Unsolicited Biz Advice

Ep 7. Lovable - Can They Last?

43 min · 20. mars 2026
episode Ep 7. Lovable - Can They Last? cover

Beskrivelse

Episode 7. Lovable - Can They Last? We're taking Unsolicited Biz Advice on the road! For our first-ever destination episode, Ian Ash and Steve Mast are live in sunny Lisbon, Portugal, joined by special guest George Helgesen, of the software development firm ProCoders and host of the Backstage Tech podcast. This week, we're diving into one of the most explosive companies in tech: Lovable, the AI-powered app builder that reached a staggering $6.6 billion valuation in just over a year. With 8 million users and over 100,000 new projects started daily, they are the undisputed leader of the "vibe coding" movement. But can they last? We break down the five biggest threats to Lovable's survival, from rising customer churn and the problem with token-based pricing to the looming shadow of incumbents like Google and Microsoft. We also explore the fascinating concept of "epistemic debt" — the knowledge gap created when humans have to maintain and fix code written by AI. Finally, we each give our one piece of unsolicited advice to Lovable's founders. Should they cash out and sell? Go on a buying spree? Or is the secret to their long-term survival something else entirely? Tune in for a deep-dive into the future of software development, the creator economy, and whether this unicorn is built to last or destined to implode. In this episode, you'll learn: •The key stats behind Lovable's meteoric rise (01:10) •An overview of the "Vibe Coding Wars" and the competitive landscape (02:45) •5 critical threats that could derail Lovable's success (04:30) •What "epistemic debt" is and why it's a huge problem for AI-generated code (07:55) •The team's final, unsolicited advice for Lovable (14:20) Follow our guest: •George Helgesen: LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/georgehelgesen] •ProCoders: Website [https://procoders.tech/] •Backstage Tech Podcast: Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/backstage-tech-by-george-helgesen/id1839944993] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/5a7OB49RrVoUp7I5965kWc] Mentioned in this episode: •Lovable: https://lovable.dev/ [https://lovable.dev/] Subscribe to Unsolicited Biz Advice on Apple Podcasts [YOUR_APPLE_PODCASTS_LINK], Spotify [YOUR_SPOTIFY_LINK], or wherever you get your podcasts.

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Alle episoder

10 Episoder

episode Ep 10. Apple's AI Playbook: Our Unsolicited Advice cover

Ep 10. Apple's AI Playbook: Our Unsolicited Advice

In this episode of Unsolicited Biz Advice, Ian Ash and Steve Mast dive deep into the future of Apple as John Ternus steps into the CEO role, taking the reins from Tim Cook. With Apple's valuation hovering around a staggering $5 trillion, the conversation shifts from hardware and operations to the most critical frontier: Artificial Intelligence. Is Apple truly lagging behind in the AI race, or are they playing a much longer, more strategic game? Steve argues that Apple's disciplined approach and unparalleled consumer trust position them to become the ultimate "Life OS"—owning the personal context layer that seamlessly integrates our daily lives. Meanwhile, Ian challenges the conventional wisdom, suggesting that Apple's biggest missed opportunity lies in open-weight models and the enterprise sector. He proposes a bold vision: Apple should create the first great North American open-source model and leverage the Mac Studio as the de facto AI workstation, bridging the gap between personal privacy and enterprise security. Key Takeaways: * The Executive Shift: Analyzing John Ternus's transition to CEO and what it means for Apple's product-focused future. * The "Life OS" Concept: How Apple's ecosystem of devices (from the iPhone to the Apple Watch and AirPods) creates a unique, trusted personal context layer that competitors can't match. * The AI Harness: The potential for Apple to build an agnostic "app store of LLMs," allowing users to plug in their preferred frontier models (like ChatGPT or Claude) while Apple safeguards their private data. * The Open-Weight Opportunity: Why the Mac Studio is inadvertently becoming a powerhouse for running open-weight models, and why Apple should lean into this space to disrupt the enterprise market. * Trust as a Moat: In an era of AI anxiety and PR missteps by major tech players, how Apple's unwavering commitment to privacy remains its strongest asset. Whether you're an investor wondering what's priced into Apple's 31x forward PE, a tech enthusiast curious about the future of Siri (spoiler: they think it's the "Jar Jar Binks of AI"), or just trying to understand the next wave of personal computing, this episode offers a provocative look at how the world's most valuable company might just conquer the AI revolution. Tune in to hear Ian and Steve's unsolicited advice for John Ternus on his first day in the boardroom!

I går42 min
episode Ep 9. TALY’s B2B Playbook: Make Customers Richer and Lazier cover

Ep 9. TALY’s B2B Playbook: Make Customers Richer and Lazier

In this episode of Unsolicited Biz Advice, Ian Ash and Steve Mast sit down with Peter Treloar, founder of TALY, a fast-growing B2B start-up building an AI-powered people intelligence platform for leaders. TALY is operating in the HR tech and AI space, helping managers use science-based personality and behavioural data in the moments that matter at work, from onboarding and recruitment to feedback, coaching, and team communication. Peter brings the team a live B2B start-up challenge: how do you get enterprise buyers, HR leaders, and incumbent platforms to adopt something new when they are busy, risk-averse, and already surrounded by tools? Ian and Steve offer practical advice drawn from their own experience building, scaling, and exiting B2B businesses. The conversation covers how to position a new category, why start-ups should make customers “richer and lazier,” how to use consulting and white-glove service as a bridge to SaaS adoption, why marquee clients can become powerful brand ambassadors, and how an AI-native company can get the attention of large incumbents and strategic buyers. Key themes include B2B start-up positioning, AI in HR tech, enterprise adoption, selling innovation, services plus SaaS, marquee clients, conference strategy, category creation, advisory boards, and the strategic advantage of being AI-native. Timestamps: * 01:19 Peter explains TALY as a people intelligence platform using science-based personality data and AI. * 03:08 Steve frames the HR tech and AI landscape, from systems of record to decision-based intelligence tools. * 12:28 Peter raises TALY’s central start-up challenge: how to get busy enterprise buyers to adopt a new way of working. * 14:54 Ian introduces the “richer and lazier” framework for selling innovation. * 20:11 Steve makes the case for charging for consulting and using service to build trust. * 26:51 Ian shares how B2B companies can use conferences strategically, especially through speaking engagements with marquee clients. * 49:31 Ian closes with advice on conferences, adoption, advisory boards, and TALY’s AI-native acquisition opportunity.

27. mai 202651 min
episode Ep 8. Tony Chapman Talks CBC & More! cover

Ep 8. Tony Chapman Talks CBC & More!

This week, Ian Ash and Steve Mast are joined by Canadian marketing legend, entrepreneur, and host of the Chatter That Matters podcast, Tony Chapman. Inspired by Tony's viral LinkedIn post, the team tackles one of the most polarizing topics in Canadian media: the future of the CBC. With a $1.4 billion annual budget, an aging demographic, and fierce competition from global streaming giants, is it time for Canada's public broadcaster to fundamentally reinvent itself? Tony argues that Canada doesn't have a talent deficit — we have an ownership deficit. We discuss why Canada needs to stop acting like a "branch plant" for Hollywood and start operating like a national IP engine. From the success of BBC Studios to the untapped potential of Canadian video gaming, music, and AI-generated content, we explore how repurposing public funds could turn Canada into a global creative powerhouse. Plus, the team gives their unsolicited advice on how to stem the brain drain, rebrand the country's "culture of weakness," and why the next great science fiction franchise might just be vibe-coded from a phone in Toronto. In This Episode, You'll Learn * (03:07) Why the CBC's is a political lightning rod. * (08:08) Tony's vision for transforming the CBC from a traditional broadcaster into a global IP venture capital pool. * (11:23) The BBC Studios model and why owning franchises (like Doctor Who or Strictly Come Dancing) is the secret to recurring revenue. * (13:04) Why Canada's risk capital problem is holding back innovation across all sectors. * (24:39) How AI is leveling the playing field for Canadian creators to disrupt Hollywood. * (31:23) The team's final, unsolicited advice for the CBC and Canadian creators. Follow Tony Chapman: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tonychapmanreactions/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/tonychapmanreactions/] Chatter That Matters Podcast: https://chatterthatmatters.ca/ [https://chatterthatmatters.ca/] Chatter AI: https://www.linkedin.com/company/chatteraictm/ [https://www.linkedin.com/company/chatteraictm/] Subscribe to Unsolicited Biz Advice on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

11. april 202636 min
episode Ep 7. Lovable - Can They Last? cover

Ep 7. Lovable - Can They Last?

Episode 7. Lovable - Can They Last? We're taking Unsolicited Biz Advice on the road! For our first-ever destination episode, Ian Ash and Steve Mast are live in sunny Lisbon, Portugal, joined by special guest George Helgesen, of the software development firm ProCoders and host of the Backstage Tech podcast. This week, we're diving into one of the most explosive companies in tech: Lovable, the AI-powered app builder that reached a staggering $6.6 billion valuation in just over a year. With 8 million users and over 100,000 new projects started daily, they are the undisputed leader of the "vibe coding" movement. But can they last? We break down the five biggest threats to Lovable's survival, from rising customer churn and the problem with token-based pricing to the looming shadow of incumbents like Google and Microsoft. We also explore the fascinating concept of "epistemic debt" — the knowledge gap created when humans have to maintain and fix code written by AI. Finally, we each give our one piece of unsolicited advice to Lovable's founders. Should they cash out and sell? Go on a buying spree? Or is the secret to their long-term survival something else entirely? Tune in for a deep-dive into the future of software development, the creator economy, and whether this unicorn is built to last or destined to implode. In this episode, you'll learn: •The key stats behind Lovable's meteoric rise (01:10) •An overview of the "Vibe Coding Wars" and the competitive landscape (02:45) •5 critical threats that could derail Lovable's success (04:30) •What "epistemic debt" is and why it's a huge problem for AI-generated code (07:55) •The team's final, unsolicited advice for Lovable (14:20) Follow our guest: •George Helgesen: LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/georgehelgesen] •ProCoders: Website [https://procoders.tech/] •Backstage Tech Podcast: Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/backstage-tech-by-george-helgesen/id1839944993] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/5a7OB49RrVoUp7I5965kWc] Mentioned in this episode: •Lovable: https://lovable.dev/ [https://lovable.dev/] Subscribe to Unsolicited Biz Advice on Apple Podcasts [YOUR_APPLE_PODCASTS_LINK], Spotify [YOUR_SPOTIFY_LINK], or wherever you get your podcasts.

20. mars 202643 min
episode Ep 6. Our Own Podcast cover

Ep 6. Our Own Podcast

In this episode, Ian and Steve reflect on their podcasting journey so far. They analyze the structure and content of their podcast, emphasizing the importance of audience engagement and the shift towards YouTube as a primary platform for podcasts. They share their favorite podcasts and discuss strategies for monetization and growth, highlighting the need for guest appearances and a clear content framework. The conversation concludes with a focus on the importance of feedback and continuous improvement in their podcasting efforts.   Chapters (00:00) Podcasting Adventures (02:31) Reflecting on the UBA Podcast Journey (05:23) Analyzing Podcast Dynamics and Audience Feedback (10:04) The Importance of Structure and Content (13:48) The Shift to Visual Mediums in Podcasting (19:24) Performance Insights and Future Directions (23:12) Favorite Podcasts and Influences (24:21) Podcast Recommendations and Insights (28:37) The Importance of Communication and Mediums (32:56) Exploring the Joy of Podcasting (36:50) Monetization Strategies and Market Potential (40:24) Future Directions and Strategic Questions

28. feb. 202646 min