Gen ZEO Playbook
Football clubs spend billions on players, and a shocking number of those decisions still come down to an agent's text and a gut feeling. Jake Schuster is building the AI that changes who makes that call. In this episode of the Gen ZEO Playbook, Rayyan Ali sits down with Jake Schuster, founder of Gemini Sports, the AI co-pilot for sporting directors. Jake has raised around $7 million, his investors own 27 sports organizations around the world, and his customers have ranged from the Indianapolis Colts in the NFL to European football clubs like Parma and Monaco. The twist: he's not a career technologist. He's a former sports scientist who worked with elite programs in the run-up to the 2016 Olympics and got tired of fighting MATLAB, SQL, and Python just to answer basic questions about his players. We get into why football's biggest transfers still happen over WhatsApp, why he killed his first product six months too late, and why "being clever is commoditized" in sports tech. What you'll learn: -What an AI co-pilot for sporting directors actually does on a chaotic transfer deadline day Why clubs don't lack information — they lack information at their fingertips How Jake accidentally built a "faster horse" and what made him kill his first product Why Gemini sells workflows and automation, not algorithms — and why models are table stakes The three ways sports tech competitors are missing the point (and the fake "head of AI" problem) Why billion-dollar clubs are run like overgrown family offices, decades behind Fortune 500s Who's accountable when a £40M signing recommended by data flops How to sell into a skeptical, relationship-driven industry with no existing budget line Why shipping real product updates every three weeks is "breaking people's brains" Why pain tolerance, not intelligence, is the only quality a founder actually needs Chapters: 00:00 Intro 02:04 Jake joins the show 02:15 Deadline day: what Gemini actually does when three deals are moving at once 04:33 From sports scientist to founder: the moment behind the company 06:03 Building a product for nobody — and killing it six months too late 08:19 Real edge or just selling certainty? Pushing back on the pitch 12:10 What competitors get wrong: algorithms, scouts, and vaporware 14:17 Why billion-dollar clubs are overgrown family offices 17:11 The future: squad management becomes asset trading 18:33 The £40M flop question: who takes the blame — the director or the algorithm? 22:40 Useful co-pilot or expensive blame machine? 24:26 Selling a category that doesn't exist yet 28:00 Winning over skeptical, slow-moving buyers 30:42 How Gemini ships so fast (hint: don't be cheap with engineers) 31:17 Advice to his younger self + the one trait every founder needs 34:12 Rayyan's three takeaways and your homework About Jake Schuster: Jake is the founder of Gemini Sports, an AI co-pilot that unifies recruitment, finance, and analysis for sporting directors — on their phone, where the football industry actually lives. A former sports scientist who worked with elite Olympic and rugby programs, he's raised ~$7M from investors who own 27 sports organizations worldwide. Connect with Jake: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jake-george-schuster/ About the show: The GenZEO Playbook is a podcast on founders, building, and the shifts that decide who wins next. New episodes on YouTube and wherever you listen.
43 episoder
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