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. 9月3日

    E37: Bigger Isn't Better and Give First with Techstars' David Cohen

    David Cohen is the CEO and Cofounder of Techstars. Techstars is one of the OGs of startup accelerators, investing in almost 5,000 startups since Techstars was founded in 2006. David himself is a serial entrepreneur who was the founding CEO at Techstars, later stepped back from that role, and then returned as CEO in 2024. We talked about the problems that Techstars solves for founders, how vibe-coding affects accelerators, why Techstars finally opened up in SF, and why bigger isn’t better – better is better. Please enjoy.    A few longer highlights:   Techstars was founded to create a supportive community for entrepreneurs. The accelerator model has evolved, with many new players in the market. Quality of support is more important than the number of companies funded. Techstars is focused on improving the offer for founders to attract high-quality startups. The network of mentors and alumni is a key asset for Techstars. Founders often come in with hubris but learn to embrace feedback. The experience of founders in the program can lead to significant transformations. Market selection is based on capital availability and community strength. Techstars aims to maintain quality while allowing MDs autonomy in decision-making. AI is changing the landscape of startup development, emphasizing storytelling and long-term vision.   Investing in Startups is hosted by Joe Magyer and produced by Seaplane Ventures.

  2. 8月20日

    E36: Network Effects, AI Agents, & the Myth of "Product Is Enough" with NFX's Gigi Levy-Weiss

    Gigi Levy-Weiss is a serial founder and a Founding Partner at NFX. NFX is an early-stage firm that has established itself as one of leading experts in network effects. We talked about network effects, AI agents, the importance of speed of exectuion, why first-mover advantages are overrated, and how NFX has built its own brand, systems, and network effects.    We also covered:   Going global without going local — Despite a 10-hour time gap between Israel and Silicon Valley, NFX partners rejected the easier path of separate regional funds, instead building a fully integrated, unified investment process based on trust, asynchronous communication, and individual founder meetings. Content as a competitive weapon — Early, sustained investment in short-form, actionable founder content gave NFX outsized market presence. Articles like the “Network Effects Bible” turned content into a persistent competitive advantage, positioning NFX as the definitive voice on network effects. AI's future is agent-to-agent, not agent-to-human — Gigi sees current AI implementations as merely transitional (agent-to-human workflows), predicting the true revolution lies in agent-to-agent interactions, cutting entire human-dependent processes from months down to minutes. B2C is AI’s biggest opening — Contrary to many investors betting big on AI-driven enterprise SaaS, Gigi argues consumer and SMB markets offer more attractive opportunities. Large enterprises will adapt quickly, limiting disruption, while SMBs and consumer verticals are ripe for agent-first innovation. First-mover advantage is overrated — Gigi challenges the widely-held VC belief in the inherent value of being first. Pointing to past failures, he argues that "being great is more important than being first," and successful fast-followers often become category leaders. Great products rarely sell themselves — Founders mistakenly obsess over perfecting product details (“product delusion”), yet distribution and defensibility usually matter more. NFX advocates for “product-market-network-distribution fit,” highlighting cases like Craigslist where distribution outshone product polish. VC needs its own disruption — NFX built internal VC tooling (“The Force”) and founder-focused products like Signal and BriefLink, seeing tech-driven innovation as essential for winning deal flow. They reject the outdated assumption that every industry except VC itself can be disrupted by technology.   Investing in Startups is hosted by Joe Magyer and produced by Seaplane Ventures.

  3. 8月6日

    E35: The Pitch, Democratizing Startup Funding, and Non-Consensus Investing with Josh Muccio

    Josh Muccio is the Founder of The Pitch and The Pitch Fund. The Pitch is a show that features startup founders pitching a panel of VCs and getting live-fire feedback. The Pitch Fund invests in Josh’s favorite startups that appear on The Pitch. We talked about the behind-the-scenes of how the show works, pitching, whether the market matters more than the founder, and the dangers of consensus investing.   We also dove into:   – Josh shares how selling an iPhone-repair startup and falling in love with Gimlet’s Startup podcast led him to create The Pitch to “democratize access” to startup investing and storytelling.    – Why The Pitch is “like Shark Tank for tech” but with real, check-writing VCs. Less ego, more thoughtful questions, and founders who actually get funded.    – Inside the funnel: ~1,000 companies apply each season; venture partner Peter Liu screens hundreds before Lisa Muccio and Josh decide who records—only after all three have met the founder to curb bias.    – The backstory of The Pitch Fund and Josh’s investing rubric: market > founder > product—he weights market roughly 60 % and warns that even great founders struggle in weak markets.    – Railing against “consensus chasing,” he argues that investing purely for quick mark-ups hurts returns and founders; instead, he hunts non-consensus deals—like a snack-chip startup he backed at a $4 million valuation.    Investing in Startups is hosted by Joe Magyer and produced by Seaplane Ventures.

  4. 6月25日

    E31: Unlocking the Secrets of Startup Secondaries with Jamie Melzer

    Our guest this week is Jamie Melzer, Managing Partner at Altra Venture Partners. Altra invests in late-stage and pre-IPO venture-backed startups via secondaries. Jamie took us on a behind-the-scenes tour of the secondary market, how it works, why it is relevant to early stage investors and founders, and where the market is heading. This was the first time we’ve talked about secondaries on Investing in Startups but it probably won’t be the last because it is becoming more important as startups stay private for longer. Please enjoy.   We also covered:   The nuts and bolts of a secondary deal—finding a seller, agreeing on price with scant data, and getting past ROFRs or outright company blocks that kill roughly a third of transactions. Why the late-stage secondary market now looks like public-equity investing, with the top 10 U.S. unicorns (SpaceX, Stripe, OpenAI, etc.) representing more than a third of all private-tech value—a true power-law. Common shares trading at premiums to fresh preferred rounds, and how hidden liquidation stacks can wipe you out if you don’t model the waterfall. The surge of giant institutional funds and private-wealth vehicles buying $100-300 M blocks—versus retail SPVs chasing “Birkin-bag” names like Anduril or SpaceX, often at double the institutional price. Lessons Jamie brought from distressed credit: pricing risk, valuing businesses bottom-up, and why share-class selection matters as much as entry multiple. Rethinking portfolio construction: focus on position size and access, not “own 10 %,” and accept that 15-30 late-stage names can give better exposure than hundreds of seed bets. How evergreen, index-style funds could let employees and early VCs tap liquidity every 6-12 months while letting new investors hold compounders indefinitely. The coming “secondary-of-secondaries” wave, when today’s growth-stage and secondary funds will themselves need liquidity from even later buyers.   Investing in Startups is hosted by Joe Magyer and produced by Seaplane Ventures.

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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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