A Product Market Fit Show | Startup Podcast for Founders

He quit his $50M ARR startup to work as a paralegal—then raised a $60M Series A. | Dan Mishin, Founder of Manifest

42 min · 15 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio He quit his $50M ARR startup to work as a paralegal—then raised a $60M Series A. | Dan Mishin, Founder of Manifest

Descripción

Dan founded and scaled a $50M ARR, SoftBank-backed startup—and could've stayed to make tens of millions. Instead, he handed it to his chief of staff and started from scratch. He wanted something bigger. He took an entry-level paralegal job to learn everything about law hands on. Then he built Manifest, which just raised a $60M Series A. In this episode, Dan breaks down why he did intake calls for 1,000 legal clients before building anything, how free Slack communities turned Fortune 500 HR managers into buyers without a dollar of ads, and why he refused to sell software to law firms even when investors told him he was crazy. Why You Should Listen * How 2 months working as a paralegal beat years of customer discovery. * How free Slack communities turned Fortune 500 HR managers into clients. * Why earned media compounds like an asset while paid ads burn like an expense. * Why impact is the best driver for starting startups. Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, legal tech, legal AI, AI-native law firm, immigration law, services as software, community-led growth, earned media, customer discovery, Dan Mishin, Manifest Chapters * 00:00:00 Intro * 00:06:34 Walking Away from $50M ARR * 00:13:12 Why Immigration Law Has AI Leverage * 00:18:01 The AI-Native Law Firm Model * 00:21:49 1,000 Intake Calls Before Building Anything * 00:30:21 Turning Free Communities Into Buyers * 00:37:20 Earned Media That Compounds Send me a message to let me know what you think! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1889238/fan_mail/new]

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291 episodios

episode He quit Stripe and hit $10M ARR in 4 years—with $0 marketing spend. | Anurag Goel, Founder of Render artwork

He quit Stripe and hit $10M ARR in 4 years—with $0 marketing spend. | Anurag Goel, Founder of Render

Anurag was employee #8 at Stripe, set for life and free to do anything next. Instead he spent a year and a half hunting for a problem worth decades of his life. He chose to build a product to make it simple for developers to ship apps, going head-to-head with AWS. In this episode, Anurag breaks down how he hit $10M ARR in 4 years with zero marketing spend, why refusing to launch a free tier was his most expensive mistake, and how putting engineers on customer support rotations quietly shaped the entire product roadmap. Why You Should Listen * Why you don't have real product market fit until your users sell the product for you. * How a sub-2-minute setup turned developers into a word-of-mouth machine. * Why skipping a free tier for years was his most expensive mistake. * How engineers doing support on rotation built the roadmap—and 6M+ developers. Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, developer tools, cloud infrastructure, PaaS, Render, word of mouth growth, product-led growth, AI infrastructure, Stripe Chapters * 00:00:00 Intro * 00:01:44 The Moment of True Product Market Fit * 00:04:14 The #1 Driver of Word of Mouth * 00:13:25 Why He Left Stripe to Build Render * 00:23:48 Why AWS Would Never Build This * 00:30:33 $10M ARR With No Marketing Spend * 00:36:43 Engineers as the Support Team * 00:42:19 Riding the AI Boom Send me a message to let me know what you think! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1889238/fan_mail/new]

29 de jun de 202647 min
episode He shut down his last startup and gave the money back—then hit $1M ARR in 6 months. | George, Founder of Monk artwork

He shut down his last startup and gave the money back—then hit $1M ARR in 6 months. | George, Founder of Monk

George had to wind down his last startup and give investors their money back. He went deep into the valley of despair, certain he'd missed his window to build something big. Then he met a co-founder, decided to start over, and started selling. In this episode, George breaks down how a customer signed a $36K pilot off nothing but a Loom and a one-pager, how cold email took him from zero to $1M ARR with no sales team, and why a "seven out of ten" is the most dangerous hire you can make. Why You Should Listen * How a customer signed a $36K pilot after a single Loom and zero calls. * Why he gave the money back on his last startup—and what "follow your energy" really means. * How cold outbound email built his first $1M ARR with no sales team. * Why a "seven out of ten" is the most dangerous hire you can make. Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, fintech, accounts receivable automation, AI agents, cold outbound email, B2B SaaS, Series A fundraising, services as software Chapters * 00:00:00 Intro * 00:01:39 The Moment of True Product Market Fit * 00:03:33 Shutting Down a Small-Market Startup * 00:07:44 Picking Fintech From Five Ideas * 00:17:12 From Black Box to Full App * 00:24:47 $1M ARR on Cold Email Alone * 00:36:11 Why a "Seven" Is the Most Dangerous Hire * 00:42:15 Compressing a $25M Series A Send me a message to let me know what you think! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1889238/fan_mail/new]

22 de jun de 202646 min
episode He quit his $50M ARR startup to work as a paralegal—then raised a $60M Series A. | Dan Mishin, Founder of Manifest artwork

He quit his $50M ARR startup to work as a paralegal—then raised a $60M Series A. | Dan Mishin, Founder of Manifest

Dan founded and scaled a $50M ARR, SoftBank-backed startup—and could've stayed to make tens of millions. Instead, he handed it to his chief of staff and started from scratch. He wanted something bigger. He took an entry-level paralegal job to learn everything about law hands on. Then he built Manifest, which just raised a $60M Series A. In this episode, Dan breaks down why he did intake calls for 1,000 legal clients before building anything, how free Slack communities turned Fortune 500 HR managers into buyers without a dollar of ads, and why he refused to sell software to law firms even when investors told him he was crazy. Why You Should Listen * How 2 months working as a paralegal beat years of customer discovery. * How free Slack communities turned Fortune 500 HR managers into clients. * Why earned media compounds like an asset while paid ads burn like an expense. * Why impact is the best driver for starting startups. Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, legal tech, legal AI, AI-native law firm, immigration law, services as software, community-led growth, earned media, customer discovery, Dan Mishin, Manifest Chapters * 00:00:00 Intro * 00:06:34 Walking Away from $50M ARR * 00:13:12 Why Immigration Law Has AI Leverage * 00:18:01 The AI-Native Law Firm Model * 00:21:49 1,000 Intake Calls Before Building Anything * 00:30:21 Turning Free Communities Into Buyers * 00:37:20 Earned Media That Compounds Send me a message to let me know what you think! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1889238/fan_mail/new]

15 de jun de 202642 min
episode He churned 100% of his revenue on purpose—then grew 10x to $2M ARR in under 12 months. | Ali Khokhar, Founder of Amigo AI artwork

He churned 100% of his revenue on purpose—then grew 10x to $2M ARR in under 12 months. | Ali Khokhar, Founder of Amigo AI

Ali quit his job a few months after ChatGPT launched, convinced AI would eat labor marketplaces like Upwork. With no co-founder and no code, he collected $12K from real customers—using a faked demo and a cloned voice. Then he pitched 100 VCs in 10 days and got 47 straight 'no's. In this episode, Ali breaks down how he banked $12K in revenue before writing a single line of code, how a $20/month Slack community drove Amigo's first $1M in ARR, and why he churned every existing customer to go all-in on $100K+ healthcare enterprise deals. Why You Should Listen * Why validation only counts when dollars exchange hands. * How a $20/month paid community turned into $1M in ARR. * Why he refunded every customer and churned 100% of his revenue. * Why founders must sell the first $2M themselves before hiring an AE. Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, AI agents, healthcare AI, enterprise sales, pre-seed fundraising, community-led growth, customer validation, pivot, Amigo AI Chapters * 00:00:00 Intro * 00:08:37 From Upwork to Starting Amigo * 00:13:30 $12K in Revenue Before Writing Code * 00:23:24 Pitching 100 VCs in 10 Days * 00:30:20 47 No's—Then FOMO Took Over * 00:37:12 The $20/Month Community Behind the First $1M * 00:45:47 Churning 100% of Revenue on Purpose * 00:01:49 The Moment of True Product Market Fit Send me a message to let me know what you think! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1889238/fan_mail/new]

8 de jun de 202653 min
episode He hit $1M ARR by sending 500,000 cold emails—then raised a $25M Series A in 6 days. | Mark Hughes, Co-Founder of Solidroad artwork

He hit $1M ARR by sending 500,000 cold emails—then raised a $25M Series A in 6 days. | Mark Hughes, Co-Founder of Solidroad

Mark was running a startup out of a tiny annex office in Dublin with zero product usage. Then one customer turned it on and overnight he saw usage spike to thousands of simulations. He got to $1M ARR 100% through outbound, by sending 500,000 cold emails. A few months ago he closed a $25M Series A. In this episode, Mark breaks down the pivot from sales roleplay to customer support that unlocked his first real traction, the cold outbound playbook that took him to $1M ARR (500K emails, 250 meetings, 40 customers), and why doorstepping customers in Utah is what drove his net revenue retention to 186%. Why You Should Listen * Exactly how to use a cold outbound strategy to hit $1M ARR. * Why getting on 56 flights last year to visit customers led to 186% NRR. * How he closed a $25M Series A in just 6 days. Keywords startup podcast, startup podcast for founders, product market fit, finding pmf, AI startup, customer support, cold outbound, Y Combinator, Series A, enterprise sales, SaaS, Solid Road Chapters * 00:00:00 Intro * 00:06:10 The Pivot From Sales to Customer Support * 00:12:54 Why Moving to SF Changed Everything * 00:22:34 Cold Outbound to $1M ARR * 00:32:47 Doorstepping Customers for 186% NRR * 00:39:17 Closing a $25M Series A in 6 Days Send me a message to let me know what you think! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/1889238/fan_mail/new]

1 de jun de 202642 min