Knuckle Up with Nakul

Nakul Mandan

Knuckle Up is about the HOW of building iconic companies. Recruiting, culture, intensity, the inner game of being a founder CEO. The stuff that actually separates great companies from good ones. Hosted by Nakul Mandan (GP, Audacious Ventures), each episode goes deep with founders who’ve done it at the highest level. Not highlight reels. Operating playbooks, straight from the best of the best. www.knuckleup.co

Episodes

  1. Building a $5b company without 996

    Jun 23

    Building a $5b company without 996

    Most founders get more stressed as the company gets bigger. Immad Akhund has spent years engineering the opposite. “I’ve tried to make it so that the pressure kind of goes down as success goes up, which I think is relatively rare,” he says. “If you’re more successful, why are you more stressed about it?” This may be surprising coming from someone running one of the most loved fintechs of this generation. But Immad has reached this point through a deliberate operating philosophy that he shares in this discussion. Mercury serves around 300,000 customers, runs at a $650 million annualized run rate, and has been profitable for four years straight. One in three US startups banks with it, and in April 2026 the company won conditional approval to establish Mercury Bank, N.A. Immad has done all of it on his own terms: anti-996, still remote-first while Silicon Valley snapped back to fully in person, and hiring for curiosity and humility. The throughline is that he optimized early to be a founder for life, not for a sprint. In this conversation, Immad walks me through how that philosophy actually runs a 1,200-person company. Why 996 may not make you more productive. What Mercury’s famous curiosity interview is really testing. Why he killed one-on-ones after listening to Jensen Huang. How AI has turned the disruption of banking further in Mercury’s favor. And why, three startups in, the thing he would tell his younger self is to build something he would actually love to exist. Listen on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts Immad Akhund is the co-founder and CEO of Mercury, the fintech banking platform founded in 2017 that serves around 300,000 businesses and runs at a $650 million annualized run rate. In April 2026, Mercury received conditional approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to establish Mercury Bank, N.A., and the company subsequently raised $200 million at a $5.2 billion valuation. Before Mercury, Akhund co-founded Heyzap, a mobile developer platform that went through Y Combinator and sold for $45 million in 2016, and earlier co-founded Clickpass. He has served as a part-time partner at Y Combinator and is a prolific angel investor backing more than 350 startups, including Airtable, Substack, and Deel. He was born in Pakistan and raised in the UK before moving to the United States. In this conversation with Immad Akhund: 00:00 Who is Immad Akhund? 01:53 Is culture just the founder’s personality externalized? 07:53 Is 996 actually less productive? 13:14 Why is Mercury still remote-first when Silicon Valley went back? 15:52 How did Immad hire Mercury’s first ten people? 20:33 What is Mercury’s famous “curiosity interview”? 25:06 How do you hold the hiring bar at 1,200 people? 28:48 What does Immad’s day-to-day look like? 34:10 How do you know when an exec is no longer right for the job? 37:32 Why does Mercury run on small, autonomous product teams? 40:27 What breaks when a company runs purely on metrics? 47:03 How is AI changing Mercury? 54:09 What does becoming a chartered bank actually change? 56:19 How did the SVB collapse end up helping Mercury? 1:03:40 What does psyche management look like 20 years in? 1:11:19 What does it mean to be at the founder “bonus levels”? 1:15:21 Quickfire: overrated traits, AI blind spots, and being proven wrong 1:17:52 What would Immad tell his 25-year-old self? Where to find Immad: * Mercury * X * LinkedIn Where to find Nakul: * X * LinkedIn Where to find Audacious Ventures: * Website * LinkedIn Immad’s sharpest lines from this conversation: On pressure and success: “I’ve tried to make it so that the pressure kind of goes down as success goes up, which I think is actually relatively rare. If you’re more successful, why are you more stressed about it?” On the math of a 996 day: “The extra two hours, was that really 20% more productive? I will be shocked if it was 20% more productive. It’s maybe 5% more productive.” On where culture actually comes from: “It does start with founder personalities, but then you try to structure that, try to encourage that internally, then you hire against it. Then it becomes a self-perpetuating thing, and it also shows up in the product and how you talk to customers.” On why he killed one-on-ones: “I’ve never found one-on-ones help. One-on-ones is just an avenue for them to try to sell themselves. You need to create avenues where you have visibility into what that team is doing.” On holding execs accountable: “I don’t think execs can have excuses. I think that’s the job, to deliver on that.” On why AI favors Mercury: “I highly doubt Bank of America has an MCP. We are extremely well situated for that because we are a technology company, and that’s just what we do.” On reinvention: “I love change. I live for change. Change is the main thing I want in life.” On his advice to his 25-year-old self: “Build something that you would really love for it to exist, rather than being too spreadsheet about it.” Full Transcript: Immad Akhund on Knuckle Up Immad Akhund: 9-9 is 12 hours. The extra two hours, was that really 20% more productive? I will be shocked if it was 20% more productive. If you have five employees and you hire a sixth employee, that’s 20% more productive. You’re probably a little less creative if you’re not doing anything else in your life. I have my best ideas when I’m on a flight or driving somewhere. Sometimes these decisions or these ideas are actually worth 10x more than an extra few hours of work. I started as entrepreneur. I loved it, but I just wanted to survive. We got to a billion dollar valuation in 2021. At that point, which is like, I would say I really got into the bonus levels on this game where I was like, “I don’t even know what my next goal is.” I’ve tried to make it so the pressure goes down as success goes up, which is I think actually relatively rare. If you’re more successful, why are you more stressed about it? Nakul Mandan: Immad Akhund has built one of the most loved FinTechs of this generation. Mercury serves 300,000 customers and is at a $650 million annualized run rate. One in three US startups banks with them. The company has been profitable for four straight years, and as of last month, they have conditional approval to become Mercury Bank. But what’s interesting is that Immad has accomplished all of this on his own terms. He’s anti-996. He’s still remote first at a time when Silicon Valley has bounced back to fully in-person. He hires for traits most growth-stage companies don’t even look for. He said, “It’s dangerous when everything has to be driven by metrics.” And he said openly that he’s optimized early on to be a founder for life and not for a sprint. Today we talked to Immad about how he runs Mercury, the operating philosophy that got him here and whether that philosophy holds up as Mercury becomes a bank and AI-shaped company and a business serving companies well beyond the tech ecosystem. Knuckle up. Immad, welcome to the show. Immad Akhund: Ah, thanks for having me. Nakul Mandan: Yeah. So I want to start with something you’ve said that actually cuts through a lot of the culture theater in Silicon Valley. You’ve said that the culture is about the founder’s personality, not about some values doc, not about some rituals. The founder’s personality externalized. And I was wondering as I was preparing for this, that works for 10 people, 100 people company, maybe even stretch it to a 500 people company, but at the scale at which Mercury is today, 1000-plus people, does it still work? Immad Akhund: Oh, yeah. 100%. I mean, I think I often talk to people who talk about culture, but I think they don’t know what it means, and I think it’s like an ill-defined word and I’m an engineer, so I hate ill-defined words. So I really struggled with it for a long time. I was like, “Is it like having beers in the fridge and going, ‘That’s what it was,’ or is it like what programming language you choose, et cetera?” So I think there are probably some people mean culture and they mean something else. I think the easiest way to define culture that is very definitive and means something and you can measure it and all that is what are the personalities of the people you hire, what are the personalities that you encourage, what are the types of traits you encourage, kind of thing. You kind of have to decide that very early on because what happened in my previous company is I didn’t really understand that. So we had a bunch of salespeople that kind of ended up dominating the culture because they were the loudest voice in the room and we didn’t really have a counterculture to fix that. So it was fine, but it wasn’t like the type of company I wanted to build with Mercury. So we sat down and I think there was only four people and we’re like, “Okay, what are the personalities that we really cared about?” And for us it was kind of product-minded, humble, helpful people that were kind of curious and at that time we didn’t like meetings so we were like no process, go build things kind of people. And so we wrote that down and we tried to measure against it. We had interviews like every engineer, everyone we did product interviews with, and we would try to test people for, okay, are they high ego? So there’s a bunch of things that followed from that and we have a bunch of things within the company that encouraged that behavior. We pick one thing, like we have a channel called Grateful and people at the company, like every day there’s multiple posts where people are like, “Oh, I’m really grateful to X and Y because they helped launch this project or whatever it is.” A lot of that behavior is organic. I didn’t make that channel, it just came across. But I think it’s important and I also think different personalities can work. I always think of Uber as an examp

    1h 19m
  2. Startup lessons Silicon Valley won’t teach you | Cameron McCord (Co-founder of Nominal)

    Jun 9

    Startup lessons Silicon Valley won’t teach you | Cameron McCord (Co-founder of Nominal)

    Cameron McCord spent 484 days underwater. As a submarine officer in the US Navy, he learned to run a reactor in a space where the crew sees you 24/7, even brushing your teeth, and where there is no "later" to sort out a disagreement. He still calls the Navy the single biggest influence on how he leads. After the submarine came Capitol Hill as a Navy congressional liaison, then early Anduril, then Saildrone, then a stint in venture at Lux Capital. Each one was a deliberate move toward starting a company. – That company is Nominal, a connected software suite that is changing how the world tests and operates hardware. Three years in, Nominal is valued at $1 billion, has raised $155 million in ten months, and counts four of the five largest defense contractors as customers. The team has grown from around 40 people to 170 in a year, across offices in LA, Austin, New York, DC, and now London. – In this conversation, Cameron walks through the operating playbook underneath that growth. Why he still interviews everyone and looks for people who are "three layers deep." What it means to "earn the right to stand the night watch." How he imports intentional ambiguity from early Anduril and a critique culture from the submarine. And where physical AI is actually going. – In this conversation with Cameron McCord: 00:00 Who is Cameron McCord? 01:34 What did 484 days underwater teach him about leadership? 10:36 How do you "earn the right to stand the night watch"? 16:28 What was so special about Anduril’s culture? 28:39 What is the "power of ambiguity"? 31:29 How does Cameron think about recruiting? 37:39 Can you recruit “killers” who are also low ego? 46:50 What was the broken old way of testing hardware? 50:50 How do you actually crack selling to the government? 55:12 How did Nominal land four of the five largest defense primes? 1:01:33 What does "physical AI" actually mean? 1:18:14 What is Cameron still working on in his inner game? 1:23:22 Quickfire: military movies, leadership books, and a favorite office? 1:25:07 What advice would Cameron give to his 25-year-old self? – Cameron's sharpest lines from this conversation... On why the weakest link defines the team: "Even if you're the person turning a wrench on a pump, if you don't do your job, the team could be at risk, because everything has to come together." On what he recruits for: "The biggest gift, and frankly the thing you look for in talent, in recruiting, is people that are fit to stand the night watch… a safe pair of hands." On asking a team to do the impossible: "It is always worth going the extra mile to draw the thread between the impossible task you're asking someone to do and the outcome for a customer." On what it takes to win: "Do one thing and do it really, really well… in practice, you need to do something 10 times better than the current way." On the inner game of leadership: "Being comfortable in your own head is so powerful, and it’s the biggest gift I can give to Nominal." On a mantra from his submarine captain: "Stress is the body preparing you for greatness." – Where to find Cameron: • Nominal • X • LinkedIn – Where to find Nakul: • Audacious Ventures • X • LinkedIn – Where to find Audacious Ventures: • Website • LinkedIn This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.knuckleup.co

    1h 26m
  3. Business used to be go karting. Now it's Formula 1.

    May 27

    Business used to be go karting. Now it's Formula 1.

    Akshay Kothari has spent most of his time at Notion trying to put himself out of a job. His move, repeated for years, is to run at whatever the company's biggest unsolved problem is, build the system around it, hire someone great to own it, and then remove himself. In 2023 the approach left him, a co-founder of a multibillion-dollar company, with zero direct reports and a calendar wide open to think. That instinct fits the company he helps run. Notion built itself like an art project: profitable, still largely owned by its founders and employees, raising money only when there was a real reason to, and kept deliberately small, around 1,200 people running a business at public scale. For years its core was a system of record, a modern editor and database that people genuinely loved and built their work inside. Then AI changed what people expect software to do, and Notion decided to reinvent the product rather than wait to be replaced. In this conversation, Akshay walks through how Notion pulled that off: the stretch he calls the swamp of despair, when its AI agent failed four times before it worked; why the company stopped trying to make the model fit its product and started fitting the product to the model; and how it dissolved the line between its AI team and everyone else until there was nobody left who wasn't building with AI. The bet landed. AI moved from a defensive play to a real driver of growth, and Notion's growth rate has climbed for over a year, with the most recent quarter running about 50% above where it was a year earlier. As Akshay frames it, the business went from go-karting to Formula 1, and now the company has to rewire how it drives. Listen on... • Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5KorHDryscDzLwPkWEgAH1 • Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/knuckle-up-with-nakul/id1893213920 Akshay Kothari is the co-founder and chief operating officer of Notion, where he has built and scaled functions from support and sales to marketing and finance, alongside co-founders Ivan Zhao (CEO) and Simon Last. Before Notion, he co-founded Pulse, a news-reading app that won an Apple Design Award, reached 30 million users, and was acquired by LinkedIn for $90 million in 2013. Where to find Akshay Kothari... • Notion: https://www.notion.com/ • X: https://x.com/akothari • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/akothari Where to find Nakul... • Audacious Ventures: https://www.audacious.co/ • X: https://x.com/nakul • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nakulmandan/ Where to find Audacious Ventures... • Website: https://www.audacious.co/ • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/audaciousventures/ In this conversation with Akshay Kothari... 00:00 Who is Akshay Kothari? 01:27 What were Notion's core founding principles? 06:20 Which early cultural principles scaled, and which broke? 08:22 How did Notion hire its first employees, and where did they come from? 11:48 How does hiring work now that the founders can't meet everyone? 14:35 Why does Akshay, as COO, prefer to have zero direct reports? 19:05 How do Ivan, Simon, and Akshay divide the work? 21:07 Does Notion's intentionality ever conflict with speed? 25:25 What should other founders steal from Notion's culture? 28:11 When did AI become a reason to rethink the whole product? 30:44 Why were the early AI years a "swamp of despair"? 36:05 How do you push AI across a huge product without losing the user? 39:25 Does Notion buy its AI DNA or build it? 40:44 Should Notion be afraid of OpenAI, Anthropic, and fast copycats? 46:58 What's hardest about the reinvention, and what does "meet the LLM" mean? 52:42 Is Notion AI-native in every function yet? 54:36 Are Notion's engineers still writing code, and how has engineering changed? 1:01:07 Once building is cheap, what's the new bottleneck? 1:02:39 How is AI reshaping sales, marketing, and support? 1:09:07 How many agents run inside Notion, and who builds them? 1:11:28 How has recruiting changed for the AI era? 1:13:48 What still worries Akshay about Notion's future? 1:15:22 Quickfire: admired founders, books, overrated AI advice, and Akshay’s superpower 1:19:42 What should a $50M pre-AI company do in the next 90 days? Akshay's sharpest lines from this conversation... On putting himself out of a job: "Ivan calls me a stem cell. I go there and build something, then I get out of it." On meeting the model where it is: "You really have to stop trying to fit the LLM with what you have, and you have to fit what you have to the other." On what AI is really for: "The best companies are just raising their ambitions. It's less about efficiency and more about, can each person be way more productive?" On just how much AI changed business: "We cannot take the way we were go-karting and apply it to Formula One." On disrupting yourself before the market does: "You have to disrupt yourself to where the business is going. You can kind of do it to yourself before someone else does it to you." This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.knuckleup.co

    1h 22m
  4. Behind the curtain of a $4.5b AI-native powerhouse

    May 19

    Behind the curtain of a $4.5b AI-native powerhouse

    Ashwin Sreenivas spent his childhood in India waking up at 5am and studying until 8:30 at night. History, geography, physics, chemistry, math. Every day, from 4th grade through 12th grade, through the Olympiads and the National Talent Search Exam. He says now, three years into building one of the more successful post-ChatGPT companies in the world, that all of that is precisely why what he does today feels almost easy. "I get to come in here and there's a lot of people and I'm having fun." That mode is what Decagon runs on. The company Ashwin co-founded with Jesse Zhang in 2023 is now valued at $4.5 billion, has crossed 450 employees in three years, and works with some of the largest enterprises on the planet. The path there has in some ways been simple: don't theorize about where AI is going, talk to customers until the pain is unmistakable, build for that, ship, repeat. Decagon went from zero to $1 million in ARR with two co-founders and no employees. In this conversation, Ashwin walks through what that means in practice. How Decagon operationalizes a single cultural priority: speed, even when it costs coordination. How they hire 450 people without breaking the bar. How AI has reshaped the IC engineer, the AE, and the VP of EPD. And why, after a year of running 6+ days a week, the thing he and Jesse would tell their earlier selves is: go faster. Ashwin Sreenivas is the co-founder and CTO of Decagon, the AI customer concierge platform founded in 2023 that serves enterprise customers including Substack, Eventbrite, Duolingo, and Notion and is valued at $4.5 billion. Decagon Labs, the company's in-house model development effort, now powers around 90% of Decagon's model traffic. Before Decagon, Sreenivas co-founded Helia in 2019, an AI startup acquired by Scale AI a year later. He started his career as a strategist at Palantir Technologies in New York. Sreenivas holds a Bachelor's degree (2017) and Master's degree (2019) in Computer Science from Stanford University. Decagon raised $35M in 2024 and has scaled to over 450 employees. Where to find Ashwin Sreenivas: • Decagon • X • LinkedIn Where to find Nakul: • Audacious Ventures • X • LinkedIn Where to find Audacious Ventures: • Website • LinkedIn In this conversation with Ashwin Sreenivas: 00:00 Who is Ashwin Sreenivas? 02:10 How did Jesse and Ashwin decide what to work on at Decagon? 04:19 Why did they reject the top-down market-sizing approach? 13:16 What does Decagon give up to keep moving fast? 17:54 Does Decagon expect their team to be 6-days in-office? 23:33 Why didn't they hire a single employee until $1M in ARR? 27:12 How do you hire 450 people in three years without breaking the bar? 31:20 Are Decagon engineers even writing code anymore? 35:08 How does the IC engineer role change with Claude Code and Cursor? 36:32 Shipping in two days: how does EPD leadership change? 40:15 What are the two types of FDE, and which one do most AI companies actually need? 49:21 How will the human role at Decagon evolve over three years? 57:15 Why did Decagon build its own models in Decagon Labs? 1:00:50 What worries Ashwin most about Decagon today? 1:03:52 How does Ashwin manage his psyche while running this fast? 1:08:00 What hiccups has Decagon had that no one sees from the outside? 1:09:50 Quickfire: overrated advice, AI products, books, red flags 1:12:43 What would Ashwin tell his younger self about Decagon's journey? Ashwin's sharpest lines from this conversation... On what actually matters: "If you build a company doing something that your customers care about, you can mess up everything else in a way and it doesn't really matter." On founder market fit: "If you pick the right market, the market will pull the problem and product out of the founding team." On what Decagon traded for speed: "The pace of building has changed so quickly. With AI, there isn't that much time for coordination. You have to give somewhere, and we gave for speed." On packing desks tight: "I specifically asked our head of workplace to get smaller desks so that people are packed even closer together, so that you can lean over and talk to an exponentially larger number of people." On responsibility for AI-generated code: "Use all the tools you have available so that you can move faster, but at the end of the day, you are responsible for the code you push and you should be prepared to defend it rather than say, 'oh, the AI agent wrote it.'" On hiring red flags: "It's not a specific flag, but rather that gut feeling of something's a little off and I'm not sure I want to pull the trigger on this." On the normality of “fires”: "I guarantee you every fast-growing company, probably without a single exception, they've had a thousand fires internally. Just normal. That's just how it is." On the advice he’d give his younger self: "Go faster, hire faster, build faster, get out to the biggest customers faster because the need is real, the market pull is real. You just need to go capture as much of it as quickly as you can." This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.knuckleup.co

    1h 14m
  5. $50M ARR With 3 sales reps, no CRO, and one PM | Michael Grinich (CEO, WorkOS)

    May 7

    $50M ARR With 3 sales reps, no CRO, and one PM | Michael Grinich (CEO, WorkOS)

    Michael Grinich is a design-obsessed engineer who once spent days in a recording studio with an electronic musician crafting the perfect email notification sound. He now runs WorkOS, the $50M (accelerating) ARR enterprise infrastructure business powering nearly every major AI company you can think of, OpenAI, xAI, Anthropic, Sierra, Cursor. Michael has scaled the seven-year-old company to 100 people with no CRO, no VP of sales, and just three sales reps. In an industry where most CEOs default to hiring more executives, Michael runs WorkOS with senior ICs and a weekly operating cycle. In this episode, he unpacks the philosophy behind it all. We also discuss: • Why a great startup idea has to look bad first • Why Michael subscribes to "Minimum awesome product" over MVP • Micro-leadership over micromanagement • How to "AI pill" your team • Why senior engineers are the most impactful with AI • The reverse Peter principle Referenced: • Billie Jean King • Black Swan Farming • Brian Chesky • Cursor • Founder Mode • Ivan Zhao • Model Context Protocol (MCP) • Nat Friedman • Paul Graham • Peter Principle • Seeing Like a State • Twilio Where to find Michael Grinich: • WorkOS • X • LinkedIn Where to find Nakul Mandan: • Audacious Ventures • X • LinkedIn Where to find Audacious: • Website • LinkedIn Timestamps: 00:00 Introduction 01:33 From design-obsessed founder to enterprise infrastructure 04:20 Michael’s year off and what made the WorkOS bet obvious 06:54 Why a great startup idea has to look bad first 09:46 Minimum awesome product beats MVP 11:09 The org with no CRO, no VP of sales, and one PM 13:29 Hiring for curiosity, not credentials 16:25 The "AI pilled" interview red flag 18:25 A week is 2% of the year 26:00 How WorkOS approaches brand 33:00 The future shape of engineering orgs 43:20 Why senior engineers benefit most from AI 44:45 Micro-leadership over micromanagement 49:10 Tough times in the early days 59:04 The reverse Peter principle 1:04:38 Quickfire: red flags, hires too early, and biggest fears 1:10:30 Michael's advice to their 25-year-old self This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.knuckleup.co

    1h 12m
  6. Nobody knows anything, product market fit is dead, and there's only one moat | Bipul Sinha

    Apr 30

    Nobody knows anything, product market fit is dead, and there's only one moat | Bipul Sinha

    Bipul Sinha grew up in dire circumstances in India, made his way to IIT, and immigrated to the US in search of the American dream. By 40 he had become a successful VC at Lightspeed; he then founded Rubrik, today a $10 billion public company and one of the last decade's fastest-growing enterprise software businesses. Most founders look to mentors for guidance. Bipul's first principle is "nobody knows anything." In this conversation, he shares the mental models that got him here and how he's rebuilding Rubrik for the AI era. We also discuss: • The "state of intellect vs state of will" mindset shift • Why "recruiting is like starting a religion" • "Nobody knows anything" and how to use experts expertly • "Product market fit is dead" and the S-curve stack • "Adhogāmī": only work on what worries you most • Why time is the only real moat • The "Maximal thinking" framework for dealing with uncertainty Referenced: • Bhagavad Gita • Jiddu Krishnamurti • Qasar Younis • Upanishads • Viktor Frankl Where to find Bipul: • Rubrik • X • LinkedIn Where to find Nakul: • Audacious Ventures • X • LinkedIn Where to find Audacious: • Website • X • LinkedIn Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 01:47 State of intellect vs state of will 03:09 Bipul’s maniacal recruiting philosophy 07:06 Recruiting is like starting a religion 11:44 Will vs skill: you can teach one but not the other 14:28 Adhogāmī: fighting mental downward slopes 16:03 Why Bipul thinks product market fit is dead 19:25 Nobody knows anything (and what that means for you) 23:06 Three questions that launched Rubrik’s AI transformation 32:04 “Either you go AI or you die” 33:42 There is only one moat 35:15 When Rubrik’s growth collapsed overnight 41:28 “Maximal Thinking”: How to succeed amidst uncertainty 45:12 Quickfire round: red flags, worst VC advice, more 47:29 Bipul’s advice to his 25-year-old self This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.knuckleup.co

    49 min
  7. Battle-tested playbooks for recuriting, reading the market, and adapting to AI

    Apr 23

    Battle-tested playbooks for recuriting, reading the market, and adapting to AI

    Qasar Younis grew up on a farm in Pakistan, moved to Detroit as a kid, and worked at General Motors before landing at Google and becoming COO of Y Combinator. He then founded Applied Intuition, today a $15 billion company building AI for the physical world. In an industry where most people look up to tech founders, Qasar looks up to Sam Walton and Warren Buffett. Qasar is an N of 1 founder, and in this conversation, he shares his contrarian approach to company building. We discuss: * What truly makes a founder * The “two exceptional indicators” recruiting bar * Why Qasar’s first 10 hires lived in a house together * A simple framework for monthly performance reviews * The “golden age of small companies” * How to operate with speed and intentionality Referenced: * Andrej Karpathy * Applied Intuition * Immad Akhund * Kickstarter * Peter Ludwig * 18 Mistakes That Kill Startups Where to find Qasar: * Website * Twitter / X * LinkedIn * Applied Intuition Where to find Nakul: * Twitter / X * LinkedIn Where to find Audacious Ventures: * Website * Twitter / X * LinkedIn Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 01:19 What really makes someone a founder 05:26 The company that almost became Kickstarter 08:12 The most common misread on feedback 13:40 Why most founders don’t end up with the best team 19:45 How to pick a co-founder 23:38 Your first 10 hires are really your first 100 28:21 The case for hiring slow and firing slow 33:22 Red, yellow, green: how Applied gives monthly feedback 35:00 The role that knows what’s actually going on in a company 40:01 How to operate with speed and intentionality 42:41 The three things Qasar spends time on 45:57 How Applied is driving AI adoption 52:06 The type of engineer Applied is now looking for 1:01:19 Why this could be the golden age of small companies 1:09:13 Quickfire: red flags, overrated advice, and superpowers 1:12:32 Qasar’s advice to his 25-year-old self This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.knuckleup.co

    1h 13m
  8. Frank Slootman on what most CEOs get wrong

    Apr 14

    Frank Slootman on what most CEOs get wrong

    Frank Slootman is the only CEO in history to take three enterprise companies public: Data Domain, ServiceNow, and Snowflake. At their peak, the companies he led were worth over $200 billion combined. His playbook for building high-performance organizations, captured in his book “Amp It Up”, has become required reading for CEOs. In this conversation, Frank opens up about the fear of failure that shaped his early career, why most CEOs tolerate mediocrity for far too long, and the moment he realized Snowflake needed a different kind of leader and chose to step aside. We discuss: • Why being a CEO is a confrontational job • The “drivers vs. passengers” framework • Why references matter more than interviews • Why culture isn’t about making people feel good • How Frank faces his demons “for breakfast” • How Data Domain survived year one on $3M and a product nobody believed in • Why AI is a dislocation on the scale of the Industrial Revolution Referenced: • Amp It Up • Data Domain • Elon Musk • Google • Intel • Peter Thiel • Scott McNealy • ServiceNow • Snowflake • Sridhar Ramaswamy • Steve Jobs Where to find Frank: • LinkedIn Where to find Nakul: • Twitter / X • LinkedIn Where to find Audacious Ventures: • Website • Twitter / X • LinkedIn Timestamps: 00:49 Introduction 01:21 Why being a CEO is a confrontational job 03:51 Great people are hungry for hard feedback 08:19 Psychographic profiling: how Frank builds compatible teams 09:52 Drivers vs passengers: how to tell the difference 12:39 Why back-channel references beat interviews every time 16:19 “When there’s doubt, there’s no doubt” 20:42 Inside Frank’s Tuesday operating cadence 22:27 The “go direct” rule that breaks org chart politics 26:19 Why bigger goals force better plans 31:27 Standards are the real culture 38:17 The email Frank wrote every Monday for years 41:35 Advice for navigating today’s volatility 47:25 Facing demons for breakfast at Data Domain 54:19 Why Frank fired himself as Snowflake CEO 1:05:19 Coming to Silicon Valley “10 years late” 1:07:59 Why AI is an industrial-revolution-scale shift 1:10:01 Frank’s advice to his 25-year-old self This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.knuckleup.co

    1h 11m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Knuckle Up is about the HOW of building iconic companies. Recruiting, culture, intensity, the inner game of being a founder CEO. The stuff that actually separates great companies from good ones. Hosted by Nakul Mandan (GP, Audacious Ventures), each episode goes deep with founders who’ve done it at the highest level. Not highlight reels. Operating playbooks, straight from the best of the best. www.knuckleup.co

You Might Also Like