Fun Raising
Adam's route to running a venture studio puts him in a different position than most people giving fundraising advice. He came up through investment banking at Goldman Sachs, then spent time at Eric Schmidt's family office, and then worked inside a post-quantum encryption startup before founding Roadrunner. That last stint is the one that shaped the thesis: traditional VC is a pattern-matching machine, and the patterns it uses do not map well onto technically sophisticated founders coming out of national labs or university research programs. In his framing, those founders are not underfunded because they are weak; they are "mispriced" because the standard tools investors use to evaluate risk were not built for them. Roadrunner's pitch to founders flows directly from that diagnosis: the studio provides engineering staff, executive search, non-dilutive funding access, and capital syndication alongside its own check, and Hammer is explicit that capital should be "the least valuable thing we provide." The most practical framework in the episode comes from how Hammer thinks about the problem section of a deep tech pitch. He describes the most common failure mode as "a technology looking for a market," and he uses a vivid test to force the issue: who is the customer so desperate for your solution that they would sprint across a desert to reach it? He attributes the framing to a colleague named Steve Weinstein, but applies it himself to every pitch he reviews. The point is not about market size slides. It is about urgency, not opportunity. Hammer pairs this with sharp advice on investor selection that most founders never apply symmetrically: look for domain fluency over enthusiasm, and specifically ask whether a prospective investor has worked with technical founders before and whether their return timeline actually accommodates a decade-long build. His line on the alternative is worth writing down: "fast exit money is a slow motion problem." The least obvious advice in the episode arrives after the term sheet is signed. Hammer argues that founders trained by the fundraising process to obsess over capital efficiency need to make a hard switch the moment they close. His framing is that you are no longer "up against capital," you are "up against time." He sees technical founders in particular defaulting to a grant-funded research mentality, rationing resources rather than sprinting, and losing competitive ground to other teams who are moving faster. He also pushes back on the fear many first-time founders have about early cap table decisions. His view is that cap tables evolve across multiple rounds, and founders who spend too much energy negotiating marginal valuation terms during a seed raise are sending a bad signal while solving for the wrong variable.
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