Spotlight On

Accel

Spotlight On is a podcast about how companies are built, from the people doing the building. We take you behind the scenes to hear from founders and builders about what they did, what they learned… and what they’ll never do again. This series is produced by Accel, a global venture capital firm. Learn more at Accel.com/SpotlightOn.

  1. Figma IPO, GPT-5, and a Q+A with Kerry Wang

    8月20日

    Figma IPO, GPT-5, and a Q+A with Kerry Wang

    This week, we’re talking to Accel’s newest partner, Kerry Wang, about her journey from founder to investor, advice for finding the right early-stage partners, and what we can learn from Figma’s “12-year overnight success.” This Week’s Takeaways Return to first principles during uncertainty. Figma’s journey to IPO was anything but linear, with a bumpy road to product-market fit and a near-acquisition by Adobe halted by regulators. But instead of letting the blocked deal become a “switch flip” that changed their product roadmap or strategy, the team stayed locked on their long-term vision – which in turn, drove their resilience.  Pivots aren’t failures. In Kerry’s experience, successful founders are like “heat-seeking missiles,” able to read the market's signals, make informed decisions, and adjust their paths accordingly. When you’re choosing an early investor, ask yourself: would this be the first person I’d call when I have a problem? Good investors are like the friend who always has your back—and will give you the hard truth when it matters. Conversation Highlights: 0:53 - Figma’s “12-year overnight success” 6:05 - Is it time to stop numbering AI models? 9:24 - Meet Kerry Wang 10:48 - Co-founding with your twin 12:45 - “Everything is different”: shifting AI norms 14:19 - Founders as “heat-seeking missiles” 17:22 - How do you know when it’s time to exit? 20:26 - Investor green flags

    26 分钟
  2. VBSR 1.03: Scale, Circle, and Exits 101

    7月10日

    VBSR 1.03: Scale, Circle, and Exits 101

    Sara and Vas talk about Scale’s partnership with Meta, Circle’s IPO, and what founders can learn from the companies' early journeys. They also answer common questions they get from founders about exits: the different options, how to build partnerships that can lead to an acquisition, and why a founder’s job doesn’t end at the closing table or opening bell. This Week’s Five Takeaways 1. Most people don’t actually want fully automated AI products right now. Technological capability is one thing, but people’s comfort with automation varies widely depending on their industry, task, and background. Andrej Karpathy called the spectrum between manual control and full automation the “autonomy slider” – and for most products, somewhere between those extremes is probably just right.   2. Trust is your wedge for breaking into new industries. Circle’s route to IPO wasn’t linear, but their steady focus on building credibility set them apart from other cryptocurrency and blockchain platforms. Their stablecoin USDC helped make their value clear to skeptical audiences. Takeaway: Big ideas matter (Circle’s Jeremy Allaire brings plenty), but translating them into practical, legible products is ultimately what scales. 3. Government relations is an underrated founder discipline. In sectors shaped by regulation, even early-stage leaders gain an edge by learning how to advocate to policymakers. A great example is Alexandr Wang, who framed Scale as a “data foundry” to lawmakers and made the case for AI’s role in national defense. 4. What matters now is what you’ve built, not where you’ve been. Traditional badges like Stanford degrees or FAANG stints carry less weight as founders start younger and skip established tracks. The new markers of credibility aren’t always obvious, but one stands out: you’ve already shipped something great. For technical founders without institutional credentials, building and launching is a clear way to demonstrate vision, creativity, and determination. 5. It’s a myth that founders “shop” for acquisitions. Instead, most M&A develops more organically out of strategic partnerships – product integrations, go-to-market deals – developed and tested over years of working together.

    29 分钟
  3. VBSR 1.02: The geography advantage + customer anthropology + a taste for taste

    6月19日

    VBSR 1.02: The geography advantage + customer anthropology + a taste for taste

    Sara and Vas debrief on Vas’s recent trip to India, how founders use geography to their advantage, and what tech can learn from LVMH  about taste. They also share some advice for founders on pitching their stories to investors.  This Week’s Five Takeaways Where you build can shape how you win. On his recent visit to India, Vas noticed a verve for the messy work of systems integration and solutions engineering he hadn’t seen elsewhere. Different geographies impart strategic advantages, whether it’s talent with a knack for rolling up sleeves, a longtime connection to a particular industry, or simply a certain kind of ambition in the air.   Commodified code requires aspirational brands. As AI lowers barriers to production, there’s been a lot of chatter about taste (we love Sarah Guo’s essay on this). But taste is more than a buzzword; it’s a durable business advantage. (Just look at LVMH and Herman Miller.) Founders should study how luxury brands build worlds for which their products are the ticket to enter. Taste is more than your color scheme and logo. Aesthetic instincts are a start, but the most interesting companies right now are pairing those instincts with a nuanced, almost anthropological understanding of their customer. Taste applied is all about solving the right problems with thought and charm. The founding designer is having a moment. Taste as an ascendant differentiator means designers are taking more prominent roles, earlier. And whether you’re aiming upmarket or targeting the masses, this key early hire can ensure you’re delivering on your brand promise in a way that feels coherent and consistently delights your customers and users. 5. It’s okay to talk about the messy parts of building a company. Don’t be afraid to show your work when discussing your project with an investor. That includes false starts, discarded ideas, and tests that didn’t go as planned. These stories often contain nuggets about how you think and work that are really what’s important to a potential partner.

    29 分钟

评分及评论

5
共 5 分
8 个评分

关于

Spotlight On is a podcast about how companies are built, from the people doing the building. We take you behind the scenes to hear from founders and builders about what they did, what they learned… and what they’ll never do again. This series is produced by Accel, a global venture capital firm. Learn more at Accel.com/SpotlightOn.

你可能还喜欢