The Sure Shot Entrepreneur

Gopi Rangan

Successful entrepreneurs begin with the support of a few #earlybelievers. Gopi Rangan, founding partner at Sure Ventures, interviews venture capital investors in the Silicon Valley and beyond. Guests share insider stories on how they invest in early stage startups. Do you want to learn from real-life challenges, inspiring missions and important decisions by CEOs, founders, VCs, angels, and advisors? Listen to https://podcast.sure.ventures.

  1. Young Kind Leaders are Our Hope for a Better Future

    4D AGO

    Young Kind Leaders are Our Hope for a Better Future

    Ian Sandler, COO of Insight Partners and co-founder of Riley’s Way Foundation, engages in a deeply personal and wide-ranging conversation on leadership, venture capital, and building meaningful impact. Ian reflects on his unconventional career path, his philosophy on building organizations, and how a personal tragedy shaped his mission to empower the next generation of kind leaders. He also shares practical advice for founders and young leaders on dreaming big, understanding themselves, and building networks that matter. In this episode: [00:58] Ian Sandler’s background and upbringing [03:59] From law to “wimpy entrepreneur” [06:05]  Building and scaling at Insight Partners [09:27]  Balancing venture capital with purpose [12:35]  What makes great investors today [17:12]  The story behind Riley’s Way Foundation [31:33]  Advice for young leaders: dream big, self-care, network [36:17] The future of Riley’s Way Foundation The nonprofit organization Ian is passionate about: Riley’s Way Foundation About Ian Sandler Ian Sandler is the Chief Operating Officer at Insight Partners, where he oversees the firm’s non-investment operations and helps scale new strategic initiatives. Over a career spanning roles at Morgan Stanley, The Carlyle Group, and Citadel, he has built a reputation as a “builder of businesses” who specializes in identifying talent and turning ideas into scalable platforms. In parallel, he is the co-founder of Riley’s Way Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to developing kind, community-driven young leaders. About Insight Partners Founded in 1995, Insight Partners is a global venture capital and private equity firm focused on high-growth software, internet, and technology companies. The firm manages over $90 billion in assets and has invested in more than 875 companies worldwide, supporting founders from early-stage growth through IPO. Its approach combines capital with hands-on operational support through its “Onsite” team, helping companies scale revenue, build talent, and execute go-to-market strategies. Subscribe to our podcast and stay tuned for our next episode.

    38 min
  2. Skip the InsurTech Hype and Focus on What Actually Works

    APR 21

    Skip the InsurTech Hype and Focus on What Actually Works

    Gilad Shai, Managing Director at BMI Capital International,  reveals the harsh realities and hidden opportunities in the InsurTech ecosystem. From launching InsurTech LA with 10 people in 2015 to watching billion-dollar valuations evaporate 90% post-IPO, Gilad shares unfiltered insights on why most InsurTech startups are stuck in "purgatory" and what it really takes to succeed in insurance innovation. In this episode, you'll learn: [01:13] Building the InsurTech LA community [05:26] The evolution of InsurTech over the past decade [10:50] Are we early or late in InsurTech? [15:01] Why innovation in insurance is harder than it looks [19:43] Advice for founders entering InsurTech [23:05] IPO failures and M&A realities The nonprofit organization Gilad is passionate about: Gift of Life About Gilad Shai Gilad Shai is a Managing Director at BMI Capital International. A Global InsurTech expert and lead advisor at BMI, Gilad has over 20 years of professional experience. He invests directly and is an active advisory board member in several organizations. Gilad's experience spans multiple industries and company sizes. He worked for large brands Intel, Hearst, Yahoo!, and Farmers insurance and has launched several startups. Gilad is a host, a speaker, and an author on the InsurTech subject. He has been organizing InsurTech LA events and hosting guest speakers since 2017. He has given keynote presentations and moderated panels at major global conferences in NYC, London, Chicago, Vegas, and Tel Aviv. Gilad co-authored The InsurTech book, published by Wiley, and featured in Financial Times and other media outlets and podcasts. About BMI Capital International BMI Capital International is an investment firm focused on the intersection of insurance and technology. The firm specializes in identifying and supporting innovative solutions that transform how insurance products are created, distributed, and managed. BMI Capital provides strategic capital and industry expertise to help portfolio companies navigate the complex insurance ecosystem and achieve meaningful scale. Subscribe to our podcast and stay tuned for our next episode.

    33 min
  3. Unlock Breakthroughs as Physical and Digital Worlds Merge

    APR 7

    Unlock Breakthroughs as Physical and Digital Worlds Merge

    Debjit Mukerji, Partner at NGP Capital, explains why deep tech’s defining moment has finally arrived. Drawing on a thesis-driven approach, he shares how he evaluates companies at the intersection where “atoms meet bits”, backing founders building in the physical world. Debjit breaks down the convergence of three powerful forces—labor shortages, generative AI’s expansion into industrial use cases, and faster hardware development cycles—that are unlocking a new era of opportunity for physical technology companies. In this episode, you'll learn: [05:28] Why venture capital? [07:40] Inside NGP Capital’s deep tech focus [11:05] Why now is the moment for deep tech [17:02] What Debjit looks for in founders [19:17] The Tractian story: founder intensity [31:39] Key deep tech trends: Robotics & AI [35:43] What makes a great deep tech pitch The nonprofit organization Debjit is passionate about: MedShare About Debjit Mukerji Debjit Mukerji is a Partner at NGP Capital, where he focuses on Deep Tech investments across robotics, AI, and industrial systems. With over two decades in venture capital, Debjit brings a strong technical foundation, holding a PhD in mechanical engineering from Stanford University. His career has spanned roles across multiple leading firms and industrial technology platforms, where he has consistently focused on translating breakthrough research into real-world impact. He is particularly passionate about backing founders building at the intersection of software and the physical world—where innovation is hardest, but most enduring. About NGP Capital NGP Capital is a global venture capital firm dedicated to investing in Deep Tech companies. With a focus on “digital-physical convergence,” the firm backs startups that apply AI, software, and hardware to transform physical industries. NGP Capital invests primarily at the Series A and B stages, with a global footprint spanning North America, Europe, and beyond. The firm partners closely with founders building in sectors such as robotics, industrial software, space technology, and connected systems, supporting companies that aim to redefine how the physical world operates. Subscribe to our podcast and stay tuned for our next episode.

    40 min
  4. Some Ideas Can’t Wait. Accelerate Now.

    MAR 24

    Some Ideas Can’t Wait. Accelerate Now.

    Danielle Strachman and Michael Gibson, Founders and General Partners at the 1517 Fund, discuss their unconventional approach to venture capital. The firm backs ambitious founders, many of whom choose to leave college early to pursue breakthrough ideas. Drawing on their experience building the Thiel Fellowship, Danielle and Michael explain how working closely with hundreds of young innovators shaped their belief in character driven investing. They share how they identify talent before traditional signals appear and why curiosity, conviction, and “hyper fluency” matter more than credentials. In this episode, you'll learn: [01:03] Danielle Strachman and Michael Gibson on building the Thiel Fellowship and founding 1517 Fund [07:56] Lessons from working with hundreds of Thiel Fellows and identifying exceptional young builders [14:32] Why leaving college early can be an acceleration, not a dropout [18:47] The story behind the name 1517 Fund [23:41] How 1517 evaluates founders and why character matters more than credentials [29:06] Investing in frontier technologies that sound like science fiction [36:58] Advice for young builders and how founders can connect with the 1517 community The nonprofit organization Danielle is passionate about: Foresight Institute   About Danielle Strachman Danielle Strachman is Co Founder and General Partner at 1517 Fund. She has spent more than a decade working with young entrepreneurs and unconventional builders. In 2010 she joined the founding team of the Thiel Fellowship, where she led the design and operations of the program. During that time she worked with founders such as Vitalik Buterin and Ritesh Agarwal. Before that, Danielle founded and directed Innovations Academy in San Diego, a K–8 charter school focused on student led and project based learning. At 1517 Fund, she focuses on identifying ambitious young builders and helping them turn early ideas into companies.   About Michael Gibson Michael Gibson is Co Founder and General Partner at 1517 Fund. In 2010 he helped launch the Thiel Fellowship with Peter Thiel. The program was built on a simple belief. Exceptional founders can appear without credentials and often in unexpected places. Michael frequently challenges the influence of credential driven institutions across education, government, and industry. His work focuses on supporting founders who push the edges of science and technology.   About 1517 Fund 1517 Fund is an early-stage venture capital firm founded in 2015 by Danielle Strachman and Michael Gibson. The firm backs young founders, uncredentialed builders, and renegade scientists working on ambitious ideas. Its philosophy grew out of the success of the Thiel Fellowship, which helped launch companies such as Ethereum, Figma, Luminar Technologies, OYO Rooms, and Longevity Fund. The name 1517 references the year Martin Luther sparked the Reformation. In the same spirit, the firm challenges the modern belief that credentials and diplomas are required to build important things. Subscribe to our podcast and stay tuned for our next episode.

    43 min
  5. Improve Healthcare Access for Overlooked Populations

    MAR 10

    Improve Healthcare Access for Overlooked Populations

    Jessica Karr, Founder and Managing Partner at Coyote Ventures, shares how she backs AI-driven startups focused on improving health access, outcomes, and equity. Drawing from her six years at Impossible Foods, where she helped build a product from prototype to global phenomenon, Jessica explains how she brings a product innovator's lens to healthcare's most overlooked problems: women's health, racial disparities, rural access, and aging care. Jessica demonstrates why solving for equity isn't just morally right; it's economically smart through better outcomes and cost savings. She also discusses how her Health Equity Innovator Summit has become the convergence point where founders, health systems, payers, and policymakers forge the partnerships that turn healthcare's biggest gaps into its biggest opportunities. In this episode, you'll learn: [02:40] Jessica’s journey from Texas to San Francisco and her early work in R&D at Impossible Foods [04:55] The idea behind plant based meat and how innovation can reshape consumer behavior [07:30] Why Jessica started Coyote Ventures and how the firm focuses on overlooked areas of healthcare [10:35] How AI driven digital health platforms can improve patient outcomes between doctor visits [13:15] What Coyote Ventures looks for when evaluating seed and pre seed healthcare startups [18:55] How AI is changing healthcare products and operations [22:35] Advice for founders building healthcare startups in a complex and relationship driven system [28:45] The Health Equity Innovator Summit The nonprofit organization Jessica is passionate about: Reproductive Freedom for All About Jessica Karr Jessica Karr is the Founder and Managing Partner of Coyote Ventures, an early stage venture capital firm focused on improving healthcare access and outcomes. She previously worked in research and development at Impossible Foods, where she helped develop early prototypes of the company’s plant based meat products and contributed to patents. After earning her MBA and working closely with startups, Jessica launched Coyote Ventures to back founders building innovative healthcare solutions, especially in areas that have historically been underserved. About Coyote Ventures Coyote Ventures is an early stage venture capital firm investing in digital health and healthcare technology companies that improve access, outcomes, and equity in healthcare. The firm focuses on areas such as women’s health, mental health, caregiving, aging, and other underserved segments of the healthcare system. Coyote Ventures invests in AI driven platforms and digital health solutions that help patients, healthcare providers, and payers deliver better care at scale. Portfolio companies include Alvee, Betterleave, Flex, Gabbi, Hera Biotech, Magnolia, Malama Health, Maude among others. Subscribe to our podcast and stay tuned for our next episode.

    33 min
  6. AI Will Not Save You. Reinvention Will.

    FEB 24

    AI Will Not Save You. Reinvention Will.

    Kapil Surlaker, VP of Engineering, Data and AI Infrastructure at LinkedIn, joins guest host Bhaskar Ghosh for a technical and thoughtful discussion on how AI is reshaping enterprise. Kapil shares how LinkedIn built strong data foundations over more than a decade, and how that foundation enabled generative and agentic AI use cases. He reflects on building Espresso, a distributed database created out of necessity, and explains why he would not build it again today. The conversation explores AI infrastructure, model flexibility, privacy guardrails, and operational responsibility. His message to leaders is clear. Reinvent yourself continuously, or risk becoming irrelevant. In this episode, you'll learn: [04:07] From personalization to hiring agents [08:30] Modern AI infrastructure and model flexibility [14:58] Why LinkedIn built Espresso [23:08] AI can write code but you own the pager [26:33] Data as a success layer [30:06] Privacy, governance, and guardrails in the AI age [37:56] Reinvent or go extinct About Kapil Surlaker Kapil Surlaker is a seasoned technology leader who has worked across distributed systems, large-scale databases, and AI infrastructure. He began his career at Oracle building foundational database technologies before joining LinkedIn during its hypergrowth phase. At LinkedIn, he played a central role in building Espresso, a massively scalable distributed document database, and later led AI and data platform modernization efforts that powered personalization, ads, search, and emerging generative AI use cases. His work spans infrastructure, privacy engineering, governance systems, and enterprise AI transformation. About Bhaskar "BG" Ghosh Bhaskar "BG" Ghosh is an engineer, operator and investor, currently building and raising capital in the emerging investment category of AI-powered services for high TAM legacy verticals. Previously BG was a General Partner at SF venture firm 8VC where he led the core early-phase enterprise s/w investments in AI and Data, incubated disruptive businesses in AI-enabled Services and Infra, and supported a large family of founders in trenches and on boards. BG spent his formative Silicon Valley years building core tech and teams during the hyper-scaling phases of LinkedIn Data, Yahoo Ads, Oracle RDBMS and Nerdwallet marketplaces. Subscribe to our podcast and stay tuned for our next episode.

    43 min
  7. We are in a Bubble of Bubble Talk, Not in a Real Financial Bubble

    FEB 10

    We are in a Bubble of Bubble Talk, Not in a Real Financial Bubble

    Aman Verjee, Founder and General Partner at Practical Venture Capital, shares his view of how venture capital has evolved over the past two decades and why secondary markets now play a critical role in the ecosystem. Drawing from his time at PayPal, eBay, and Sonos, Aman explains how companies today stay private far longer than they used to, what that means for early investors and employees, and how thoughtfully structured secondary transactions can reduce friction and misalignment on the cap table. He also challenges popular narratives around tech bubbles, walking through historical examples to explain why today’s AI-driven market looks fundamentally different. In this episode, you'll learn: [01:11] Aman’s journey from Wall Street to Practical VC [03:40] What made the early PayPal team exceptional [06:32] Follow the customer, not the original plan [10:44] Why are startups staying private longer today? [11:17] What secondary transactions actually are [18:41] How founders should handle secondary requests [26:11] Are we in a tech bubble today? The nonprofit organization Aman is passionate about: AYSO (American Youth Soccer Organization) About Aman Verjee Aman Verjee is the Founder and General Partner of Practical Venture Capital, a secondary-focused fund providing liquidity to early investors in late-stage private companies. Before launching Practical VC, Aman spent over a decade in finance and operations roles at PayPal and eBay, joining PayPal in 2001 before its IPO and witnessing its transformation from a money-beaming mobile app to the dominant payment platform for eBay. Earlier, he worked in investment banking in New York after studying economics at Stanford and constitutional law at Harvard Law School. Aman was recruited to PayPal by Peter Thiel and worked directly for David Sachs during the company's pivotal early years. Now partnering with Dave McClure, he focuses on Series C and D investments in SaaS and FinTech companies with $200M+ in revenue and clear paths to liquidity within 5-7 years. He's also writing a book on the history of financial bubbles and co-hosts the Trading Places podcast, analyzing private company valuations. About Practical Venture Capital Practical Venture Capital is a secondary-focused venture firm that provides liquidity solutions for early investors, employees, and funds. Operating with a 7-year fund structure instead of the traditional 10-15 years, Practical VC targets 20-40% discounts to last-round valuations in Series C and D companies with $200M+ in revenue and clear paths to exit. The firm specializes in SaaS and FinTech but has made exceptions for exceptional opportunities like SpaceX, now their biggest winner despite violating their typical investment criteria. Founded by Aman Verjee and Dave McClure, Practical VC evaluates roughly 50 companies at any given time, making 5-10 investments annually. The firm also offers SPVs for deals that don't fit their main fund and covers LATAM opportunities through an operating partner in Argentina. Their approach recognizes that modern venture capital requires new liquidity solutions as companies like SpaceX (23 years private), Airbnb (17 years), and Palantir (20 years) redefine what "patient capital" means. Subscribe to our podcast and stay tuned for our next episode.

    40 min
  8. Are You Willing to Deal With the Pain of Building a Successful Business?

    JAN 27

    Are You Willing to Deal With the Pain of Building a Successful Business?

    Jonathan Crystal, Managing Partner at Crystal Venture Partners, talks about investing in early-stage AI-driven insurtech companies. After leading his family's insurance brokerage to a successful exit, Jonathan launched his $33M fund when he realized AI was the catalyst insurance had been waiting for. He explains why entrepreneurship means "dooming yourself to years of terror," and why the best investments happen when founders identify problems before revenue models. With investments in companies like Bright Harbor, which helps families navigate disaster recovery, Jonathan explains how domain expertise enables conviction at day one—when there's no product, just a founder with an audacious vision. In this episode, you'll learn: [02:14] From Texas to Princeton to building an insurance dynasty in New York [04:04] Why insurance rewards creativity and curious minds [07:24] The brutal truth: 99% of a VC's job is saying no [10:31] Exiting the family business and finding the "why now" moment for venture [12:10] The ChatGPT revelation that launched Crystal Venture Partners [14:13] Investment thesis: $1-3M checks at day one for transformational companies [19:11] Why building a venture company means years of terror—and that's the test [21:59] Bright Harbor case study: From revenue model questions to product-market fit during LA fires [25:30] Most common reason for no: "We're not your best source of capital" [29:40] Finding investment opportunities in unusual areas The nonprofit organization Jonathan is passionate about: 12/64 About Jonathan Crystal Jonathan Crystal is the Managing Partner of Crystal Venture Partners, a $33 million early-stage venture fund focused on AI-driven transformation in the insurance industry. Before entering venture capital, Jonathan spent 20 years as an operator in the insurance brokerage business, ultimately serving as CFO of Crystal and Company, a top-25 national insurance brokerage firm founded by his family. He led the firm to a successful exit to Alliant Insurance Services in 2018. Jonathan brings deep domain expertise and company-building experience to his investments. He backs seasoned, often serial entrepreneurs building transformational companies, writing $1-3 million checks as early as day one. His portfolio includes companies like Bright Harbor, Sixfold AI, NevadoAI, Comulate, and Corvus Insurance. About Crystal Venture Partners Crystal Venture Partners is a $33 million early-stage venture capital firm founded in 2022 to capitalize on the AI transformation of the insurance industry. The firm writes $1-3 million first checks, often as the first institutional investor or alongside other first institutional investments. Crystal Venture Partners invests in 4-6 companies annually from a pipeline of 300+ opportunities, maintaining a highly selective approach with domain expertise enabling conviction at the earliest stages—sometimes backing founders on day one before product development. The firm's portfolio of 10 companies has shown strong momentum, with over half securing follow-on financing in multiple rounds within a year of initial investment. Led by Jonathan Crystal, who brings two decades of insurance industry operating experience, the firm specializes in identifying transformational opportunities where AI can create and capture significant value in risk management and insurance markets. Subscribe to our podcast and stay tuned for our next episode.

    32 min
4.9
out of 5
61 Ratings

About

Successful entrepreneurs begin with the support of a few #earlybelievers. Gopi Rangan, founding partner at Sure Ventures, interviews venture capital investors in the Silicon Valley and beyond. Guests share insider stories on how they invest in early stage startups. Do you want to learn from real-life challenges, inspiring missions and important decisions by CEOs, founders, VCs, angels, and advisors? Listen to https://podcast.sure.ventures.

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