Zero to Umm...

Kyle Hudson

Dive into the raw, unfiltered journey of startup founders and CEOs as they navigate the tumultuous waters of entrepreneurship. "Zero to Umm..." flips the script on typical success stories, focusing instead on the pivotal moments of uncertainty, fear, and adaptation that truly define a startup's path.

  1. Apr 29

    Cody Schneider (Graphed): What It Takes to Build AI Marketing Agents That Work

    Episode Stack: https://stackl.ist/4vWPzAl You've heard the pitch: AI agents that run your marketing, write your content, manage your ads, source your leads. It sounds like science fiction, or at minimum, like something that works for someone else's company. Cody Schneider has actually built it. In this episode, Cody, co-founder of Graphed, former growth lead at Rupa Health, and serial builder from Coeur d'Alene, Idaho — sits down with Kyle to get specific about what's real and what's hype in the AI go-to-market space. He's not philosophizing from the outside. He built a sourcing agent before breakfast the morning of this recording. Discussion topics: - Why "just give an agent a task" fails, and what agent orchestration actually looks like when it works - The AI SDR post-mortem: why those tools didn't fail because AI is bad, and what the wrong optimization metric actually costs you - How Cody thinks about "biology": whether an idea has the structure to become a real company or a good side project - The compounding go-to-market loop: layering channels, acting on signal, and why you never stop what's working - Data quality as the hidden killer of every AI analytics project (including why your Facebook ads API data is probably wrong) - Vibe coding from 0 to 80% vs. 80% to production & why that gap is where companies get stuck - What a GTM engineer actually does in 2026, and why that skillset is one of the rarest in the market right now - The future Cody is betting on: agent teams, services bought as outcomes, and what happens when the cost of intelligence approaches zero Key moments: [00:00] Board meetings with your agents [01:00] An agent Cody built before 8am and what it did [04:12] How Cody evaluates whether an idea has "biology" to be a real company [08:56] From Etsy scraping to Rupa Health: the origin story [15:48] Signal and noise — acting fast when you have it [18:00] Why AI SDRs failed (it wasn't the agents) [22:12] Software that molds to the user: the end of dropdown UIs [27:12] Vibe coding's dirty secret [33:06] Where Cody sees Graphed in six months [49:15] Cody's homework for non-technical founders right now [52:30] Kyle's live Graphed demo: Apollo, Stripe, QuickBooks, Brex, and PostHog in one afternoon

    57 min
  2. Vlad Cazacu - Flowlie

    Jan 7

    Vlad Cazacu - Flowlie

    Episode Stack: https://stackl.ist/4qaixcK Summary In this episode I sit down with Vlad Cazacu, Founder and CEO of Flowlie, to talk about the long, winding path that led him from an immigrant kid obsessed with science magazines to building one of the most thoughtful fundraising tools I’ve used as a founder. We go way back. Before Flowlie was helping founders raise hundreds of millions of dollars, Vlad was running a textbook startup in college, turning down an acquisition offer because it did not feel big enough at the time. That early mix of curiosity, naivety, and ambition shows up again and again in his story. Vlad spent years on the investing side, working in venture capital and family offices, seeing thousands of deals and learning how capital actually moves. Flowlie did not start as a founder product at all. It began as an internal tool for investors, then pivoted after founders started asking a simple question: “Are we even a good fit for these investors?” We talk about the shoebox office in Miami, the moment Stripe lit up with their first paid users, why fundraising is mostly unnecessary overhead, and how AI should remove friction instead of adding noise. This is a true zero-to-something story, told while still very much in motion. Key moments we cover: Growing up in Romania and falling in love with building through curiosityBuilding and shutting down a college startup after turning down an acquisitionWriting a book before ChatGPT and how it unlocked a VC careerWhy Flowlie started as an investor tool and pivoted to foundersThe first Stripe notification that made everything feel realA future where founders only show up for investor meetings Key takeaways: Naivety is often a feature, not a bug, in early foundersFundraising is a system problem, not a confidence problemThe right tool removes emotional and cognitive overhead Chapters 00:00 The Naivety of Startup Beginnings 03:03 The Journey to Entrepreneurship 06:07 The Birth of Barter Out 09:01 The Influence of Family and Curiosity 12:04 Lessons from Early Ventures 14:55 Transitioning to Venture Capital 17:58 Building Flowlie: The Next Chapter 22:57 The Pivot to Founders' Needs 30:00 Building the Team and Culture 37:05 Funding Journey and Growth 38:13 Future Vision and AI Integration

    1 min

About

Dive into the raw, unfiltered journey of startup founders and CEOs as they navigate the tumultuous waters of entrepreneurship. "Zero to Umm..." flips the script on typical success stories, focusing instead on the pivotal moments of uncertainty, fear, and adaptation that truly define a startup's path.