Chang "CK" Kim - Saywise
From $510M Exit to AI Startup: The Founder Who Finally Learned to Stop
What does it actually cost to build two companies from scratch and sell one for $510 million? For serial founder CK, the price was 20 years without a real break, chronic sleeplessness, and the constant pressure of pretending to have all the answers in every room.
In this episode, we go deep on one of the most honest founder journeys you'll hear. From a military-service detour in Korea that accidentally became his real-world MBA, to a Google acquisition, to a nearly decade-long grind that turned 15 employees into millionaires and early investors into 30x returns.
Here's what we unpack:
How a mandatory military posting launched his career. CK had zero engineering background and zero business training when he landed at a 30-person Korean tech startup during the dot-com boom. He ended up handling fundraising, investor materials, and eventually helped take the company public on the Korean Stock Exchange. "I was grumbling a lot," he admits. "But in hindsight, that was the best real-life MBA I could ever have."
Getting acquired by Google, in one of the only countries Google doesn't dominate. Korea is one of just three countries globally where Google doesn't hold majority search market share. Their solution? Buy a content platform. CK and his co-founder had built the leading blogging platform in the country. The deal took nearly a year. He was at the Google Seoul office Monday morning after it closed on a Friday.
Nine years. One number. What it actually cost. His second company, a mobile publishing and storytelling platform, took nine years to exit at $510 million. The financial wins were real: 70 employees, roughly 15% became millionaires, Series B investors saw 30x returns. But CK is equally candid about the toll. Ambient stress. Sleepless nights. The performance of certainty even when you have none. "You're supposed to be the smartest person in the room, even though you may not be."
The sabbatical that changed everything. After walking away from the acquiring company two years post-deal, CK made a decision the previous version of himself never would have: he took a year and a half off. No plan. No roadmap. Just people, conversations, and the radical act of listening. His wife told him he was a different person. Coming from someone who watched 20 years of nonstop intensity, he took that seriously.
Building the platform that listens back. The sabbatical produced the seed of his next company. A friend's thought experiment, "What would you do if a doctor gave you three years to live?", led CK back to the same instinct that drove every company he had ever built: helping people share what they know. His new company, Saywise, uses AI to extract and publish human knowledge through conversation. You talk. The AI listens, asks follow-ups, and turns it into polished content. The antidote to a flooding internet of AI-generated noise.
The through line across CK's entire career? Every company he has built has centered on one thing: giving people a platform to express and share knowledge. The only thing the sabbatical changed was who was doing the listening.
Whether you are a founder mid-grind, approaching an exit, or wondering what comes after the wire transfer, this conversation is required listening.
This season is supported by Perkins Coie. Perkins Coie is a leading international law firm known for providing high-value, strategic solutions. The Emerging Companies and Venture Capital team counsels startups and the investors who back them, supporting clients from formation to exit. In the past three years, clients have raised more than $23 billion in private markets between the pre-seed and growth stages. Perkins Coie combines tailored counsel with sector experience, so when it’s time to accelerate, whether for the next financing round, a strategic deal, or going public, your team is ready. To learn more, visit perkinscoie.com