Our guest today is Juan Pablo Cappello, founder of Nue Life. Nue Life is a mental wellness company that offers in-home ketamine therapy. This was a fascinating conversation about where our current healthcare system has failed us with the wrong incentive structure, new alternative therapies, his own mission and inspiration, and what the goal is for Nue Life. Some of the questions I ask Juan Pablo: When were you first exposed psychedelics and ketamine? What inspired you to found Nue Life? How did you develop a program? What are some of the regulation speed bumps that you’ve had to go through in order to launch? What’s the business model? How much do you charge? How long is the program? What was your approach to acquiring new customers? Do you see your customers going through your program multiple times / on going or is it a quest to always bring on new customers? What’s been your approach to scale? What’s been your approach to raising money? Shat was your attraction to entrepreneurship? What were your learnings from starting Patagon, the first online bank in LatAm? What’s one thing you would change about venture capital? What’s one thing that’s misunderstood about psychedelics? What’s one book that inspired you personally and one book that inspired you professionally? What’s the best piece of advice that you’ve received?
My guest today is Luke Vernon, Managing Partner of Ridgeline Ventures. Ridgeline Ventures is an independent investment group that provides founders and brands a unique alternative to traditional investment firms. Some of their investments include Cotopaxi, Bobo’s, OROS, and Pro’s Closet. Previously he was the CEO of Eco products, which he grew from $1mm to $80mm. We discuss his learnings as an operator, why he invests in consumer brands where other investor interest has softened, the benefits of being a family office and how he thinks about investment timelines. What were three of your biggest learnings growing Eco Products from $1mm to $80mm? Since you also started Luke’s Circle and helps companies find talent, what is the key to hiring the right people? After Eco Products sold, what eventually got you thinking of becoming an investor? How did Ridgeline Ventures form? Why doesn’t Ridgeline take outside capital? There’s been alot of funds that have pivoted or moved away from investing in consumer brands. What are the opportunities that you’re focused on? What’s your due diligence process? Pricing strategy in each channel How to scale the operations of the business How long does it take to scale? Food manufacturing Self manufacturing Great vehicles to finance CAPEX What were some of your learnings during COVID? How can a board provide value to a company? What’s one thing you think is overlooked when investing in consumer businesses? What’s one book that inspired you personally and one book that inspired you professionally?Endurance by Ernest Jackelin Blue Ocean Strategy What’s the best piece of advice that you’ve received?
Our guest today is Joe Spector, Founder & CEO of Dutch. Dutch is the online vet care when you need it. Previously Joe was one of the founders of hims & hers. We discuss the opportunity he saw within pet insurance and care, how his approach to fundraising is different than hims & hers, why he wants to change the incentive structure within the vet industry. Why did you decide to leave hims & hers? What was the aha moment that led to Dutch? What was the opportunity that you saw? Why did you decide to focus on telehealth for pets? What is the major pain point for pet owners? Can you lay out for us the value chain for healthcare for pets? How are the regulatory requirements different from healthcare for humans? How did you approach raising capital? In the early days, they have to be good at multiple things What was the first problem you wanted to solve? How did you approach distribution and sales? Paying vets $80 an hour Hims & Hers raised money every 90 days and raised lots of money. Ho...
Our guest today is Brian O’Malley, Partner at Forerunner. Forerunner is one of the top consumer venture capital firms that tirelessly champions founders who deliver the innovation they demand. Some of Brian’s investments include Sunday, Canal and Dumpling. Recently they raised $1 billion for Fund 6. We discuss how Forerunner’s thesis has evolved over the past few years, what is the empowerment economy, and current valuation and venture climate today. We discuss: How do you define investing in consumer today? It seems as though Forerunner’s thesis has evolved from only investing in pure consumer companies to ecommerce enablement/B2B, along with other funds that primarily focus on consumer. Can you talk about why the transition?Is part of the reason why because it’s harder than before to pick brands that could generate great returns? What is the empowerment economy? In your article “Empowering Main Street”, you mention how OpenTable and Yelp achieved massive local market share, but they weren’t embraced. What do you mean by that and how do identify if a company you’re looking at is being embraced? Partnering up with their customers Did COVID at all change your thesis when it came the your empowering economy thesis? When you’re looking at empowering SMBs or bringing them online, when does a white label option make sense vs. a standalone application? I certainly understand the push for consumers wanting to shop local, but isn’t partly what killed local stores that they couldn’t compete on price with the Walmarts / Targets? How do you think about consumer price sensitivity? When you and your conduct your consumer insights research, how do you make sure there’s alignment with what people say and how they act? Where customer What are some of the differences between investing and evaluating a business where an SMB is the customer rather than the customer? How do you also think about the current venture landscape when it comes to valuations? There’s been a lot of chatter about some of the more high-profile companies folding and there’s been a debate about who is responsible - could the board have guided the CEO to cut burn for example. After you invest, what do you think about a board’s role and board construction? What’s one thing you would change about VC? What’s one book that has inspired you personally and one book that has inspired you professionally?The Wright Brothers book Shoedog by Phil Knight What’s the best piece of advice that you’ve received?
Our guest today is John Timar, CEO of Kill Cliff. Kill Cliff is America’s best-selling clean energy drink and the official drink of the Atlanta Braves. We discuss how the Navy Seals impacted John and led the founding of Kill Cliff, some of the creative marketing initiatives Kill Cliff has done the past few years including a partnership with Joe Rogan, why at one point they considered a rebrand, and how they doubled down on their core audience and release new SKUs. Without further ado, here’s John. Why did you want to be a Navy SEAL? What was the hardest part of becoming a SEAL? What did you most learn from that experience? How was the transition to civilian life? How was the transition from SEALs into business? What did you first do after the SEALs?Don’t have the community Why did Todd Ehrlich found Kill Cliff? What was the insight? How did you know Todd? When you say lost its way, give an example of something that the company did that was inauthentic to the brand? What were some...
Our guest today is Patrick Chun, Founding Partner of Juxtapose. Juxtapose is an inception stage investment firm. Some of the companies that they founded include Tend, Care/of, and Dayforward. Their process for how they build companies is pretty unique for this show. We discuss their model, why their model is less risky than traditional venture capital, and his process for finding the right CEO to lead each business. Without further ado, here’s Patrick. What is Juxtapose? What was the initial insight or prior experience that influenced your decision to found it? Why did you choose to found it? Why do you believe your model is less risky than traditional venture capital?You are incubating When you say do the work, what do you mean? What’s your process identifying an observationTrue verifiable fact in the world When your Lots of observation How many observations do you have a week Insights you can pull off of an observation On-demand dispatch Track 500-1000 observationsTalk about 50-100 What’s your process for building businesses step by step – from the ideation stage to creating beta products / product is in market? Recycled and reentered the funnel 4-6 months How do you think about timing as well? Obsolete assumptionYou can never have an investor home When do you bring on an experienced CEO and team? How do you think about that process?What are qualities you’d like to see from the CEO? From 0 to 10 at what stage is the company in when you bring on a CEO? How do you source “Michael Jordan” CEOs? If they are the Michael Jordan’s, what typically get them excited to join the company - since I’m sure they get alot of offers to lead different teams?Can it be difficult to attract since these companies are still small? How do you hire the team? Once a company has a CEO, how do you think about the role of Juxtapose moving forward with the business?The best supporter of the company from 0-200 people Is the shift from operator to more of board member/observer type role? Do you ever get the itch to become a CEO of one of your companies? How do you approach hiring for your studio? Are you looking for people who have operational experience or more investor experience since it seems the studio model is at the intersection of both? What are the challenges with the studio model? What can get overlooked? What are the shortcomings of the venture studio model or what do studios tend to struggle with? Was there a prior experience that led you to want to build a different type of firm than traditional VC? What’s one thing you would change about venture capital? What’s one book that inspired you personally and one book that inspired you professionally?4,000 weeks Oliver Burkman What’s the best piece of advice for founders?What is it that people will see in the market and if you’re right
My guest today is Patrick Schwarzenegger, CEO and cofounder of Mosh. Mosh is a brain wellness brand co-founded by both Patrick and his mom, Maria Shriver. They’re on a mission to change the conversation about brain health through food, education, research and providing the tools for a "mindstyle" lifestyle. Patrick is also an actor, angel investor in a number of health and wellness brands. We discuss what attracted him to innovation within health and wellness, how he became interested in investing, what he looks for in companies and the founding story of how he and his mom founded Mosh. Without further ado, here’s Patrick. What was your initial attraction or introduction to investing in consumer brands and consumer technology? How would you describe your due diligence process as an investor?What’s your process for discovering new brands and having a pulse on the latest trends? Do you consider to be more top-down or bottom-up? What are trends within CPG that you’re particularly excited about and a trend that you think is maybe past its prime or no longer special? Is there any common threads that you’ve seen when it comes to what makes a successful founder or company? KPIs that stand out? How early do you typically write a check in a company? For your investments that didn’t work out. What tended to be the reasons why the companies failed? What were your takeaways from Expo West? How do you spend your time? You’re a CEO, actor, active angel investor, how do you juggle it? How do you also think and analyze brands that are co-founded by celebrities and people of influence? How did you found Mosh with your mom, Maria? What was the pain point you both wanted to solve? How did you approach building the product?What’s the goal of the brand? Currently, you’re only selling online. Are we going to see Mosh in retail channels? How do you think about what the right channels should be for Mosh? How do you juggle being CEO and also an actor? What’s one thing you would change about the fundraising process or venture capital? What’s one book that has inspired you personally and one book that has inspired you professionally?Number one book - Atomic Habits What’s the best piece of advice that you’ve received? What’s one piece of advice that you have for founders?
Our guest today is Ariana Thacker, founder of Conscience VC. Conscience invests into early-stage & science-led consumer startups. We’re going to discuss why science-led consumer startups is contrarian in itself, what are real tangible defensible moats, and her approach to fundraising her first fund. Why did you want to break into VC? Why did you decide to start your own fund? What was the fundraising process like? How do you partner with founders? What’s your approach to portfolio construction and fund construction? I.e. are you more concentrated or less concentrated, what are your Gen-Z apprentices role within the fund / scout program What do you mean by the intersection of deep tech and consumer? How do you think about defensible competitive advantages? Walk us through why you invested in Nimbus or gained conviction? How far along does a founder need to be in order for you to be at your stage? Are there specific categories that you mostly focus on? 3 buckets What are some of the challenges investing in deeptech? Why do alot of fund managers stay away? What’s your approach to sourcing opportunities? Go through multi pronged approach What’s one thing you would change about venture capital? What’s one book that has inspired you personally and one book that has inspired you professionally? 4 agreements - dont personally, dont make assumptions, always do your best, be impeccable with your word Disciplined entrepreneurship -> What’s the best piece of advice that you’ve received?
Our guest today is Paul Voge, one of the founders and CEO of Aura Bora. Aura Bora is sparkling water made from real herbs, fruits, and flowers for earthly tastes and heavenly feelings. The flavors are definitely one of kind and different like Lavender Cucumber, Cactus Rose, Peppermint Watermelon. I was skeptical at first but when I tried it, I must say I LOVED it. My personal favorite is lemongrass coconut. Paul has a pretty fascinating story about how he started and his approach to building a sparkling water company with out-there wacky flavors that are delicious. How would you define your relationship with Sparkling water before you started a sparkling water company? Did you always want to be an entrepreneur? What was the “aha” moment? What was the first flavor you LOVED that you felt you perfected? How did you think about different flavor profiles/expanding SKUsI had Seth on last week How did you think about experimenting with flavors? Was this something you did yourself, did you hire/partner with a food/drink scientist? You didn’t have any experience within CPG. How did you go about building your network? Why invest in beverage brands? What was the hardest part fundraising? How do you think about ads? When did you feel like you were on to something? At what point did you quit your job? What was your distribution strategy? Was it to start DTC and then go into retail or go into retail from the getgo? How did you get into Whole Foods? Why did you move from Boulder to San Francisco? What were some of the things you had to pick up on quickly since you didn’t come from CPG prior to starting Aura Bora?How much should you spend in tradespend? You were in SKUs accelerator, what was so valuable about that experience? It’s March 2020. COVID happens and your cranking, trying to get into stores. Walk us through what’s happening during that time?How did you approach developing relationships with stores during that period? How did COVID change your distribution approach? We talk to a number of CPG retail investors on this show that emphasize it’s all about velocity rather than the total number of stores you’re in. What’s good velocity to you? How do you measure success? Why did you decide to go on Shark Tank? What was that experience like?Was the intent always to take a deal no matter what? What was your approach to raising a fundraising round? How do you think about SKUs and flavor approach today? What’s the strategy? What’s one thing that you’ve been surprised in the consumer response - could be positive or negative. Negative could be more interesting. What’s one book that has inspired you personally and one book that inspired you professionally?Seth Goldman - Mission in a Bottle Mark Rompolla - Build Something Great The Last Lecture What’s the best piece of advice that you’ve received?Amateurs talk strategy, experts talk logistics What’s one thing you would change about the CPG industry?
Our guest today is Joe Marchese, who is a serial entrepreneur and has started a few VC funds including Human Ventures, Casa Komos, Groundswell, True X, Reserve and Attention Capital. His resume is pretty wild. Joe has alot of experience within marketing and advertising so on today’s episode we’re going to focus on how to approach marketing channels, what channels are still undervalued and maybe you can get more bang for your buck, and his approach to building brands and partnering with exceptional entrepreneurs. How did you get your start in media and advertising? What was your attraction to entrepreneurship as well as working with founders? What advertising channel is still underappreciated by brands? What’s still misunderstood about media today? (follow on: talk about the Attention Economy.) How do you monetize attention? What’s your approach to starting businesses? How did Human Ventures come together? When you are incubating companies at Human, what do first-time entrepreneurs misunderstand the most when it comes to growing their businesses? What’s your diligence process when you’re analyzing companies? Are there specific categories that you’re currently deep in or intrigued by? What’s one thing you would change about venture capital? What’s one book that has inspired you personally and one book that has inspired you professionally?Probable impossibilities Life’s Edge by Carl Zimmer What’s the best piece of advice you’ve received?