pricing.   + Plus: Abe Othman’s follow-on finding (funds that never follow on beat always-follow funds 63% of the time) as a jumping-off point for David’s take.   Investing in Startups is a Seaplane Ventures production hosted by Joe Magyer.

    49 min
  4. 11/19/2025

    E43: Trust, Paying Up, & Homebrew Forever with Hunter Walk

    Our guest this week is Hunter Walk, Co-Founder of Homebrew and Screendoor. Hunter has a deep background in product, including from his time at Google and YouTube, but is best known for his investing. Homebrew’s big wins over the years include Chime, Plaid, Gusto, Cruise, and more. We talked about trust and context, product, funnel math, investing life after LPs, and why Hunter isn’t as fussy these days about valuation.   Here's a longer rundown of the episode:   Homebrew → “Forever.” Why Hunter and Satya moved from an LP-backed seed fund to a self-funded evergreen model—and why they accelerated the shift in 2022.   Ditching ownership targets. Early-stage “must-own X%” rules create artificial scarcity for founders; Homebrew now fits their check into whatever round construction serves the company best. Prioritizing alignment with founders and co-investors over leading every round.   Valuation: what it really signals. Price matters less as a target and more for what it reveals about the founder’s decision-making, who’s on the cap table, and the path to the next round—especially when you don’t hold reserves.   Trust + context > generic advice. Hunter’s operating model with founders: build trust to have honest conversations, and keep real context so advice is specific—not just a blog post link.   Meeting math & magnets. You can’t jump into every haystack—so create magnets (writing, references, approachability) to pull the right needles; historically ~1 investment per ~100 inbound companies.   Your company is a product. Hiring, comp, and cadence must cohere like a product system; inconsistency is the cultural anti-pattern.   Focus areas now. Still heavy B2B dev tools (increasingly AI/ML) and FinTech; comfortable as #2–10 on the cap table alongside specialists, which expands where they can help.   Against multi-gen for most firms. Hunter argues many venture franchises lose “fidelity” as AUM and headcount grow—like copies of a mixtape over time.   Investing in Startups is produced by Seaplane Ventures. The show is hosted by Joe Magyer.

5
out of 5
21 Ratings

About

Investing In Startups explores the strategies and stories of leading early-stage venture capitalists. The show is for VCs, angels, founders, operators, and the startup-curious. Whether you're a seasoned pro or just dipping your toes into startups, this podcast is your guide to navigating this dynamic ecosystem. The show is hosted by Joe Magyer, Founder and Managing Partner of Seaplane Ventures.

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