エピソード

  • How Jack Henry is Modernizing Banking Infrastructure
    2024/12/19

    Most financial institutions still bank on software built before the internet, but Jack Henry's CTO, Ben Metz, is leading a quiet revolution to change that. Speaking with a16z General Partner Angela Strange, Metz shares how banks’ historical tech infrastructure and regulatory obstacles have stymied innovation—and how Jack Henry is helping them overcome these challenges. Metz outlines actionable ways startup founders can help smaller community banks leverage artificial intelligence and cloud computing, reshaping the industry at large.

    Chapter Breakdown:

    0:47 Backstory
    2:15 Community banks and historical infrastructure
    4:30 Pre-internet banking & software realities
    6:45 Challenges of scaling historical banking tech
    8:30 Building software & COBOL
    12:15 Dissecting core banking systems
    15:40 How regulatory hurdles impact innovation
    18:30 Mobile banking and market shiftsT
    22:45 Integrating AI into banking's foundation
    25:30 Digital service core to banking
    28:15 Where AI will be integrated first
    31:20 Advice for fintech founders
    34:45 Building a data platform to enable innovation
    38:20 Working together: banking & tech startups

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    27 分
  • Building a $20B+ Open Source Business with MongoDB's Eliot Horowitz
    2024/12/12

    a16z Partner Seema Amble talks with MongoDB and Viam co-founder Eliot Horowitz about building sustainable open source software tools. From challenging Oracle to building the de facto cloud-based database management tool, Horowitz outlines MongoDB’s early go-to-market strategies, approach to community building, and enterprise sales motion. This episode provides detailed tips on creating solutions for the developer community, building trust amongst enterprises, and successfully scaling a business supported by the open source community.

    01:18-03:42 Why open source is a strategic business decision

    3:42:6:03 Product development strategy + making developers’ lives easier

    6:03-08:24 MongoDB strategy of building community through meetups

    08:24-10:49 The five-second rule for developer products

    10:49-13:09 How MongoDB used meetups to fuel growth

    13:09-15:35 The importance of getting people excited about your product

    15:35-19:29 MongoDB’s enterprise sales strategy

    19:28-20:26 MongoDB’s recruiting strategy

    20:26-25:12 Open source customers vs. users, adoption patterns

    25:12-27:35 The evolution of enterprise deals and building trust through demos

    27:35-32:23 Product communication strategies and tactics

    32:23-39:37 Managing customers and building long-term relationships

    39:37-40:16 Outro

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    40 分
  • How Zapier Became Profitable in 3 years and Scaled to $5B with Wade Foster
    2024/12/10

    a16z Partner Seema Amble connects with Zapier co-founder Wade Foster about the company’s founding and GTM success utilizing a product-led growth (PLG) strategy. Chalked full of actionable insights, this episode explores Zapier’s product strategy, customer experience, and how the team built a sustainable growth engine that enabled them to reach profitability within three years. Foster also provides valuable guidance on brand strategy and how creating an unconventional “weird” brand helped Zapier differentiate from competitors.


    1:15-2:05 Zapier's origin story
    2:05-3:13 Initial product idea
    3:13-5:06 Finding product-market fit and YC
    5:06-7:43 How Zapier found their early customers
    7:43-10:15 Strategic approach to identifying services to integrate
    10:15-13:28 Identifying customer needs and optimizing onboarding
    13:28-16:10 Developing a scalable customer acquisition strategy
    16:10-19:07 Guidance on building a successful self-serve product
    19:07:23:52 Early pricing experiments and brand evolution
    23:53-27:04 Early hiring strategy
    27:04-29:59 Reflecting on Zapier’s brand identity and product strategy
    29:59-31:19 Advice for founders regarding customer acquisition and GTM
    31:19-31:59 Outro

    Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should not be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see

    a16z.com/disclosures

    .

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    32 分
  • How Gusto Used Customer Input to Scale Growth with Tomer London
    2024/12/05

    In this episode, a16z Partner Seema Amble chats with Tomer London, co-founder of Gusto, about establishing product-market fit and product discovery. London shares how Gusto, now valued at ~$10 billion with 300,000+ customers, identified early customers who could provide valuable feedback that helped the team optimize the self-service product experience. The conversation explores Gusto's approach to product development, as well as managing and incorporating customer feedback while maintaining a clear product vision.

    1:18-3:14 Gusto’s founding story
    3:14- 4:56 Solidifying a GTM sales strategy
    4:56-10:03 Identifying early customers and perfecting the sales pitch
    10:03-12:45 Working with customers to optimize the product UX
    12:45-14:31 Engendering trust and finding success with accountants
    14:31-16:41 The role accountants planned in Gusto’s success
    16:41-19:34 Creating a feedback funnel and balancing product vision
    19:34-22:38 Self-service strategy and measuring success
    22:38- 23:45 Refining the UX at scale
    23:45-25:45 Identifying real-world use cases to inform product strategy
    25:45-29:52 GTM learnings and advice
    29:52-30:05 Outro

    Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should not be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures.

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    31 分
  • How to Build a Thriving AI Ecosystem with Lisa Su, CEO of AMD
    2024/10/30

    High-performance compute is the bedrock of generative AI, and if there’s anyone who knows about high-performance chips, it’s AMD CEO Lisa Su. In this wide-ranging conversation with a16z Operating Partner Bob Swan—himself formerly CEO of Intel—Lisa lays out her vision for the evolution of compute within the AI ecosystem, touching not only on raw power and the continuation of Moore’s Law, but also how AMD will support “the right compute for each form factor” for a wider ranges of real-world gen AI use cases. Lisa also shares her perspective on the state of chip manufacturing, how AMD matches their R&D cycles to fast-moving industries, and how partnerships build strong ecosystems.

    Read more, including a full transcript, here: https://a16z.com/how-to-build-ai-ecos...

    Time stamps:

    [00:01:37] Lisa's career in compute
    [00:04:48] Compute in the genAI era
    [00:09:39] High performance or multimodal?
    [00:10:47] Making the genAI ecosystem open
    [00:14:16] The chip supply chain
    [00:17:53] Resiliency and the CHIPS Act
    [00:20:54] How AMD balances long development cycles with short term innovation
    [00:24:48] Learnings from the hyperscaler market
    [00:26:54] What being fabless means for AMD
    [00:31:24] Lisa's advice for startup founders

    Find more content from our AI Revolution series on www.a16z.com/AIRevolution.

    Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures.

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    37 分
  • a16z Growth's David George on His Frameworks for Late-Stage Investing
    2024/10/15

    Finding and backing companies that can reach escape velocity is the name of the game over here at a16z Growth—but picking those winners is far from easy. David George, head of the a16z Growth fund, sat down with the I/O podcast to discuss his mental models for growth-stage investing, what it really takes to go public, where AI is today and where it’s headed, and more.

    [00:03:19] What makes Andreessen Horowitz different

    [00:08:29] David's mental model for investing

    [00:18:23] Focusing on inputs, not outputs

    [00:26:52] What constitutes a growth company?

    [00:29:14] David's three investing frameworks

    [00:36:45] How to measure the ROI of R&D

    [00:42:15] What it takes to go public today

    [00:46:43] AI: market structure and infrastructure vs. application layers

    To read a transcript of this conversation, click here.

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    59 分
  • Why Human Data is Key to AI: Alexandr Wang from Scale AI
    2024/10/04

    In this conversation with a16z general partner David George, Scale AI founder and CEO Alexandr Wang discusses the three pillars of AI—models, compute, and data—and how creating abundant data is core to the evolution of gen AI. With Scale’s work across enterprise, automotive, and the public sector, Alex is also building the critical infrastructure that will allow any organization to use their proprietary data to build bespoke gen AI applications. In addition to talking about frontier data, Alex also shares his learnings from the growth of Scale, his approach to leadership, and what he thinks growth-stage founder/CEOs tend to get wrong about hiring.

    Read more, including a full transcript, here: https://a16z.com/frontier-data-foundries-alex-wang-scale-ai/

    Timestamps:

    [00:00:58] How frontier data will change gen AI

    [00:08:47] Are big tech companies over-investing in AI?

    [00:14:39] Where the best AI businesses will thrive

    [00:17:05] How enterprise businesses are approaching AI adoption

    [00:19:50] What does the next phase of gen AI products look like?

    [00:23:23] Alex's approach to scaling Scale

    [00:25:36] The founder fallacy

    [00:30:12] MEI and how Alex views talent acquisition

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    35 分
  • In the Vault: Assessing AI Impact vs. Hype with John Stecher of Blackstone
    2024/09/25

    a16z general partner David Haber talks to John Stecher, Chief Technology Officer at Blackstone, where he advances cutting-edge technology, heads up innovation investing, and advises the firm’s investment teams and portfolio companies. The conversation covers how he decides whether to build tech in-house or partner with startups, what qualities he’s looking for in early stage companies, and how he sees AI impacting real estate, credit, energy, and ecommerce.

    0:00-1:05 Intro

    1:06-3:55 Changes in finance x tech over the past 2 decades

    3:56-5:06 Investing in "themes" across asset classes

    5:07-7:00 What the CTO role entails

    7:01-9:00 "Build it" vs. "buy it": trade-offs

    9:01-11:57 Advice for early stage companies

    11:58-16:37 Ways Blackstone is incorporating generative AI

    16:38-17:46 How AI changes the role of an analyst

    17:47-21:04 Gen AI's impact on private equity, real estate, credit, more

    21:05-22:54 How Blackstone will evolve over the next five years

    22:55-23:26 Outro

    Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should not be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures.

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    23 分