AI for Founders with Ryan Estes
Picture St. Louis, 1849. Two men with a bottle of champagne and a brutal choice: go north for beaver pelts, or go south chasing gold in California. Joris Delanoue does not even blink. He picks the gold. Not for the metal. For the belief. That single line tells you everything about this conversation. Joris, co-founder and co-CEO of Fairmint, has spent the better part of two decades pushing into frontiers nobody else wanted to settle. He sold a cloud computing company, Nexteem, before most people trusted the cloud. Now he is doing the same thing to the one document that quietly governs every startup's destiny: the cap table. Here is the uncomfortable truth he lays out. Fifty years ago, Microsoft went public at an eight hundred million dollar valuation, and ordinary people built entire retirements on the climb that followed. Today, companies stay private until they are worth five hundred billion, and the upside goes to a happy few. The frontier did not close. It just moved behind a velvet rope. Joris wants to tear the rope down, and he thinks the tool to do it is equity that lives on a blockchain: programmable, transferable, and liquid enough that the engineer who bet fifteen years of her life on a startup can actually borrow against her shares to buy a house. This is a conversation about wealth, about who gets to build it, and about why the most defensible thing you own in the AI era is no longer your product. It is your distribution. Buckle up. Compliance by Automation (not Intermediation)Joris frames the entire Fairmint thesis as a shift away from people and toward code. * Old world: compliance happens through layers of intermediaries, lawyers, banks, and reconciliation. * New world: compliance lives inside a smart contract that mimics securities law and applies the rules automatically. * The promise: lower transfer costs, fewer trolls under the bridge, and a single source of truth for who owns what. The Shovel Seller's DilemmaThe gold rush metaphor that opens the episode is a strategy lesson in disguise. * The prospector grinds sixteen hours a day and often ends with broken backs and empty pans. * The shovel seller monetizes everyone else's dream regardless of who strikes gold. * Joris flips it: do not just sell shovels, own a piece of the mine through programmable equity. https://www.fairmint.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/delanoue/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/ https://aiforfounders.co https://trynina.co/ https://ainativestudent.com/
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