Dan Teran is the co-founder and managing partner of Gutter Capital, an early-stage venture firm investing in vertical AI and marketplace businesses. He previously founded Managed by Q — an operating system for commercial spaces that grew to employ nearly 1,000 people, expanded nationally, and was acquired by WeWork in 2019. Dan joined WeWork as head of corporate development before leaving after a turbulent six months. He now runs Gutter Capital's third fund ($75M) and the Elbow Grease accelerator, sponsored by Mercury, which invests in early-stage founders in New York City.
What you'll learn:
How Managed by Q found extreme product-market fit in lower Manhattan — and why that made expansion harder, not easier
Why winning a market can be a trap when the TAM is smaller than you thought
The real story behind the WeWork acquisition: a three-year relationship, a theatric walkout, and why great exits are always principal-to-principal
Why over-capitalization was more ruinous to Managed by Q than any external factor
How to think about Series A benchmarks for non-AI companies today (2–3M ARR, renewals, one productive AE, 3x growth)
Why AI-enabled services businesses can be great companies even if they're not venture-scale outcomes
The mismatch between what early-stage founders need to raise and what top VC funds are mandated to deploy
Why founders should play the hype game — but stay ruthlessly honest with themselves about what game they're playing
Dan's take on Adam Neumann: what made him exceptional, where he fell short, and why Dan wouldn't bet against him
The "leaders eat last" philosophy — and why holding people to high standards and having their backs aren't in conflict
Chapters:
[00:00] The hype trap founders fall into
[01:31] Managed by Q: founding story and early growth
[02:39] Scaling nationally and selling to WeWork
[04:17] The state of co-working and commercial real estate post-WeWork
[07:18] In-person vs. remote — what actually matters pre-PMF
[11:16] How the WeWork acquisition really happened
[15:06] Realizing the TAM was smaller than expected
[17:09] Raj's parallel experience at Presto
[20:04] FOMO-driven investing and the AI diligence problem
[22:04] Series A benchmarks for applied AI companies today
[25:27] Why founders should aim for break-even before raising
[28:56] The mismatch between venture fund mandates and founder needs
[34:32] What Dan learned about fundraising after becoming an investor
[37:30] Adam Neumann, WeWork, and Flow
[39:30] Leadership, high standards, and the "leaders eat last" philosophy
[42:12] Why founders learn the wrong lessons from Steve Jobs
[47:31] FarmEvo: the drone ag company Dan flew to Karachi to diligence