EUVC

The home of European tech. Connecting the people, capital, and companies building Europe. Conversations with the investors, founders, and operators shaping the continent.

  1. The AI jobs panic might be wrong

    -2 дн.

    The AI jobs panic might be wrong

    Everyone says AI is taking jobs. The data says something more complicated. In this episode of This Week in European Tech, Dan Bowyer and Mads Jensen of SuperSeed unpack the growing panic around AI-driven job losses, why junior hiring is falling across many industries and whether AI is actually the culprit. They explore new research suggesting remote work may be having a bigger impact on entry-level employment than AI, discuss the UK's record number of young people not in employment, education or training and examine what the data really shows about automation and labour markets. They also cover Anthropic's latest model release, the rise of AI application-layer companies, Europe's sovereignty debate, the economics of AI infrastructure and a zero-employee AI company that just raised $30 million. Topics covered Is AI really replacing workers?Why junior hiring is fallingWhat the data says about AI and employmentAnthropic's rise and Opus 4.8Why the AI application layer is winningEurope's tech sovereignty dilemmaThe zero-employee AI company phenomenonAI infrastructure beyond GPUsTimestamps (00:00) The rise of the zero-employee AI company(04:50) Why AI applications are becoming more valuable(09:00) AI infrastructure moves beyond GPUs(16:00) Snowflake, Salesforce and enterprise AI adoption(24:00) Anthropic's latest model and valuation surge(27:00) Europe's sovereignty dilemma(33:00) The $30 million zero-employee AI startup(35:45) Is AI actually taking jobs?(38:00) What the data says about junior hiring(41:00) Why AI may not be the main cause(46:00) Predictions: which AI unicorn could fail next?(48:00) Deal of the week: Cognition and DevinFor more European venture, AI and startup insights, subscribe to EUVC, the home of European tech.

    53 мин.
  2. Building the world's 'thinnest' battery out of Europe

    19 мая

    Building the world's 'thinnest' battery out of Europe

    Batteries do not just power products anymore. They shape what products can be built. In this episode, Andreas Munk Holm speaks with Michael Brehm and Mohamed Foulser from Redstone alongside Moritz H. Futscher, CEO and Co-Founder of BTRY, about why the next wave of battery innovation is not about bigger battery packs but entirely new form factors. BTRY is a Swiss battery startup developing an ultra-thin, foldable solid-state battery designed for IoT, medtech and consumer electronics. Founded in 2023 as an Empa and ETH Zürich spin-off, the company is building a new category of batteries aimed at enabling products that previously were not possible. The discussion covers Europe’s industrial opportunity in batteries, the importance of scalable manufacturing, overlooked opportunities in embedded electronics and why the future of hardware may make batteries effectively disappear. Key highlights Why battery innovation is shifting from chemistry to product design and manufacturingHow BTRY is creating a new category of ultra-thin batteriesWhy scalability matters more than lab breakthroughs in deep techEurope’s opportunity to build globally competitive battery companiesWhat embedded batteries could unlock across wearables, sensors and medtechTimestamps (00:00) Why batteries still limit innovation(04:10) The overlooked opportunity in sub-1Ah batteries(07:25) Rebuilding battery manufacturing from scratch(10:00) What foldable batteries could enable(14:00) Smart labels, sensors and embedded devices(18:00) Why scaling production is the real challenge(24:30) Can Europe compete in batteries?(34:00) The future of ultra-thin battery-powered productsSubscribe to EUVC, the home of European tech, for more insights.

    37 мин.
  3. What happens when AI agents become customers?

    14 мая

    What happens when AI agents become customers?

    What changes when AI agents can transact on their own? Andreas Munk Holm speaks with Viggo Stenseth, CEO and Co-Founder of SolvaPay, alongside Redstone General Partners Samuli Sirén and Mickaël Bellaïche, about building payment infrastructure for the agentic economy. The conversation explores agent-to-agent transactions, usage-based billing, protocol interoperability, regulatory moats and why existing payment rails may not be designed for AI-native commerce. Key highlights Why AI agents need payment infrastructure built for agentic commerceHow businesses can monetise APIs, datasets and digital services used by agentsWhy SolvaPay plugs into existing financial rails rather than bypassing themThe “battle of protocols” across agent marketplaces and ecosystemsWhy regulation, licensing and identity matter in agentic paymentsTimestamps (00:00) Why payments are blocking the agentic economy(02:00) What SolvaPay is building(05:10) Why customers already want agent-to-agent transactions(06:30) Existing financial rails versus crypto-native approaches(08:10) The “battle of protocols” and AI marketplaces(12:00) Redstone on why agentic payments are real(17:20) Why Redstone invested before traction existed(27:00) Can SolvaPay become the Stripe for AI agents?(32:00) Why incumbents may struggle to adapt(36:10) Building long term versus building for exit(41:00) Does the world need an agentic bank?Subscribe to EUVC, the home of European tech, for more insights: https://www.eu.vc/subscribe

    47 мин.
  4. Ro Gupta, Woven Capital: How Toyota uses corporate venture to win in AI and robotics

    13 мая

    Ro Gupta, Woven Capital: How Toyota uses corporate venture to win in AI and robotics

    Most corporates struggle to move fast enough for AI and robotics. Toyota’s answer is corporate venture. In this episode, Andreas Munk Holm and Jeppe Høier speak with Ro Gupta, CEO and Managing Director of Woven Capital, Toyota’s growth-stage venture fund focused on mobility, AI, automation and climate technology. They discuss how Toyota uses CVC to identify frontier technologies, work with startups and think decades ahead. Ro shares how Woven Capital functions as agile “speedboats” around Toyota’s industrial “supertanker”, scanning for strategic opportunities across AI, robotics, mobility, manufacturing and infrastructure. Highlights Why Toyota invests through both “inside-out” and “outside-in” models How Woven evaluates AI, robotics and the future of labour Why strategic engagement matters more than passive investing How Toyota balances long-term thinking with venture-speed execution Why Europe is becoming increasingly important for Toyota’s innovation strategy Timestamps (00:00) Ro Gupta’s founder background and move into Toyota(04:00) Startup operators vs corporate insiders in CVC(10:00) Toyota’s multi-fund venture strategy(15:00) The “supertanker and speedboats” framework(18:00) AI hype cycles and long-term industrial strategy(23:00) AI, robotics and advanced manufacturing themes(27:00) What Woven Capital looks for in startups(30:00) What founders expect from CVC investors(33:00) How Woven collaborates with traditional VCs(35:00) Europe’s role in Toyota’s future strategy(39:00) Toyota’s next 100-year opportunity(44:00) The “build, move and connect” framework Subscribe to EUVC, the home of European tech, for more insights: https://www.eu.vc/subscribe

    49 мин.
  5. Episode #1: Consumer Tech Napkin | Fundraising & Benchmarks in Consumer Tech

    12 мая

    Episode #1: Consumer Tech Napkin | Fundraising & Benchmarks in Consumer Tech

    What actually gets a consumer company funded in Europe? Fewer things than most founders think. This is one of the questions the first episode of Consumer Tech Napkin explores, with Andreas Munk Holm joined by Sameer Singh (Partner with Speedinvest's Marketplaces and Consumer team), Susan Lin (Partner and Investor at Felix Capital) and Joe Seager-Dupuy (Director, Investment at True). The conversation covers engagement as the real leading indicator, why a decade of cheap capital let weak products hide behind paid acquisition, what behavioural signals actually move investors and why AI is not the defensibility play most founders assume it is. If you're building consumer, this one's worth your time. Key highlights Engagement is the strongest signal in consumer software, not monetisationGrowth can hide weak businesses when retention and organic acquisition are missingAI alone is not a moat and thin wrappers are easy to replicateConsumer is underfunded in Europe despite producing many of its biggest outcomesBlitzscaling only works when companies already have defensibilityTimestamps (00:00)⁠ What actually gets a consumer company funded in Europe?⁠(02:40)⁠ Why AI is not a platform shift⁠(04:15)⁠ Thin AI wrappers and defensibility in consumer software⁠(07:30) AI-enabled consumer opportunities in health, therapy and financial services⁠(10:00)⁠ What investors actually look for in consumer startups⁠(11:20)⁠ Why engagement is the strongest signal that something is working⁠(15:10)⁠ Why behaviour matters more than surveys or narratives⁠(19:00)⁠ Why consumer remains underweight in European venture⁠(27:00)⁠ Marginal costs, pricing power and scalable business models⁠(34:30)⁠ Why blitzscaling only works when companies already have a moat⁠(39:00)⁠ Paid acquisition, defensibility and sustainable growth⁠(41:30)⁠ Felix Capital’s consumer investing scorecardSubscribe to EUVC, the home of European tech, for more insights: https://www.eu.vc/subscribe

    45 мин.
5
из 5
Оценок: 4

Об этом подкасте

The home of European tech. Connecting the people, capital, and companies building Europe. Conversations with the investors, founders, and operators shaping the continent.

Еще от провайдера «EUVC»

Вам может также понравиться