Spotlight On

Accel

Spotlight On examines the technology shaping our world through conversations with the people building it. Hear from leaders at some of today's most important companies as they share their learnings, challenges, and breakthroughs. This series is produced by Accel, a global venture capital firm. Learn more at Accel.com/SpotlightOn. read less
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Episodes

ConductorOne’s Alex Bovee on the critical ingredients of a high-growth startup | S2E10
2d ago
ConductorOne’s Alex Bovee on the critical ingredients of a high-growth startup | S2E10
Alex Bovee sees three critical ingredients to building a high-growth startup: a founding team with innate grit for entrepreneurship, a good idea, and great timing. ConductorOne has all three. In this episode of Spotlight On, Alex shares his founding journey and encourages entrepreneurs to focus on building unique solutions that address unmet market needs. ConductorOne is an access control solution that helps companies secure identity across their cloud and on-premises apps and infrastructure. In 2020, Alex joined Accel as an Entrepreneur in Residence (and was our first virtual EIR, for obvious reasons) before we partnered for their Seed later that year. The episode covers the founding story, identity market, ConductorOne’s unique approach to building a company out of Portland, Oregon, and the advantages of getting a startup team together in the same room. Alex also discusses the challenges faced during the early iteration phases, the importance of timing, and the inspiration that can be found in competing against large incumbents. Conversation highlights: 00:00 – Alex’s background and early interest in entrepreneurship 04:51 – Identifying current gaps in the access control experience 07:44 – Complementary skillsets that make startup founders successful 08:50 – Transitioning from COVID to an in-person culture in Portland, Oregon 17:00 – Early iteration phase challenges 19:00 – Finding inspiration as an underdog competing against large incumbents 25:18 – Takeaways from RSA 2024 and the biggest trends in security, AI, and identity
Monte Carlo’s Barr Moses on creating a playbook for a product that’s never been built before | S2E9
May 23 2024
Monte Carlo’s Barr Moses on creating a playbook for a product that’s never been built before | S2E9
In 2018, Barr Moses was looking to start a company but wasn't sure which idea to pursue. She decided to work on three different startup ideas in parallel to see which one gained the most traction with customers. One of those ideas was Monte Carlo, a solution to address the challenges around data reliability that Barr had experienced throughout her career— dealing with broken data products, wasted time, lost trust, and firefighting data quality issues. As Barr met with potential customers, it became clear that there was significant demand from technical leaders grappling with the consequences of data downtime across their organizations.  Today, Monte Carlo has successfully created a new category and firmly established itself as the end-to-end data observability platform for companies like Cisco, Fox, American Airlines, and more. Now, in the era of AI, the role of data quality has never been more critical.  In this episode of Spotlight On, Barr and Accel’s Steve Loughlin reflect on Monte Carlo’s unique origin story, explain “Hell Yeah Moments” as a company success metric, and dig into why they chose speed, focus, and customer impact as core values. Barr also peels the curtain back on why she decided to launch the company alongside an entirely new category—Data Observability—and the grit and determination it takes to build and sell a product that’s never been built or sold before. There’s no playbook for that, but Monte Carlo created its own. Conversation Highlights: 00:00: Monte Carlo’s origin story3:54: How Barr discovered the idea of “data downtime,” which became the foundation for Monte Carlo and validated customer demand7:19: Successfully raising Monte Carlo’s seed round and acquiring its first customers—despite a lackluster slide deck10:31: The team’s maniacal focus on making just one customer happy and how that informs PMF12:00: “Hell yeah” moments as a metric to measure customer success13:40: What are the signals to move from a freemium to a paid product?15:58: How Barr’s leadership style has evolved as the company has scaled18:26: Why competition in a new category is a good thing22:48: What it’s like building and selling a product that’s never been built before, and how Barr screens for “risk-takers” 29:46: The future of the Data Observability category and the crucial role that quality data will play in enabling safe and accurate generative AI33:10: The most rewarding part of Barr’s entrepreneurial journey thus far Featured: Barr Moses, Co-Founder and CEO at Monte Carlo, and Steve Loughlin, Partner at Accel. Learn more about Accel’s relationship with Monte Carlo: Launching the Data Reliability Category with Monte CarloSecrets to Scaling with Monte Carlo’s Barr Moses
Gamma’s Jon Noronha on how early-stage startups can challenge industry incumbents | S2E8
May 16 2024
Gamma’s Jon Noronha on how early-stage startups can challenge industry incumbents | S2E8
In a landscape dominated by incumbent players, Gamma takes a bold approach: instead of trying to be better than the existing players, they aim to be an entirely different tech company. They've reimagined the very essence of presentation tools and the creative possibilities they offer. In this episode of Spotlight On, Gamma’s Co-Founder, Jon Noronha, delves into the team’s journey, from an early acquisition at a former startup to somewhat coincidentally building a product that dovetails perfectly with AI. He also unpacks the challenges and opportunities early-stage companies face navigating today’s landscape. While still in the early innings, Gamma’s journey underscores the importance of staying nimble and ahead of the curve. They’ve learned to anticipate and adapt to advancements in AI models and how to prevent the common (yet often surprising!) misuse of artificial intelligence products. On the heels of their Series A round, the discussion offers advice for early-stage startup founders on overcoming hurdles in aligning a product with market needs, fundraising in different economic climates, and more. Conversation Highlights: 00:00 - Introduction to Gamma 03:10 - The foundations Gamma had in place to take advantage of the AI wave 08:42 - Structuring early-stage teams to leverage AI UX designers 14:31 - Outpacing powerful incumbents by embracing uniqueness to earn market share 23:02 - Building an AI company with customer data sensitivity in mind 30:02 - Overcoming challenges of fundraising during boom times 32:08 - Reflecting on the importance of a lean early-stage team Featured: Jon Noronha, Co-Founder at Gamma, and Vas Natarajan, Partner at Accel
Remote’s Marcelo Lebre on the future of the global workforce | S2E7
May 9 2024
Remote’s Marcelo Lebre on the future of the global workforce | S2E7
Since joining forces in 2019 to tackle the complexities of global employment, founders Marcelo Lebre and Job van der Voort navigated their startup, Remote, and its customers through a series of challenges: a global pandemic, the rapid emergence of distributed workforces, and subsequent economic volatility. In this episode of Spotlight On, Marcelo and Accel’s Miles Clements discuss the effectiveness of global remote team structures despite obstacles. Marcelo has taken no shortcuts in understanding the nuances that come with operating a distributed workforce himself, operating Remote’s $3B business with a team in 75+ countries worldwide. This episode provides essential insights for founders on the importance of deeply understanding the problems they aim to solve and, of course, presents a convincing argument for the sustainability of remote work. As debates continue around the effectiveness of remote work, and its pros and cons, Marcelo and his team focus on helping others consider the benefits of a well-considered, long-term strategy for supporting durable, globally distributed teams. Conversation Highlights:  00:00 - Introduction to Marcelo Lebre and Remote 02:46 - Discovering early challenges in hiring global, distributed teams 07:09 - Lessons from scaling a startup like Remote during the uncertainty of COVID-19 12:29 - Data that supports the enduring trend of a global, distributed workforce 15:26 - Economic advantages of hiring talent globally 18:13 - Advantages of building a full-stack product in a competitive market 24:10 - Remote’s thoughtful, methodical approach to understanding global markets  Featured: Marcelo Lebre, Co-Founder at Remote, and Miles Clements, Partner at Accel
Accel’s Amit Kumar and Ivan Zhou on being an effective startup partner when things don’t go according to plan | S2E6
May 2 2024
Accel’s Amit Kumar and Ivan Zhou on being an effective startup partner when things don’t go according to plan | S2E6
No founder's journey is a straight line. In the throes of ups and downs, having guidance from someone who understands your experience can be invaluable. In this special episode of Spotlight On, Accel’s Amit Kumar and Ivan Zhou discuss their shared founder journeys and transition into VC, and dive into how they worked together to steer Ivan’s startup, Mayhem, through its most challenging times. Mayhem (formerly Visor) was a social gaming platform that joined Accel Family in 2018 and was acquired by Niantic in 2021. In April, Ivan joined Accel as an early-stage partner, mirroring Amit’s founder-partner journey. Their discussion explores the resilience needed to navigate turbulent times, a central theme in their founder experiences. This episode unpacks some of the most critical qualities of early-stage founders and operators – the determination to solve real problems, the importance of establishing strong foundations, and the willingness to rethink strategies when things don’t go according to plan. Conversation highlights:  00:00 - Ivan’s background and first startup attempt 04:44 - Uncovering the problem and passion that would inspire Mayhem  07:25 - What Ivan and Amit were looking for in an early-stage VC partnership 11:40 - The importance of building a company around a problem, not a category 18:09 - Lessons learned in a pivotal moment when Mayhem nearly failed 21:16 - How adversity as a founder helped both Amit and Ivan become better partners 30:50 - Ivan’s discovery of his passion for supporting other founders 39:17 - The core verticals and traits Ivan is looking for in future founders Featured: Ivan Zhou and Amit Kumar, Partners at Accel
CrowdStrike’s George Kurtz on building a generational company | S2E5
Apr 25 2024
CrowdStrike’s George Kurtz on building a generational company | S2E5
Since its inception in 2011, CrowdStrike has had a profound impact on the security landscape. Yet, despite their wildly successful 2019 IPO, there is no finish line for CEO and Co-Founder George Kurtz. With each passing year, the company grows larger, the market opportunities expand, and the need to prevent breaches becomes even more critical.  In this episode of Spotlight On, George and Accel’s Sameer Gandhi reflect on how their shared vision for a full suite of security solutions on a single platform, which kickstarted the partnership in 2013, has become a reality. As CrowdStrike approaches the 5th anniversary of its IPO, boasting a market cap of $72 billion, George reflects on the company’s enduring success. He shares his learnings as a second-time founder, detailing how he structures his investors and his board, and how his unwavering focus on solving the hard problems first continues to guide the company today.   Conversation highlights:  00:00 - Recounting the first meeting between George and Accel, which, against all odds, kickstarted a successful partnership  11:34 - How George held onto conviction for an unconventional approach to security  16:41 - Advice for founders operating in highly competitive landscapes 30:19 - Building an effective board of directors  33:00 - The importance of retaining the agility of a startup, even as a scaled business 38:01 - Parallels between racing and leading a business: time, data, team, and detail 44:40 - Considerations for the impact of AI and dark LLMs across the security landscape 51:05 - How George reinforced his commitment to customers post-IPO Featured: George Kurtz, President, CEO, and Co-Founder of CrowdStrike, and Sameer Gandhi, Partner at Accel
Sysdig’s Suresh Vasudevan on embracing a “challenger mindset” | S2E4
Apr 18 2024
Sysdig’s Suresh Vasudevan on embracing a “challenger mindset” | S2E4
In 2018, Sysdig made two critical decisions: pivoting its focus entirely to cloud security and welcoming Suresh Vasudevan as its new CEO. In this episode of Spotlight On, Suresh shares insights from his journey and unveils the bold decisions that have transformed Sysdig into a leading cloud security company. Suresh has learned the key to a successful CEO transition is shared decision-making. Over the years, he built a highly collaborative and disciplined team, encouraging them to stay focused on their strategy and core areas of strength regardless of what their competitors are doing. It is all part of maintaining a "challenger mindset," and it has steered the company through periods of change and helped it thrive despite a fiercely competitive tech landscape. Conversation highlights:  00:00 – Intro to Sysdig and Suresh’s background 03:59 – How a new CEO can build trust through shared decision-making 07:48 – Sysdig's pivot from observability to security: risks & strategic decisions 11:49 – How to challenge competition effectively through customer validation 14:10 – Navigating common pitfalls when building an open-source community 17:53 – The importance of building a team strong enough to withstand executive change 22:26 – How AI will transform the cloud security user experience  Featured: Suresh Vasudevan, CEO of Sysdig, and Ping Li, Partner at Accel accel.com/spotlight-on/sysdig-suresh-vasudevan
Syrup’s James Theuerkauf on building an AI-powered product that cuts through the noise | S2E3
Apr 11 2024
Syrup’s James Theuerkauf on building an AI-powered product that cuts through the noise | S2E3
Building an AI-powered startup today presents distinct challenges: a lingering hype cycle, steep competition, endless customer education, and rapidly evolving technical capabilities. In this episode of Spotlight On, Syrup’s James Theuerkauf shares advice for early-stage founders navigating this inflection point. He discusses building an AI product that cuts through the noise and adds value, the advantages of building a distributed, global team, and how to stay focused on what matters in a market full of distractions.  The episode also offers a look into the evolving retail landscape. Syrup's AI helps retail leaders like Faherty, Desigual, and Reformation optimize inventory, their most precious and expensive asset. Getting the right product, in the right location, at the right time is an age-old challenge, but today, it is precisely the type of problem AI can solve.  Conversation highlights: 00:00 – James’ background and Syrup’s founding story  01:44 – How technology can solve the complex merchandising problems brands face 06:57 – The environmental impact of wasted garments, how AI presents solutions 10:05 – Roadblocks to AI adoption among brands and common customer concerns 18:27 – Advice for startups building a global, distributed product and team 26:17 – How early-stage companies can cut through the noise and fundraise thoughtfully Featured: Sara Ittelson, Partner at Accel and James Theuerkauf, CEO and Founder of Syrup
Webflow’s Vlad Magdalin on the biggest lessons learned from bootstrapping and raising capital | S2E2
Apr 4 2024
Webflow’s Vlad Magdalin on the biggest lessons learned from bootstrapping and raising capital | S2E2
Webflow provides a way to design, build, and launch powerful websites visually without writing code. In this episode, Vlad Magdalin shares his inspiration for the product, tracing the story back from his early passion for computer science and 3D animation to the very moment he recognized a market need for intuitive, visual web design tools. He provides an open look into the company-building challenges his team faced during the early days, and how it helped build resilience in the years that followed. Today, Webflow is a successful startup that supports a vibrant community of over 3.5 million users worldwide. Vlad shares his advice for other founders that he wishes he’d known at the start of his journey: to approach investors with boldness about your vision and values, think systematically around monetization, invest time training leaders, and more. Conversation highlights:  00:00 – Vlad’s background and Webflow’s founding story 02:53 – How fundraising challenges turned Webflow into a resilient business 09:22 – The importance of setting expectations and values alignment with VCs 20:00 – Ways the CEO role and business changed in the first year after fundraising 22:31 – Lessons Vlad wishes he had known at the start of his entrepreneurial journey  30:50 – Webflow’s approach to training AI models with respect for creators Featured: Vlad Magdalin, CEO and Co-Founder at Webflow, Arun Mathew, Partner at Accel
Klaviyo’s Andrew Bialecki on proving a tech startup can be built anywhere | S2E1
Mar 28 2024
Klaviyo’s Andrew Bialecki on proving a tech startup can be built anywhere | S2E1
When Klaviyo became a public company in 2023, we celebrated a moment over a decade in the making. In this episode of Spotlight On, Andrew Bialecki shares learnings from Klaviyo’s unique growth story, from the diligence that came from bootstrapping to the 'unfair advantage' gained by scaling a startup outside a typical tech hub.  Klaviyo is an intelligent marketing automation platform. Under Andrew’s leadership, Klaviyo has grown to support over 143,000 brands. The discussion covers how a startup changes during various stages of growth and offers an open look into the evolving nature of the CEO role—from the earliest stages to operating as a public company.  Conversation highlights: 00:00 – Background and Klaviyo’s founding story 06:03 – Reflecting on the hustle it took to gain early customers 10:27 – Challenges & benefits of bootstrapping, what Andrew would do differently today 18:36 – Launching in Boston and learnings for startups building outside of a tech hub 22:47 – Building enduring partnerships like Klaviyo x Shopify 27:20 – How Klaviyo stays ahead by being a customer of their own products. 32:54 – Benchmarks Andrew looked for during the pre-IPO journey 35:53 – Klaviyo AI, and the impact Andrew sees from the technology in the future 41:00 – Advice for the challenges a founder faces as their roles change and evolve Featured: Andrew Bialecki, CEO and Co-Founder of Klaviyo and Ping Li, Partner at Accel Learn more: accel.com/spotlight-on/episodes/klaviyo-andrew-bialecki
Accel’s Vas Natarajan, Sara Ittelson, and Casey Aylward share insights and predictions from this season of Spotlight On: AI | S1E13
Jan 9 2024
Accel’s Vas Natarajan, Sara Ittelson, and Casey Aylward share insights and predictions from this season of Spotlight On: AI | S1E13
AI is considered to be one of today’s most significant inflection points — but is the enthusiasm warranted, or is it mere hype? In this episode of Spotlight On: AI, Accel partners delve into the state of the market and what comes next, drawing on the insights and predictions about artificial intelligence shared throughout this season. During the season, we interviewed 12 leaders applying AI in all parts of the ecosystem. They have enabled new industries and profoundly influenced productivity, creativity, and the global economy. Several founders of AI-native companies we spoke to, such as AssemblyAI, Ironclad, Scale and Synthesia, embarked on their AI journey years before the current cycle. They were the crazy ones, the early visionaries, the risk-takers, who patiently built early AI products. The Accel team reflects on their foresight and early approach and contrasts it with how new players navigate the space—listening to customer needs and meeting the moment quickly and creatively. “A world where I can just speak what I want to see and have it created feels so much closer than it ever has before.” – Sara Ittelson, Partner at Accel Regardless of the approach, every company must rise to the challenges of adapting to a rapidly evolving landscape. As a firm in our 40th year, we’ve seen many transformative, market-defining technology companies. in this episode, Accel’s Sara Ittelson, Casey Aylward, and Vas Natarajan discuss what’s next. Conversation highlights: 00:00 - Intro and season recap 00:53 - Lessons from early AI founders 01:58 - Distinguishing "hype" vs. real AI impact and innovation 04:54 - Future changes in emerging AI tech and market impact 05:31 - Surprising pace in the AI ecosystem 08:55 - AI wave parallels with mobile and cloud waves 11:09 - Global enthusiasm about AI and its impact on discovery pace 17:15 - Criteria for successful AI companies is vision and team insight 22:06 - Shifts in startups and venture investing 24:43 - Season 2 preview – Spotlight On: Security Featured: Vas Natarajan, Partner at Accel, Casey Aylward, Partner at Accel, Sara Ittelson, Partner at Accel Learn more: accel.com/spotlighton/ai-predictions-insights
Arm’s Rene Haas on building the brain of artificial intelligence | S1E12
Jan 2 2024
Arm’s Rene Haas on building the brain of artificial intelligence | S1E12
Arm has been a force in the technology ecosystem since 1990. Their unique model allows them to ride the waves of innovation without being tied to just one moment in time. As a result, they’ve powered them all: smartphones, cloud software, edge computing, and now, AI. For most of this period, Rene Haas, Arm’s CEO, has been working in the semiconductor industry. On this episode of Spotlight On: AI, Rene will reflect on the remarkable innovation he’s seen in the cutting-edge technology, and how Arm is building the brain of artificial intelligence. Arm was first born from a joint venture between Acorn Computers, Apple, and VLSI Technology. At the time, their goal was to create a Central Processing Unit (CPU) for the Newton Device, which, well, didn’t do too well. Years later, when smartphones came into the market with a clear need for CPUs, it changed everything. Arm became the brain of the mobile ecosystem. Today Arm extends far beyond mobile. 70% of the world uses a product powered by an Arm based semiconductor chip. The past few years have only pushed their name further into the spotlight. During COVID, pressure on supply chains shed light on a global chip shortage. More recently, the dramatic computing pressure from LLMs has been another clear signal. Everything that is powered by AI, needs to be powered by semiconductors. Every complex computing problem needs Arm. “It sounds like a sci-fi movie, but it's not far away. That’s the scary and cool thing about AI. It's the type of thing we’ve thought about but didn’t think we’d need to think about in our lifetime. Now we do.”  – Rene Haas With over three decades of experience in semiconductors, Rene Haas is uniquely versed in the history of global technology. In conversation with Accel’s Ping Li, he will reflect on past technology cycles, as well as the enduring importance of CPU technology as machine learning and AI transforms the future, Arm’s complementary partnership with NVIDIA and why the AI race isn’t a zero-sum game, his journey on taking the company public in one of the most anticipated IPOs of 2023 and much more. Conversation Highlights: 00:00 - Introduction to Arm and Rene's early semiconductor experiences 03:45 - Semiconductor industry history and major changes in recent decades 05:00 - Arm's inception and its journey to powering 70% of the digital universe 08:00 - Driving forces behind Arm's 2023 IPO and Rene's advice for teams going public 16:20 - Balancing profitability and growth, emphasizing a clear path to profitability 18:00 - Overlooked areas in AI innovation, such as energy consumption, and Arm's role 21:00 - Most powerful applications built on the Arm platform 23:00 - Arm's complimentary partnership with NVIDIA, AI innovation bottlenecks, the importance of human override, and fail-safe mechanisms 30:00 - Government's role in semiconductor supply chain issues 32:00 - Predictions on future breakthroughs and the enduring role of human creativity 33:40 - Rene's advice on building a strong team through skillset pairing, and what can be learned from the parallels of some of his favorite sports teams (Lakers & Raiders!) 40:00 - Closing thoughts on the captivating technology and regulatory challenges ahead Host: Ping Li, Partner at Accel Guest: Rene Haas, CEO of Arm Learn More: www.accel.com/spotlighton/arm-rene-haas
Transcend’s Kate Parker on putting data back into the hands of users in an AI-driven world | S1E11
Dec 21 2023
Transcend’s Kate Parker on putting data back into the hands of users in an AI-driven world | S1E11
Recent developments in artificial intelligence have sparked an outcry for control over personal data. While regulators, politicians, and the business community have been thinking about how to improve data privacy, there is still much more work to do. Kate Parker, Transcend’s COO, will discuss the progress in data governance, how companies can adopt and build secure AI services, and why it is critical to give power back to the user. Questions around data and privacy will only become more important and complex as AI evolves. Since 2017, Transcend’s privacy platform has been used by major enterprises like Robinhood and Patreon to answer questions about their data: What data do we have? Where is it going? Who has access to it? With user demand for control rising, it isn’t just about ticking a compliance box—it’s the key to a company’s survival in the future. “Personal data within most companies goes off like a confetti gun. It gets into every SaaS system, every data warehouse. You have to pull the confetti back together and hand it back to the user. ” – Kate Parker Efforts in Europe, such as GDPR and the AI Act, along with California’s CCPA, represent tangible steps toward putting guardrails in place. On this episode of Spotlight On: AI, Kate Parker, and Vas Natarajan will discuss the latest in data governance, and share how to enhance your company’s privacy posture to keep user data safe in our AI-driven world. Conversation highlights: 00:00 - Overview of today's data governance landscape 02:10 - The founding story behind Transcend’s privacy platform 04:57 - Exploring the link between customer privacy and brand value 06:36 - What privacy issues and threats arise from an unstructured approach to personal data in the AI landscape 10:30 - Common pain points enterprises face in meeting privacy standards and governing the output of LLMs 14:24 - What can be learned from Fortune 100 companies navigating safety personal data in AI vs the proactive approach new startups are taking 24:20 - Current AI regulations and signals for future changes 32:56 - Transcend’s internal AI deployment across sales, operations, and content 36:30 - Anticipating the future of personal data usage Host: Vas Natarajan, Partner at Accel Featuring: Kate Parker, Chief Operating Officer at Transcend Learn more: www.accel.com/spotlighton/transcend-kate-parker
Cinder’s Glen Wise on trust and safety threats and holding AI accountable | S1E10
Dec 21 2023
Cinder’s Glen Wise on trust and safety threats and holding AI accountable | S1E10
Generative AI has transformed technology, presenting new opportunities and raising concerns about potential harm. There is no shortage of questions about how to hold generative AI accountable – or if we can at all. Glen Wise and his team are answering these questions through Cinder’s trust and safety platform. Because of the recent advancements in artificial intelligence, companies face new challenges in identifying how users, networks, or content may violate their terms of service. Glen and his team at Cinder are uniquely qualified to help. Before Cinder, Glen worked for the US Government and, after that, in threat discovery at Meta. There he met his co-founder, Brian Fishman, a renowned expert in counterterrorism and hate speech. Together, they collaborated to build community threat intelligence capabilities to combat some of the biggest Internet abuse campaigns of our time involving hate groups, terrorist organizations, and election disinformation. Cinder was born out of Glen’s efforts to improve threat intelligence at Meta. To understand the tools and best practices other companies were using, Glen spoke to teams in delivery, ride-sharing, gaming, and AI, only to come to a startling realization: there weren’t any. To meet the need, Cinder’s trust and safety platform launched in 2021. Today, it is used by both rising AI companies and the top tech companies adopting new technology to help combat internet abuse at scale. “AI is being used across almost every single threat vector today, and we’ve seen real examples of how AI can be used for harm. We need to take this seriously. Can we actually hold this thing accountable?” – Glen Wise, CEO and Co-Founder of Cinder Glen balances the optimism of Silicon Valley with a unique perspective—AI alone can't replace humans in ensuring safety. Platforms will always involve humans in critical decisions and people will always remain essential. On this episode of Spotlight On: AI, Glen and Sara Ittelson discuss the security challenges that have been accelerated by AI and the enduring responsibility humans have in countering them. Conversation Highlights: 00:00 - Intro and Glen’s background 03:00 - The journey to YCombinator and the founding of Cinder 04:00 - Introduction to Trust & Safety and the impact generative AI has had on the space 08:00 - How AI can combat abuse and where it could be used as an engine for harm 14:00 - How investors like Sara discern product-market fit with new AI technologies 17:00 - Glen’s predictions for the future of AI in T&S and the role humans will play 25:00 - Advice for founders to build resilience earlier on so their platform isn’t used for harm Host: Sara Ittelson Partner at Accel Featuring: Glen Wise, CEO and Co-Founder of Cinder Learn more at www.accel.com/spotlightOn/cinder-glen-wise
Checkr’s Daniel Yanisse on tackling bias in people and AI | S1E9
Dec 19 2023
Checkr’s Daniel Yanisse on tackling bias in people and AI | S1E9
AI can be used to reduce human bias, but if we’re not careful, it can also learn it. In this episode of Spotlight On: AI, Daniel Yanisse, Co-Founder and CEO of Checkr and Accel partner Rich Wong discuss their concerns, hopes, and advice for building a fairer future. “Be self-aware. You know where bias may be, so be cautious where there is AI in those business processes. What becomes dangerous is when it is a black box, and you don’t think about how to apply it tactically.” – Daniel Yanisse Born in France, Daniel's robotics passion led him from college in Switzerland to the Silicon Valley. After roles at NASA and Cisco, he was drawn to the allure of startups. In 2013, he and his co-founder, Jonathan Perichon, realized background checks were a significant bottleneck to the on-demand ecosystem emerging at the time. To fix it, they decided to build an API for background checks. After YCombinator (S14), Checkr was born. Since Accel’s partnership in 2014, we've seen Checkr evolve into the leading background check platform with a clear mission to provide fair chance hiring opportunities to the 80 million Americans with criminal records, a mission made possible through artificial intelligence. Creating a fair and accurate background check involves using AI to navigate a complex and messy sea of unorganized data. Checkr’s AI initially focused on crime classification and expanded to address broader hiring process issues and mitigate human prejudices. Today, it can identify human biases in the recruiting process, pinpoint discrepancies in compensation, and scrutinize interview records for potential race or gender biases. There are many reasons to be optimistic about AI – productivity, accessibility, and reduction in human error. At the same time, there are valid concerns around issues like bias. It is a complex problem that demands a dual solution – AI can help humans by pointing out their existing biases, and humans can reciprocate the effort by training AI against it. We discuss the concept and more on this episode of Spotlight On. Conversation highlights: 00:00 - Daniel’s upbringing in France and early interests that inspired his move to the United States 05:00 - The experience with background checks that inspired the creation of Checkr 07:30 - Getting into YCombinator and meeting early investors through “speed-dating” 09:10 - Checkr’s early days meeting needs of the booming on-demand economy, and gaining early customer traction 11:40 - The inspiration behind Checkr’s mission to build a fairer future by reducing the imbalances and biases in the hiring process 19:50 – How Checkr has been using artificial intelligence since its earliest days to make sense of the background check data, ensure accurate classification of crimes, check for bias in the process 26:00 - Advice for founders who are excited about the potential of artificial intelligence but want to reduce AI biases that exists in  machine learning models 35:00 - Closing thoughts and a warning about the technological divides that may come from AI progress Host: Rich Wong, Partner at Accel Featuring: Daniel Yanisse, CEO & Co-Founder of Checkr Learn more: www.accel.com/spotlighton/checkr-daniel-yanisse
Ironclad’s Cai GoGwilt on a decade of anticipating the transformative power of AI | S1E8
Dec 12 2023
Ironclad’s Cai GoGwilt on a decade of anticipating the transformative power of AI | S1E8
Ironclad's story is one of great patience, careful preparation, and steadfast belief in the transformative power of artificial intelligence. For nearly a decade, the team has been preparing for the AI moment we are now in. Join us as Cai GoGwilt, Co-Founder and Chief Architect of Ironclad, shares the challenges and triumphs of their journey since founding the company in 2014. The story inspires founders to ask themselves: are there things you want to do in the future that you can prepare for today? Cai never expected to work in the legal industry. At Palantir, he was a software developer in military intelligence and AI. He noticed many industries were underserved by modern software and, inspired by friends who were lawyers, decided to start building tech that would improve the practice of law. Around the same time, Jason Boehmig, who is now Cai’s Co-Founder and Ironclad’s CEO, was a corporate attorney at Fenwick & West. Jason was seeking tech solutions to break through legal bottlenecks. In 2014, they teamed up to build Ironclad to do precisely that. For the first few years, they focused solely on collaboration tools. But in the background, they were always working on AI. Years later, when GPT3 launched, it changed everything. “When I first saw what AI is now capable of, my first thought was, ‘It's time.’.’” – Cai GoGwilt Ironclad has been building, learning, and experimenting with AI for nearly a decade. Despite meticulous preparation, the rapid pace of progress over the past year was not without challenges. In the upcoming episode, Cai and Accel’s Steve Loughlin will share how their team sustained their stamina for AI and turned roadblocks into critical ingredients for success. Conversation Highlights: 00:00 - Cai’s early interest in legal tech and the formation of Ironclad’s founding team 7:00 -  Balancing early product development with patience for the AI ecosystem to develop 11:00 - Predictions for the dramatic impact AI will have on the legal practice 14:00- Ironclad’s attempts at building an AI agent – and their big open-source breakthrough 18:00 - What startup founders can learn from Ironclad’s quick response to GPT 23:00 - Implications of AI on the legal workforce; massive efficiency gains 27:00 - Advice for avoiding common mistakes startups make when a new disruptive technology emerges Host: Steve Loughlin, Partner at Accel Guest: Cai GoGwilt, Co-Founder and Chief Architect of Ironclad Learn More: www.Accel.com/SpotlightOn/Ironclad-Cai-Gogwilt
Synthesia’s Victor Riparbelli on creating an environment to harness AI benefits and reduce harms | S1E7
Dec 5 2023
Synthesia’s Victor Riparbelli on creating an environment to harness AI benefits and reduce harms | S1E7
A self-proclaimed sci-fi enthusiast, Victor Ribarbelli is drawn to the exciting frontiers of technology. His work began with website development and evolved into a passion for company building. Eventually, he found his place in the European startup ecosystem as Synthesia’s Co-Founder and CEO, where he has had a lasting impact. After a year of exploring VR, AR, and AI startup ideas, he crossed paths with Professor Matthias Niessner. Niessner’s influential research on AI video generation at Stanford captivated Victor. When he saw the research paper for the first time, he knew he wanted to focus on exploring its concepts. “I just felt like I saw magic. It's rare you get those moments in life. A lot of people had that with ChatGPT where, when you try it, you're mind blown. I had that moment. I saw the technology and realized this is going to change everything we know about media production.” - Victor Riparbelli The company they went on to build, Synthesia, is now the leading AI text-to-video platform for the enterprise. We first met Victor Riparbelli and the Synthesia team in 2021, and we’ve watched them push the boundaries of what’s achievable with generative AI. Even when they launched in 2018, when the term generative AI was relatively unused, Synthesia had embraced the technology, referring to it as synthetic media. Despite their progress, Victor feels they’re only 5% into the roadmap of what’s coming at Synthesia, let alone the AI video ecosystem. There are entire scenes, interactive avatars, and enhanced movement, all to come. The visionary nature of Victor and his co-founders is clear. They've come remarkably close to predicting precise developments across the AI industry, including the fact that text-to-video would materialize around 2023, and full Hollywood-style filmmaking would be done with AI by 2028 – both of which are well underway. In conversation with Accel’s Philippe Botteri, Victor explores Synthesia’s journey and breaks down his predictions for the future of artificial intelligence. The discussion extends to offer guidance for founders on product development, fundraising, AI research, and navigating regulatory shifts. Listeners will hear why Victor remains unsurprised by the swift transformations taking place in the landscape. Conversation Highlights: 00:00 - Synthesia’s founding story and Victor’s belief in the radical impact of AI on video 05:00 - The hard work that went into building a founding team and raising initial funding from Mark Cuban 13:00 - Org structures of powerful AI companies; balancing science, research, and development 19:40 - Victor’s predictions for the future of video avatars and multimodal intelligence 34:00 - How Synthesia’s team built a great GTM engine through virality 39:00 - How founders and creators can harness AI’s benefits and reduce its harms 42:00 - The challenges and implications of AI regulation and legislation Host: Philippe Botteri, Partner at Accel Guest: Victor Riparbelli, Co-Founder and CEO of Synthesia Learn More: www.accel.com/spotlighton/synthesia-victor-riparbelli
Bard’s Jack Krawczyk on the birth of Google’s AI chatbot and the creative potential that lies ahead | S1E6
Nov 28 2023
Bard’s Jack Krawczyk on the birth of Google’s AI chatbot and the creative potential that lies ahead | S1E6
Jack Krawczyk, Google Bard’s Product Lead, has a founder-like obsession with pooling feedback and measuring success. Since launching in March 2023, Bard has been quickly recognized as an extraordinary tool for unlocking creativity. In this episode, Jack shares his experiences building Bard, his advice for founders, and discusses the creative opportunities to come from AI. We first got to know Jack in 2016 when he joined our team as an Entrepreneur in Residence, and later advised for an Accel company. Born in Poland, Jack’s family immigrated to the US when he was young for his father’s job as an electrical engineer. He has always been fascinated with math, computing, and the intricacies of the world's functions. These interests led Jack to carve an impressive course of product impact across a number of startups, and, eventually, Google. The Bard experiment came together around the same time as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, and despite the rapid uptake of these large language models (LLMs), Jack believes the technology is still in its infancy. As a result, the Bard team has been uniquely intentional about acknowledging risk and limitations. “I describe generative AI as an idea creator. It helps take an idea in your mind, helps you find the words to describe it, and makes it approachable for people so when you do speak it into the world, it has legs.” - Jack Krawczyk On this episode of Spotlight On: AI, Jack sits down with Accel’s John Locke to discuss Google’s AI efforts, creative AI opportunities, the importance of risk mitigation, and timely advice. Conversation highlights: 00:00 - Jack’s upbringing and early interest in math and technology 04:52 - The problems that led Jack from banking to a career in technology 12:01 - How the team behind Bard came together to launch the AI assistant 16:24 - Jack’s advice for user research and measuring the success of new AI products 20:10 - Navigating the highly competitive dynamics in the AI space 21:56 - How Jack uses Bard in his everyday work and life 24:54 - Understanding the risk discrepancies between reliable AI output and input 27:03 - What startup founders can learn from Bard’s success as a “startup” within Google, and how they can apply AI effectively Host: John Locke, Partner at Accel Featuring: Jack Krawczyk, Sr. Director of Product at Google, focused on Bard Learn more: www.accel.com/spotlighton/google-bard-jack-krawczyk *Bard's episode was recorded in early November, 2023
Scale AI’s Alexandr Wang on the most powerful technological advancement of our time | S1E5
Nov 14 2023
Scale AI’s Alexandr Wang on the most powerful technological advancement of our time | S1E5
It was only recently that Scale AI stepped into the limelight. But since 2016, it has been one of Silicon Valley’s quiet but indispensable forces – the data infrastructure powering the entire AI industry. Today, every significant large language model (LLM) is built on top of Scale’s data engine. Because of Scale, AI has the potential to transform the global economy. “AI is the most important technological advancement of our time.” - Alexandr Wang At its helm is founder and CEO Alexandr (Alex) Wang. Born in Los Alamos, New Mexico, as the child of two physicists, Alex saw the profound impact of science and technology demonstrated many times. But he rarely followed anyone else’s playbook. Before Scale, Alex tinkered with artificial intelligence and deep learning. He created AI algorithms that could detect people’s emotions based on facial expressions or power a refrigerator camera to catch if his roommates were eating his food. Alex understood that progress in AI would not hinge on algorithms or technical limitations but on data availability. Alex believed he could build the data infrastructure platform to support the entire AI ecosystem. So, at 19 years old, Alex dropped out of MIT to launch Scale. Around this time, the Accel team met Alex, and we were struck by his determination. In the years following, Scale has been at the forefront of every significant advancement in AI, contributing to projects such as autonomous vehicle programs at General Motors and Toyota, the US Government's pioneering AI initiatives, and several leading AI labs at Meta, Microsoft, and more. At just 26 years old, Alex is now a seasoned veteran in the AI space. In this episode, he joins us to reflect on Scale’s founding story and, in his own words, the advantage of naïveté and how a fresh perspective enabled him to achieve things no other artificial intelligence company has. He also shares advice for founders on how to get a headstart in a developing industry and gives his thoughts on how the AI ecosystem has developed faster than he ever expected. Conversation highlights: 00:00 - How Alex’s upbringing as the child of two physicists shaped his view of the world 03:00 - The significant bottleneck for AI development that inspired Alex to launch Scale 04:40 - Defining AI infrastructure and how to spot a great infrastructure opportunity 10:00 - Alex’s advice for founders on critical early entry into new markets before they are “cool” 13:00 - Why “naïveté” ​​can help new founders accomplish things that left other companies in a rut 23:00 - Future predictions on how AI models could become highly personalized 27:00 - Exploring the potential impact of AI on the national and global economy 33:44 - Alex’s opinion on why “algo-raving” is the best way to experience music Host: Dan Levine, Partner at Accel Featuring: Alexandr Wang, CEO and Founder of Scale Learn more: www.accel.com/spotlighton/scale-alexandr-wang *Scale's episode was recorded in October 2023 and references events that have now passed as “upcoming” **Due to the Thanksgiving holiday next week the next episode will air on 11/28/23