Inside the Leader's Mind
Summary Aras Sheikhi, CEO of Janus Innovation Hub, has rebuilt his life from zero four times -- in Iran, Dubai, Australia, and now San Diego. A former faculty member at Sharif University of Technology, Aras found his calling as a bridge between academic research and industry need. After a successful exit in Australia, he launched Janus to support first-generation immigrant founders who have the resilience to build but need the right mentors, playbook, and community to thrive. Aras and David also explore neurodivergent entrepreneurship, why failure is just compressed learning, and what it really means to build your wings on the way down. Takeaways Immigrants are wired for entrepreneurship. Having rebuilt their lives, networks, and identity from scratch, first-generation founders carry resilience and flexibility -- the two traits that matter most in a startup journey. Mentorship only works when it's matched correctly. A mentor who hasn't lived the same concerns can't truly advise. Janus pairs founders with mentors from their own communities who understand the full picture -- visa stress, cultural pressure, and business all at once. Failure is compressed learning. Reframing failure removes the stigma and keeps founders moving. If you haven't pivoted or failed, you probably haven't built anything meaningful yet. Name it and tame it. When you rename failure as a compressed lesson, you can own it instead of avoid it. Language shapes how founders process setbacks and keep going. Neurodivergent thinkers see over the fence. Through co-founder Mustafa and the Nordic Frontier pipeline with Vanderbilt, Stanford, and UCSD, Aras is building ecosystems that treat neurodivergent thinking as an asset, not a limitation. Soundbites "Immigration is like building your wings on a way down when you don't have a safety net." "The idea is not important at all. The things you need are resiliency and flexibility." "If you know how to negotiate with your fear, congratulations -- welcome to the club. You are an entrepreneur." "When we see the fence, neurodivergent people see over the fence." "If I don't fail on a daily routine, something happened -- I'm on my safe side. And that is not development." Timestamps 00:01 -- Introduction: Aras Sheikhi, CEO of Janus Innovation Hub 01:14 -- From Iran to Dubai to Australia to San Diego: the full journey 07:07 -- When academia stopped being enough and the bridge role emerged 09:21 -- Seeing talent in others as a core leadership ability 11:25 -- Why immigrant founders need a different playbook 13:53 -- Mentor matchmaking: why community alignment matters 15:29 -- Life and business are interwoven -- especially for immigrants 17:18 -- Why immigrants may be naturally suited for entrepreneurship 20:06 -- Nothing to lose: the risk advantage of starting over 23:15 -- Where early-stage founders get stuck most often 25:07 -- How to destigmatize failure and keep moving 27:53 -- What pivoting signals about a founder's mindset 29:33 -- Defining neurodivergent: seeing over the fence 31:27 -- Mustafa and the founding of the Nordic Frontier pipeline 35:24 -- What changes when investors see neurodivergent thinking as an asset 39:32 -- The obstacle that became the path 43:49 -- The question Aras wishes people would ask him Contact Links LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aras-sheikhi-9210b54b/ Website: janusinnovationhub.com Keyword Tags Immigrant founders, entrepreneurship, startup ecosystem, Janus Innovation Hub, neurodivergent entrepreneurs, resilience, failure mindset, compressed learning, mentor matchmaking, San Diego startups, early stage startups, pivot strategy, Nordic Frontier, Vanderbilt University, UCSD, Stanford, Inside the Leader's Mind, innovation hub, immigrant leadership, ecosystem building
47 episodios
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