Solo Founders

Sold a Company at 16, Raised $3M at 19 | Dhravya Shah, Supermemory

1 h 12 min · 11. Juni 2026
Episode Sold a Company at 16, Raised $3M at 19 | Dhravya Shah, Supermemory Cover

Beschreibung

Dhravya Shah sold his first company at 16 and raised $3M at 19 as the solo founder of Supermemory, the open-source memory and context layer for AI agents (now past 26k GitHub stars and 1M+ SDK downloads). The twist: he never chased any of it as a business. He built in public, for free, said no to VCs for nine months, and only raised once the company's vision was undeniable. A conversation about why the fundraise is a result, not the goal. Topics covered: * Why the raise is a result, not the goal — and saying no to VCs for nine months * Building your "art" in public until it becomes a company * Escaping the inventor's dilemma: killing your own viral hits * Why he's a solo founder, after a co-founder breakup killed an earlier company * The honest version of AI memory: benchmark-gaming, Goodhart's Law, and evals that matter * Hiring "true builders" out of open source as a solo founder Guest: Dhravya Shah — founder and CEO of Supermemory, the memory layer for AI agents (1M+ SDK downloads); sold his first company at 16, raised $3M at 19; ASU dropout and ex-Cloudflare.

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Alle Folgen

16 Folgen

Episode Sold a Company at 16, Raised $3M at 19 | Dhravya Shah, Supermemory Cover

Sold a Company at 16, Raised $3M at 19 | Dhravya Shah, Supermemory

Dhravya Shah sold his first company at 16 and raised $3M at 19 as the solo founder of Supermemory, the open-source memory and context layer for AI agents (now past 26k GitHub stars and 1M+ SDK downloads). The twist: he never chased any of it as a business. He built in public, for free, said no to VCs for nine months, and only raised once the company's vision was undeniable. A conversation about why the fundraise is a result, not the goal. Topics covered: * Why the raise is a result, not the goal — and saying no to VCs for nine months * Building your "art" in public until it becomes a company * Escaping the inventor's dilemma: killing your own viral hits * Why he's a solo founder, after a co-founder breakup killed an earlier company * The honest version of AI memory: benchmark-gaming, Goodhart's Law, and evals that matter * Hiring "true builders" out of open source as a solo founder Guest: Dhravya Shah — founder and CEO of Supermemory, the memory layer for AI agents (1M+ SDK downloads); sold his first company at 16, raised $3M at 19; ASU dropout and ex-Cloudflare.

11. Juni 20261 h 12 min
Episode I Asked 5 Massively Successful Founders Why They Went Solo Cover

I Asked 5 Massively Successful Founders Why They Went Solo

A $300M company. 30M+ users. Tens of millions in revenue, some raised and some bootstrapped from zero. Software that saves lives. Five founders, zero co-founders. Julian connects the dots across the first six episodes of the show — Ben Cera (Polsia, $30M raised), Yasser Elsaid (Chatbase, $10M ARR bootstrapped), Paul Klein IV (Browserbase, a $300M company), Eugenia Kuyda (Replika, 30M+ users), Daniel Francis (Abel), and investor Charles Hudson (Precursor Ventures) — on why they built alone, and what they all figured out about it. The through-line: don't take a co-founder of convenience. A talented solo founder beats a mismatched team, and most co-founders get taken for the wrong reasons rather than because they're a genuine fit. Topics covered: - The "co-founder of convenience" — and why a talented solo founder beats a mismatched team - Why the human 20% (taste, judgment, direction) is the whole game - The clarity advantage: one voice, one layer of alignment - Building from the personal, because the most personal is the most universal - Mission as a forcing function — when the work clarifies every decision - True solo vs free solo: two routes to the same rejection of the co-founder default

3. Juni 202620 min
Episode The Co-Founder "Blood Bond" Is a Myth | Michael Grinich, WorkOS Cover

The Co-Founder "Blood Bond" Is a Myth | Michael Grinich, WorkOS

Michael Grinich built WorkOS solo — now a $2B company and the enterprise infrastructure behind OpenAI, Anthropic, and Replit — with no co-founder. So when he says "it's not the blood bond it was made out to be," it lands. This conversation is his case against the ride-or-die co-founder myth, the question he thinks actually matters before you start a company, and the honest bear and bull case for going it alone. Topics covered: * Why co-founders aren't a blood bond — and "are you the one who holds it forever?" * The founder "mental disorder," and why you only need one person who has it * The bear and bull case for solo founding — from John Lennon to "the company is a mirror" * How to pick the idea: a notebook, four filters, and lessons borrowed from stand-up comedy * Why "pivots are the most traumatic thing you can do to a business" * The case for founder-led sales — and hiring a head of sales as a partner, not a handoff Guest: Michael Grinich — solo founder and CEO of WorkOS, the infrastructure that makes startups enterprise-ready.

27. Mai 20261 h 10 min
Episode Turning Services Into Software To Move Talent To America | Minn Kim, Lighthouse Cover

Turning Services Into Software To Move Talent To America | Minn Kim, Lighthouse

Minn Kim runs Lighthouse, the AI-powered immigration firm rebuilding the visa stack for frontier-tech companies. She is solo. She isn't a lawyer. Her first two hires were engineers. The conversation with Julian covers how she got there, why "solve your own problem" isn't always the path to success, the complicated-vs-complex framework she uses to pick what to build, and her bull case for solo founding stated as a fact about her own life rather than a thesis. Topics covered: * The Korean-immigrant origin and the 2022 side quest that became Lighthouse * Services-as-software: why "professional services don't scale" stopped being true around 2021 * Why "solve your own problem" isn't always right — and what to do instead * The complicated-vs-complex problem framework for founder fit and capital structure * First two hires were engineers, not lawyers * Long-game hiring and contractor-to-full-time as a deliberate pattern * The 30-question anonymous Google Form for surfacing blind spots * "Twenty of them in the world" — the talent-infrastructure thesis behind Lighthouse * Bear case and bull case for solo founding, the latter stated as lived experience Guest: Minn Kim — founder and CEO of Lighthouse, the AI-powered immigration firm for frontier-tech companies and their hires.

20. Mai 202656 min
Episode Fired by His Own Co-Founder, Then Built the #1 Startup Accounting Platform | David Phillips, Fondo Cover

Fired by His Own Co-Founder, Then Built the #1 Startup Accounting Platform | David Phillips, Fondo

David J. Phillips tried co-founders four times before he went solo. With $40,000 left in the bank after a stalled aquihire, he refounded the company alone — and built Fondo, the accounting platform now used by hundreds of YC and pre-seed startups. The conversation is part founder-confessional, part early-stage GTM playbook. Topics covered: * The four co-founder breakups across four prior startups * Refounding with $40K and a single investor email * The lived playbook for co-founder breakups (lawyer advice, severance + stock + move on) * The four-question $40K filter for picking ideas you can ship solo * The Sam Parr false bottom — first customer, three months of nothing * The Delaware-franchise-tax mini-product wedge that produced the first ten paying customers * Bear case and bull case for solo founding * "Your co-founder lives in Claude now" — the closing argument Guest: David J. Phillips — founder & CEO of Fondo, the accounting and tax platform for venture-backed startups.

13. Mai 202651 min