The Syndicate One Podcast

Can Your Customers Vibe Code You Out of Business?

28 min · I går
episode Can Your Customers Vibe Code You Out of Business? cover

Description

Spentys had customers walk out to build their own thing. Six months later, they showed up again. So what does that really say about the whole 'vibe coding' threat to SaaS? Louis-Philippe Broze co-founded Spentys in Brussels while still in his master's. He'd just wrapped a full-time internship at Wooclap. Now he's on Forbes 30 Under 30, and Spentys has 24 people split between Brussels and Georgia. Half their revenue comes from the US. They use 3D scanning, modeling, and printing to digitize custom orthoses and prosthetics. Louis-Philippe sat down with Robin Wauters to break down what really happened when customers tried to roll their own solution, and why they came back. He gets into: * How Spentys is building AI modules so tailored to orthopedics that nobody else can touch them.  * How raising money too early burned 18 months they could've kept. * Why you should bring on an independent US board member from day one, not years down the line.  * Why Belgium's political setup is slowing down the whole ecosystem. You'll also hear about the lasagne-and-burger theory for staying sane as a founder, why 80% of patients choose 3D-printed devices, and what Materialise taught him about getting hospitals on board. Listen in, pass it on, and if you're building something big from Belgium, reach out.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the The Syndicate One Podcast community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

16 episodes

episode Can Your Customers Vibe Code You Out of Business? artwork

Can Your Customers Vibe Code You Out of Business?

Spentys had customers walk out to build their own thing. Six months later, they showed up again. So what does that really say about the whole 'vibe coding' threat to SaaS? Louis-Philippe Broze co-founded Spentys in Brussels while still in his master's. He'd just wrapped a full-time internship at Wooclap. Now he's on Forbes 30 Under 30, and Spentys has 24 people split between Brussels and Georgia. Half their revenue comes from the US. They use 3D scanning, modeling, and printing to digitize custom orthoses and prosthetics. Louis-Philippe sat down with Robin Wauters to break down what really happened when customers tried to roll their own solution, and why they came back. He gets into: * How Spentys is building AI modules so tailored to orthopedics that nobody else can touch them.  * How raising money too early burned 18 months they could've kept. * Why you should bring on an independent US board member from day one, not years down the line.  * Why Belgium's political setup is slowing down the whole ecosystem. You'll also hear about the lasagne-and-burger theory for staying sane as a founder, why 80% of patients choose 3D-printed devices, and what Materialise taught him about getting hospitals on board. Listen in, pass it on, and if you're building something big from Belgium, reach out.

Yesterday28 min
episode From a shoebox of receipts to Visma: Alexis Eggermont on building Accountable artwork

From a shoebox of receipts to Visma: Alexis Eggermont on building Accountable

"To ship our first prototype, I had to show up unannounced at our Serbian dev agency's door. Today? I'd vibe code the whole thing."  Alexis Eggermont co-founded Accountable. If you're a freelancer in Belgium or Germany, you probably know it. Visma owns it now, but Alexis has been with Syndicate One since day one. He sat down with Robin Wauters and walked through eight years of building from zero. Here's what jumped out.  * Alexis and Nicolas decided to start a company first, then came up with the idea later. They worked backward through three questions and landed on Accountable. * Exits aren't a single moment. The Visma deal took four years to pull off. After the sale? Same team, same product, just a bigger family. More gradual than sudden.  * And while AI is melting software moats, Alexis sees it growing the market, not killing it.

15. juni 202621 min
episode Building What Matters - Navigating the AI Era with Tanguy Goretti, CTO of HEXA artwork

Building What Matters - Navigating the AI Era with Tanguy Goretti, CTO of HEXA

"Today is a good time to build - just make sure you understand the direction the market is heading before you start." In this episode, we sit down with Tanguy Goretti, CTO at HEXA, to unpack the new reality of the tech ecosystem. Drawing from his experience, Tanguy shares what he has learned, what he would do differently, and why he has never been more optimistic about what lies ahead for European founders. The real challenge today is not speed but relevance. Will what you are building now still matter as models evolve? With the barrier to entry lower than ever, every founder must honestly ask whether AI is helping them build something great or just making it easier to build more things. We also took time to look back and discuss what it really takes to build and scale a hardware company in Europe and what we can learn now that the dust has settled. Key questions addressed in this episode: * Will what you build today still matter as models evolve? * Is AI making it easier to build great companies, or just easier to build more companies? * Why is the CTPO profile, technical and product, becoming the most critical role of the next decade?

8. juni 202622 min
episode A chat with Sébastien Deletaille, CEO and co-founder at Rosa artwork

A chat with Sébastien Deletaille, CEO and co-founder at Rosa

Robin Wauters sat down with @Sebastien Deletaille on the Syndicate One podcast "I like the idea that with few people, you can build something that scales and impacts millions." 📍 Great teams on the wrong market go nowhere. Sebastien watched sharper engineers than him get outpaced by someone on a better wave. Market choice, he argues, is what separates the top league from the rest. 🔄 On picking investors: skip the success stories. Talk to the founders who returned one and a half times. They are the ones who will tell you what a fund is really like when things get hard. 🇧🇪 On ecosystems: cities work because proximity creates serendipity. What Ghent built, Brussels can replicate, but it needs participants, not just leaders.

25. maj 202643 min