The Learning Corner by Precursor

Episode #78: Owning Your AI Agents, When Your VC Leaves, Are You Actually AI-Native?

22 min · 7 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode #78: Owning Your AI Agents, When Your VC Leaves, Are You Actually AI-Native?

Descripción

This week on The Learning Corner, Charles and Mia dig into who actually owns the AI agents you build at work and whether you can take them with you when you leave. They unpack what happens to a founder's standing inside a VC firm when their partner walks out the door, and why that moment is really the start of a new fundraise. They close with a sharp framework for separating companies that are truly AI-native from those just using better autocomplete. Three great reads, one tight conversation. Can You Take Your AI Agents With You When You Leave a Job? [https://www.forbes.com/sites/niritcohen/2026/04/28/can-you-take-your-ai-agents-with-you-when-you-leave-a-job/] When Your VC Leaves, You Are Fundraising Again [https://www.motivenotes.ai/p/when-your-vc-leaves-you-are-fundraising?r=mnnu&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email&triedRedirect=true] Everyone Wants to Be AI-Pilled. Most Companies Are Still Level 1. [https://x.com/annimaniac/status/2050225284277026990] (0:00) Introduction, AI adoption levels, and changing workplace dynamics (0:51) Forbes article on AI agents and personal capability stacks (1:56) Employee transitions and managing AI systems in companies (4:33) Challenges in transferring, managing, and regulating AI tools (8:54) Substack article on VC departures and their impact on startups (10:17) Managing VC transitions and company board member selection (16:32) X article and discussion on AI adoption in companies (19:32) Managing and integrating AI agents in organizations (21:22) Steve Blank quote and comparison of AI-native vs. traditional companies (22:18) Incumbents vs. AI-native startups and closing remarks

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Portada del episodio Episode #81: Does Your Boss Have AI Brain?, Career Bets That Compound, Too Much Is Happening Too Fast

Episode #81: Does Your Boss Have AI Brain?, Career Bets That Compound, Too Much Is Happening Too Fast

This week on The Learning Corner, we dig into Rachel Karten's viral piece on AI-obsessed leadership and what happens when organizations adopt AI without any real strategy. We then discuss Karan Dhir's framework for career bets that actually compound versus the ones that just look like progress, including a debate on whether the AI era has quietly rehabilitated the generalist. We close with Charlie Warzel's Atlantic piece on AI malaise and whether the anxiety around AI is actually a geography problem more than a technology one. Does Your Boss Have AI Brain? - Rachel Karten [https://www.milkkarten.net/p/boss-obsessed-ai-marketing] The Career Bets That Compound (And the Ones That Don't) - Karan Dhir [https://open.substack.com/pub/koffeeguy/p/the-career-bets-that-compound-and?r=4btmbk&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web] Too Much Is Happening Too Fast - Charlie Warzel, The Atlantic [https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/2026/05/too-much-happening-too-fast/687177/] (0:00) High status jobs vs. startup adventure and podcast introduction (0:41) Sponsor: AngelList (1:17) AI integration in workplaces and lack of clear strategies (2:09) Creativity, judgment, and over-reliance on AI in marketing (4:22) Efficiency vs. human value and challenges under AI-obsessed leadership (6:56) Loss of employee trust and satisfaction from AI-driven processes (7:47) Career bets, opportunity costs, and the adventure vs. certainty dilemma (12:49) Patience, long-term commitment, and working at iconic companies (15:46) Making informed career choices and understanding personal goals (16:21) Generalists, AI’s impact on specialized roles, and industry messaging (18:45) AI industry’s marketing problem and public perception (21:24) New job opportunities and the downside of careerism in higher education (23:49) AI’s impact on job markets and supporting displaced workers (25:19) The future of software development and the importance of personal branding (26:30) The value of 9-to-5 jobs in a changing work landscape (27:21) Closing remarks and acknowledgments (27:34) Thanking listeners and encouraging subscriptions

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Portada del episodio Episode #80: Narrative Above All, The Job Market Signal Collapsed, IC Work Is the New Career Flex, OpenAI Files for IPO

Episode #80: Narrative Above All, The Job Market Signal Collapsed, IC Work Is the New Career Flex, OpenAI Files for IPO

This week on The Learning Corner, Charles and Mia discuss a good read explaining why the quiet builder playbook is no longer enough and why founders must now own their narrative to win. They dive into a provocative take on the job market arguing the signal collapsed, not the opportunities, and what that means for the next generation of candidates. They also explore the rise of the High-Impact Individual Contributor and how AI is reshaping career paths at every level. Plus a quick flash on OpenAI's reported plans to file for IPO as early as September at a valuation of up to one trillion dollars. Narrative by Villi Iltchev [https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/narrative-villi-iltchev-kkx3c/] If You Can't Get a Job Today, It's Your Fault by Auren Hoffman [https://substack.com/home/post/p-197218332] IC Work Is the New Career Flex by Elena Verna [https://www.elenaverna.com/p/ic-work-is-the-new-career-flex] OpenAI Is Preparing to File for IPO via Reuters [https://www.reuters.com/business/openai-preparing-file-ipo-soon-wsj-reports-2026-05-20/] (0:00) Episode introduction and the role of colleges beyond education (0:49) The necessity of narrative and standing out in startups (3:06) The impact of stealth mode and being a market leader (5:30) Oren Hoffman's take on the job market and evolving qualifications (7:00) The changing demand for job skills and tech job challenges (10:37) Predictions for the future of university enrollment (12:00) The rise and appeal of high impact individual contributors (Hi C) (16:19) Management hierarchy and challenges for high ICs and junior employees (19:18) OpenAI's confidential IPO filing and impact on the AI market (19:55) SpaceX S-1 filing and implications for tech companies (20:49) Closing remarks and thank yous

21 de may de 202621 min
Portada del episodio Episode #79: Networking Is Mostly Cope, AI Is Changing What Skills Matter, CEO AI Psychosis

Episode #79: Networking Is Mostly Cope, AI Is Changing What Skills Matter, CEO AI Psychosis

This week on The Learning Corner, we open with an argument on why traditional networking culture is mostly negative selection and why broadcasting your work publicly is the stronger play. We then dig into why AI is making the "what" of your work more important than the "how," and which skills actually become load-bearing in that world. We close on a sobering piece about AI psychosis spreading through executive suites, the sycophancy loop baked into AI tools, and what it means when the feeling of running a massive organization is completely disconnected from what is actually shipping. Networking as Activity Is Mostly Cope [https://x.com/signulll/status/2053512338729537726?s=46] You Spent Your Whole Life Getting Good at the Wrong Thing [https://www.thealgorithmicbridge.com/p/you-spent-your-whole-life-getting] Your CEO Is Suffering from AI Psychosis [https://open.substack.com/pub/handyai/p/your-ceo-is-suffering-from-ai-psychosis?r=4btmbk&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web] (0:00) Introduction, building vs. planning, and networking fundamentals (3:23) Knowing your audience and time management at events (6:03) Impact of AI on cost of execution for knowledge workers (7:08) Deciding what to build and avoiding low-cost dev shop pitfalls (10:33) Building products with a point of view (11:35) AI psychosis and hype in executive and VC circles (13:23) AI agents: allure, pitfalls, and CEO pressures (17:11) Productive doom scrolling and firsthand AI experiences (18:07) Challenges with AI-generated reports and review processes (19:34) Concerns about review quality in the AI era and closing remarks

14 de may de 202620 min
Portada del episodio Episode #78: Owning Your AI Agents, When Your VC Leaves, Are You Actually AI-Native?

Episode #78: Owning Your AI Agents, When Your VC Leaves, Are You Actually AI-Native?

This week on The Learning Corner, Charles and Mia dig into who actually owns the AI agents you build at work and whether you can take them with you when you leave. They unpack what happens to a founder's standing inside a VC firm when their partner walks out the door, and why that moment is really the start of a new fundraise. They close with a sharp framework for separating companies that are truly AI-native from those just using better autocomplete. Three great reads, one tight conversation. Can You Take Your AI Agents With You When You Leave a Job? [https://www.forbes.com/sites/niritcohen/2026/04/28/can-you-take-your-ai-agents-with-you-when-you-leave-a-job/] When Your VC Leaves, You Are Fundraising Again [https://www.motivenotes.ai/p/when-your-vc-leaves-you-are-fundraising?r=mnnu&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email&triedRedirect=true] Everyone Wants to Be AI-Pilled. Most Companies Are Still Level 1. [https://x.com/annimaniac/status/2050225284277026990] (0:00) Introduction, AI adoption levels, and changing workplace dynamics (0:51) Forbes article on AI agents and personal capability stacks (1:56) Employee transitions and managing AI systems in companies (4:33) Challenges in transferring, managing, and regulating AI tools (8:54) Substack article on VC departures and their impact on startups (10:17) Managing VC transitions and company board member selection (16:32) X article and discussion on AI adoption in companies (19:32) Managing and integrating AI agents in organizations (21:22) Steve Blank quote and comparison of AI-native vs. traditional companies (22:18) Incumbents vs. AI-native startups and closing remarks

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Portada del episodio Episode #77: The Broken Seed Model, YC's Revenue Honesty Rules, China Blocks Meta's Manus Deal

Episode #77: The Broken Seed Model, YC's Revenue Honesty Rules, China Blocks Meta's Manus Deal

This week on The Learning Corner, Charles and Mia dig into Lucas Vaz's viral thread arguing that the era of easy, low-priced, diversified venture investing is over and that seed fund math is fundamentally broken. They also break down Garry Tan and YC's official guidance on why founders need to stop conflating LOIs, GMV, and ARR before it costs them investor trust. The episode closes on China's decision to block Meta's $2 billion acquisition of Manus AI and what it signals about the closing window for cross-border AI deals. The Narrow Path [https://x.com/lucasbagnocvaz/status/2046273988683305008?s=46&t=MBgtyoFU0g51xfHHrEjGww%5C] Being Truthful and Precise About Revenue [https://x.com/garrytan/status/2048017824895909901?s=46&t=MBgtyoFU0g51xfHHrEjGww%5C] China Vetoes Meta's $2B Manus Deal [https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/27/china-vetoes-metas-2b-manus-deal-after-months-long-probe/%5C] (0:00) Introduction, episode overview, and standards in a competitive environment (0:52) The Narrow Path by Lucas Vaz (2:13) Charles Hudson's thoughts on seed investing (5:26) The role of seed funds and strategy (7:14) Gary Tan on revenue metrics and the impact of imprecise revenue language (14:22) Founders and investor meetings (14:41) Meta's blocked acquisition of Manus AI and national interest in AI (18:02) Episode closing remarks

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