Exponential Scale

Should Small Teams Raise Money, And How: Interview with Miko Matsumura, Managing Partner, gumi Cryptos Capital

1 h 3 min · 14. maj 2026
episode Should Small Teams Raise Money, And How: Interview with Miko Matsumura, Managing Partner, gumi Cryptos Capital cover

Description

Miko Matsumura, a venture capitalist who built neural networks at Yale in 1990 explains why a 5x return is life-changing for a founder but a rounding error for a VC fund. Miko is a Managing Partner at gumi Cryptos Capital ($130M+ AUM, 8 unicorn-scale outcomes) and joins host Ron Schmelzer on the Exponential Scale podcast to expose the structural misalignment between entrepreneurs and venture capital, and why small teams may not need VC at all. Miko raised $50M+ as a founder before deploying $130M+ as a VC. He and Ron (who worked together during the ZapThink/SOA days) dig into whether single-founder companies are fundable, why the VC model demands 1000x+ returns that make 5x founders irrelevant, and how the Japanese keiretsu model of equity-swapped federations could become the new deal structure for AI-era companies. What you'll learn: * Why a 5x return is life-changing for a founder but a rounding error for a VC portfolio * The VC–entrepreneur misalignment: "They're making deals with a very asymmetric partner who has very different goals" * How AI collapses the four-pillar startup (engineering, product, sales, marketing) into a single founder * Miko's case for "mindset as moat" — why ancient texts outperform modern business frameworks * The keiretsu model: equity-swapped federations where customers and vendors share success * Why "FAFO" is the best strategy for small-team founders right now LINKS: • gumi Cryptos Capital: gumicryptos.com [http://gumicryptos.com] • Miko Matsumura on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/mikomatsumura [http://linkedin.com/in/mikomatsumura] • Miko on X: x.com/mikojava [http://x.com/mikojava] Subscribe: scalebrate.com/podcast [http://scalebrate.com/podcast]

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21. maj 20261 h 5 min
episode Should Small Teams Raise Money, And How: Interview with Miko Matsumura, Managing Partner, gumi Cryptos Capital artwork

Should Small Teams Raise Money, And How: Interview with Miko Matsumura, Managing Partner, gumi Cryptos Capital

Miko Matsumura, a venture capitalist who built neural networks at Yale in 1990 explains why a 5x return is life-changing for a founder but a rounding error for a VC fund. Miko is a Managing Partner at gumi Cryptos Capital ($130M+ AUM, 8 unicorn-scale outcomes) and joins host Ron Schmelzer on the Exponential Scale podcast to expose the structural misalignment between entrepreneurs and venture capital, and why small teams may not need VC at all. Miko raised $50M+ as a founder before deploying $130M+ as a VC. He and Ron (who worked together during the ZapThink/SOA days) dig into whether single-founder companies are fundable, why the VC model demands 1000x+ returns that make 5x founders irrelevant, and how the Japanese keiretsu model of equity-swapped federations could become the new deal structure for AI-era companies. What you'll learn: * Why a 5x return is life-changing for a founder but a rounding error for a VC portfolio * The VC–entrepreneur misalignment: "They're making deals with a very asymmetric partner who has very different goals" * How AI collapses the four-pillar startup (engineering, product, sales, marketing) into a single founder * Miko's case for "mindset as moat" — why ancient texts outperform modern business frameworks * The keiretsu model: equity-swapped federations where customers and vendors share success * Why "FAFO" is the best strategy for small-team founders right now LINKS: • gumi Cryptos Capital: gumicryptos.com [http://gumicryptos.com] • Miko Matsumura on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/mikomatsumura [http://linkedin.com/in/mikomatsumura] • Miko on X: x.com/mikojava [http://x.com/mikojava] Subscribe: scalebrate.com/podcast [http://scalebrate.com/podcast]

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8. maj 20261 h 3 min
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