PodcastsScienceFounders in Arms

Founders in Arms

Immad Akhund and Rajat Suri
Founders in Arms
Latest episode

93 episodes

  • Founders in Arms

    Inside the 2026 Tech Pullback: SaaS, AI, and Survival Strategies

    30/1/2026 | 45 mins.
    SaaS companies are down dramatically—Figma is 77% off its peak. In this candid conversation, Immad Akhund (CEO of Mercury) and Raj Suri (co-founder of Lima and Tribe) unpack what's really happening in tech as we head into 2026.
    They explore why the SaaS business model is under attack (hint: it's not just AI building software faster), the shift from per-seat pricing to API-driven usage, and why enterprises actually buy SaaS products—spoiler, it's not about the software. The conversation reveals how startups can now stay lean with fewer employees for much longer, with companies like OpenAI reaching $500B valuations with just 4,000 people.
    Immad and Raj also dive into their personal experiences with AI agents, discussing what actually works versus the hype, why they're skeptical of consumer AI hardware, and how AI is changing daily productivity for founders. They debate Google's quiet win with the Apple-Gemini deal, why Siri is dead, and whether one AI model controlling all handsets should concern us.
    The episode wraps with practical advice on what makes a compelling VC pitch in 2026, why crazy promises still work (even when timelines are wildly optimistic), and how to think about your startup's valuation as a call option rather than current worth. From Elon's humanoid robot bet to the new growth expectations (0 to $5M in 12 months), this conversation offers an honest founder-to-founder take on navigating the current landscape.
    Key Topics:
    Why SaaS companies are struggling and what survives
    The real reason enterprises buy software (risk offloading, not features)
    AI agents in practice: what works, what doesn't
    Google's strategic win with Apple's Gemini integration
    How to pitch VCs when expectations are 5x higher than before
    Why crazy promises and long timelines still attract capital
    The shift to leaner startups and API-first business models
  • Founders in Arms

    How Matic Built an Intelligent Home Robot (While Others Failed) With Mehul Nariyawala

    23/1/2026 | 55 mins.
    Mehul Nariyawala is the co-founder and President of Matic Robotics, a home robotics company building what he calls “robotics 2.0” — intelligent, vision-first robots designed to actually work in real homes. After early careers at Nest and a prior acquisition by Google, Mehul and his team spent seven years building Matic, challenging the assumptions behind robot vacuums, consumer hardware, and how robotics companies should scale.
    In this conversation, Mehul breaks down why robotics is far harder than software, why most home robots quietly fail, and how Matic approached everything differently — from vision-only robotics and in-house manufacturing to avoiding subscriptions, ads, and premature market creation.
    What you’ll learn:
    Why robotics is “100× harder than software” — and where most teams underestimate the work
    The difference between automation and true intelligence in home robots
    Why negative-NPS categories can hide massive opportunities
    How Matic beat entrenched incumbents like Roomba by fixing fundamentals, not adding features
    Why vision-only robotics was a risky but necessary bet
    The real reason humanoid robots are still far from consumer-ready
    Lessons from Nest on why some hardware categories stay defensible for decades
    Why creating a new market can be fatal for hardware startups
    How Matic built robots in-house in California instead of outsourcing manufacturing
    The tradeoffs between subscriptions, ownership, and consumer trust
    Why great hardware products must earn word-of-mouth before growth

    In this episode, we cover:
    (00:00) Introduction to Mehul Naryawala and Matic Robotics
    (01:10) Why robotics is dramatically harder than software
    (03:00) The failure modes of early robot vacuums
    (05:10) Identifying opportunity in negative-NPS markets
    (07:45) Automation vs. intelligence in consumer robotics
    (10:15) Why vision-only robotics was a foundational bet
    (14:00) Lessons from Nest on defensible hardware categories
    (17:30) Why Matic avoided creating a new market
    (20:45) In-house manufacturing and vertical integration
    (24:30) Scaling hardware without inventory risk
    (28:10) The long road from demo to product
    (32:00) Why humanoid robots are still overhyped
    (36:20) Word-of-mouth, product-led growth, and brand trust
    (40:15) Subscription fatigue and consumer psychology
    (44:30) The future of home robotics and where Matic goes next
  • Founders in Arms

    Building a Global Payments Platform with Airwallex's Jack Zhang

    16/1/2026 | 42 mins.
    Jack Zhang is the co-founder and CEO of Airwallex, a global payments and financial platform valued at $5.5 billion. Founded in Melbourne, Airwallex processes billions in cross-border transactions and serves businesses expanding internationally. Jack shares his journey from starting the company to competing with giants like Stripe, navigating the complexities of global payments infrastructure, and building across multiple regulated markets.
    What you'll learn:
    Why cross-border payments remain broken despite decades of fintech innovation
    How Airwallex competes against Stripe and other established payment platforms
    The challenge of building financial infrastructure across multiple countries and regulations
    Jack's perspective on fair competition versus FUD (fear, uncertainty, doubt) tactics in business
    Why Airwallex is deploying $1 billion in the US market over the next three years
    The reality of being a foreign founder building in America during geopolitical tensions
    How payment infrastructure for global businesses differs from consumer fintech
    The trade-offs between growth velocity and sustainable business building
    Jack's philosophy on money, success, and what matters after achieving wealth at 30
    Why he chose to stay in Melbourne instead of relocating to San Francisco

    In this episode, we cover:
    (00:00) Introduction to Jack Zhang and Airwallex
    (02:34) Early days of Airwallex and the founding story
    (05:12) The problem with cross-border payments
    (08:45) Competing with Stripe and other payment platforms
    (12:18) Building in regulated markets and compliance challenges
    (16:23) FUD (fear, uncertainty, doubt) tactics in business competition
    (19:13) Raj's experience with FUD at Lyft vs Uber
    (22:47) Navigating geopolitical tensions as a Chinese-Australian founder
    (25:36) The $1 billion US market investment commitment
    (27:41) Product philosophy and fair competition
    (31:15) Going upmarket vs staying with SMBs
    (35:22) Life choices: Melbourne vs San Francisco
    (37:49) Perspective on wealth - "not about the money"
    (42:18) The future of payments infrastructure
    (45:30) Advice for founders building in competitive markets
  • Founders in Arms

    The State of Robotics in 2026: Ryan Gariepy on Hype, Reality, and Long-Term Thinking

    09/1/2026 | 55 mins.
    Ryan Gariepy is the co-founder and former CTO of Clearpath Robotics and Otto Motors, acquired by Rockwell Automation for $600M+ in 2023. He bootstrapped the company for five years with only $300K in funding, reached profitability in 18 months, and spent 14 years building mobile robotics platforms that became the industry standard for research and industrial automation.
    (If you’re looking for inspiration and lessons from other founders, Founders in Arms is hosting a founders roundtable with Rajat Suri, Immad Akhund, and Max Mullen next Wed Jan 14th at Mercury HQ. Discussing war stories and sharing lessons with a group of founders, as part of Founders-in-Arms podcast. Will be food and drinks. Capacity strictly limited at 50 so apply early if you’re interested: https://luma.com/dk97inyk )
    What you'll learn:
    Why robotics is a systems discipline where progress stacks rather than explodes
    How to bootstrap a hardware company to $10M revenue before raising venture capital
    Why robotics follows 20-50% sustained growth for decades vs. software's boom-bust cycles
    The "promise problem" with humanoid robots and why form factor shapes user expectations
    How manufacturing in Canada (not China) became a strategic advantage for Clearpath
    Why founders overestimate 2-year progress but underestimate 10-year impact in robotics
    The real economics of humanoid robots: $20K cost becomes $80K landed price
    How robotics investment differs from software: less competitive, more defensible
    Why experience compounds in hardware but expires in software careers
    Investment criteria for robotics: engineering risk vs. technical risk and go-to-market strategy

    In this episode, we cover:
    (00:00) Introduction and live event announcement
    (03:29) Ryan's background: Clearpath Robotics and Otto Motors
    (04:06) Building two brands under one company
    (06:29) The 14-year journey: challenges and non-linear growth
    (07:11) Bootstrapping robotics when "nobody thought you could make money"
    (08:17) Reaching profitability in 18 months with research customers
    (10:28) Building robotics platforms for MIT, universities, and research labs
    (11:03) Manufacturing in Canada vs. outsourcing to Asia
    (15:05) Reconnecting after 20 years: the Waterloo entrepreneurship connection
    (16:17) Working at Kiva Systems (now Amazon Robotics)
    (18:10) Why robotics is more exciting now than ever in history
    (19:21) Robotics as systems discipline: no single breakthrough technology
    (21:22) The overhype cycle and realistic expectations
    (22:14) Software explodes then crashes; robotics compounds for decades
    (23:36) Why hardware is harder but more mission-driven
    (25:27) The talent pool advantage: people irrationally love hardware
    (27:30) Physical AI and real-world impact beyond software optimization
    (28:07) Humanoid robots: incredible tech, miscalibrated expectations
    (32:41) The "promise problem": form factors make promises to users
    (34:35) Consumer robotics examples: Matic cleaning robot
    (35:59) Asia...
  • Founders in Arms

    AGI, Alignment, and the Future of AI Power With Emmett Shear

    19/12/2025 | 52 mins.
    Emmett Shear is the founder and CEO of Softmax, an alignment research company, and previously co-founded and led Twitch as CEO. He was also a Y Combinator partner and briefly served as interim CEO of OpenAI.
    What you'll learn:
    Why AI alignment and AGI are fundamentally the same problem
    How theory of mind is the critical missing piece in current AI systems
    Why continuous learning requires self-modeling capabilities
    The dangerous truth: alignment is a capacity for both great good and great evil
    Why "aligned AI" really means "aligned to me"—and why that's concerning
    How societies of smaller AIs will outcompete singleton superintelligences
    Why AI needs to be integrated with humans, not segregated into AI-only societies
    The Twitch lesson: people don't want easy, they want good
    Why 99% of AI startups are building labor-saving tools instead of value-creating products
    How parenting and AI development mirror each other in surprising ways
    Why current AI labs are confused about continuous learning
    Conway's Law applied to AI: you ship your org chart
    The problem with mode collapse in self-learning systems
    Why emotions are training signals, not irrational noise
    Emmett's biggest mistake at Twitch: chasing new products instead of perfecting the core

    In this episode, we cover:
    (00:00) The dangerous truth about AI alignment
    (01:13) Introduction to Softmax and organic alignment
    (02:05) What alignment actually means (and why most people are confused)
    (03:33) The output: training environments for theory of mind
    (05:01) Continuous learning and why it's so hard
    (06:25) Multiplayer reasoning training in open-ended environments
    (07:14) Aligned to what? The critical question everyone ignores
    (08:40) Why alignment is always relative to the aligning being
    (11:07) Cooperation vs. competition: training for the real world
    (12:56) Is AGI an urgent problem or do we have time?
    (13:15) AGI and alignment are the same problem
    (15:25) Alignment capacity enables both good and evil
    (17:13) The singleton problem and why societies of AIs make sense
    (20:41) Building alignment between AIs and humans
    (22:09) Why Elon's "biggest cluster" strategy might be wrong
    (23:06) AI must be aligned to individual humans, not humanity
    (25:03) What does the atomic unit of AI look like?
    (28:02) Adding a new kind of person to society
    (29:06) Everything will be alive: from spreadsheets to cars
    (30:00) From Twitch retirement to Softmax founding
    (31:26) Research vs. product engineering at early-stage startups
    (32:41) Raising money for AI research in the current era
    (34:30) Why Softmax will ship products
    (34:50) Ilya's closed-loop research vs. open-loop learning
    (36:36) How you do anything is how you do everything
    (37:28) The continuous learning problem explained simply
    (38:29) Mode collapse: why AIs become stereotypes of themselves
    (39:33) The reward problem and why humans need emotions
    (40:48) Why LLMs are trained to avoid emotions
    (41:52) Watching children learn while building learning AI
    (43:04) Advice for first-time AI founders
    (45:08) Treat AI as clay to be molded, not a genie granting wishes
    (45:50) The Twitch lesson: people want good things, not easy things
    (47:22) Why 99% of AI companies are building the wrong thing
    (48:16) Rapid fire: biggest career mistake at Twitch
    (50:15) Which founders inspire Emmett most
    (50:56) The passing fad: AI slop generators

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About Founders in Arms

In this weekly series, fellow startup founders Immad Akhund (Mercury) and Rajat Suri (Presto, Lima, and Lyft) explore current events in the world of tech, startup, and policy, offering insights from their distinguished careers and an array of expert guests. YouTube: youtube.com/@FoundersInArms Substack: foundersinarms.substack.com Instagram: instagram.com/foundersinarms TikTok: tiktok.com/@foundersinarms_
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