Episodit

  • The first few hires in any team are key but what about scaling beyond that as you progress through funding rounds and possibly acquisitions and exit? 

     

    Dimple Patel is currently CEO at NatureMetrics and as a highly accomplished entrepreneur, she’s seen it all, from MVP to new markets and fundraising stages right through to exit. A strong team is what gets you there, to secure funding and drive growth, so she knows how vital it is to build a team of A players.


    During this series, we’ll be discussing the art of building strong, high-performing teams to give your startup the best foundation possible.

     

    I’ll be speaking to industry experts about inclusion, employer branding and establishing culture, plus I’ll be hearing both the VC and founder viewpoints and experiences when it comes to finding and supporting the best talent.

     

    So, whether you’re a founder starting to scaling your team, a hiring manager looking for top talent, or simply curious about how diverse teams are tackling the planet’s most pressing challenges, this series is for you.



    1:31 - Dimple’s journey from banking to coffee to tech to biodiversity.


    5:35 - Why did you choose to join NatureMetrics?


    9:49 - What stage was NatureMetrics at when you joined and how have things changed since you joined a year ago?


    14:42 - What is the culture like at NatureMetrics and how does your mission feed into that?


    19:16 - How do you show up as a leader and how do you feed into the culture?


    24:27 - What challenges and lessons have you learnt across the variety of businesses you’ve worked in?


    27:29 - What are some ways to build trust between team members?


    32:47 - When you’re working in an early-stage industry, how does that impact finding the right talent?


    38:02 - Advice for leaders who are scaling their business and maybe the people who were in the business early-on aren’t right for the long-term.


    45:15 - Have mentors helped you understand team building?


    48:26 - How important do you think it is to be part of industry communities?


    53:07 - What key piece of advice would you offer for building a culture that will endure?


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  • As any team starts to scale, it becomes more and more important to have sustainable and repeatable processes in place. But it’s also not uncommon for that to be overlooked in favour of things like sales and fundraising. 

     

    Sherry White is a consultant who works specifically with startups and scale-ups to tackle challenges, unblock and improve leadership, establish good foundations, face tough questions and get things moving fast! 

     

    She covers everything from culture and employment law, through to health and safety and commercial balance.


    During this series, we’ll be discussing the art of building strong, high-performing teams to give your startup the best foundation possible. 

     

    I’ll be speaking to industry experts about inclusion, employer branding and establishing culture, plus I’ll be hearing both the VC and founder viewpoints and experiences when it comes to finding and supporting the best talent. 

     

    So, whether you’re a founder starting to scaling your team, a hiring manager looking for top talent, or simply curious about how diverse teams are tackling the planet’s most pressing challenges, this series is for you.



    1:34 - Sherry’s journey from lab spaces to HR.


    3:34 - Are there any particular challenges that you see come up in STEM environments?


    6:28 - What are the main things you work with people on in early-stage businesses?


    7:47 - What parts of HR and People processes do you often see neglected?


    8:40 - What basics should people look at getting in place early?


    10:20 - Can startups write their own policies or do they need templates or a consultant?


    11:50 - How can startups offer good benefits on a tight budget?


    14:25 - Thoughts on equity as part of a compensation package.


    16:11 - What makes a good onboarding process?


    19:08 - Tips for scaling onboarding as the company grows.


    20:53 - Can video recorded onboarding work or should it always be in-person?


    22:05 - Is it a good motto to hire slow and fire fast?


    24:24- What are the legal requirements when letting someone go?


    26:19 - Being aware of disabilities in hiring and firing.


    32:57 - How early should you consult with an HR expert? Is it ever too early?


    34:53 - How often should you review your HR policies?


    36:36 - How to get in touch with Sherry.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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  • Supporting and engaging neurodiverse talent is a vital part of team building. Parul Singh comes from a background in tech and recruitment and has first-hand experience of the challenges faced by neurodiverse people in the workplace, having been diagnosed in 2021 with autism and ADHD. 

     

    Prior to diagnosis, she had experienced burnout, self-destructive behaviour and had struggled in both education and workplace settings. Now with a better understanding of her own needs and divergence, she is the founder of Parallel Minds. She is dedicated to creating positive change for neurodivergent people in the workplace, and supports businesses with recruitment training, coaching for leaders and line managers, running neurodivergence awareness sessions and more.


    During this series, we’ll be discussing the art of building strong, high-performing teams to give your startup the best foundation possible.



    3:00 - What was your personal journey towards diagnosis and what made you seek that out?


    7:41 - Was there a sense of relief that came with being diagnosed?


    11:08 - What led you to leave the workplace and set up Parallel Minds?


    13:00 - Key definitions around neurodiversity.


    19:08 - Why is it important to talk about and understand neurodiversity in the workplace?


    21:56 - Why is there a lack of disclosure between employees and employers?


    25:22 - What can companies do to create a safe environment where people feel comfortable to have conversations about their neurodivergence?


    28:15 - Startups are very fast-moving and experience a lot of change. Autistic people often struggle with change, so how can you create an environment where everyone can thrive?


    31:47 - You can’t be everything to everyone, so at what point do you say ‘this is our company and it might not be for everyone’?


    35:33 - What could companies be doing better to tackle common challenges?


    46:36 - What coping mechanisms and toolkits do you use to help you?



    RESOURCES:


    Connect with Parul 


    Neurodiversity resource bank 


    Neurodiversity in tech report 2023 


    Research on the link between ADHD and burnout 


    DARE report on adjustments


    CIPD neuro-inclusion at work report 2024


    Equal tech report 2023 


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  • There’s a lot that goes on within a hiring process but what is it actually like from the perspective of founders and the C-suite, when trying to scale a business and build out that initial team?

    Sebastian Leape previously worked as a sustainability consultant at McKinsey and has now turned his attention to encouraging people to embed nature into business decision-making. He is CEO at Natcap, where they offer a simple and scalable platform to bring together the world's best science, data and technology to create actionable insights and empower organisations to measure, report and ultimately act on their nature-related risks and opportunities.

    During this series, we’ll be discussing the art of building strong, high-performing teams to give your startup the best foundation possible.

    I’ll be speaking to industry experts about inclusion, employer branding and establishing culture, plus I’ll be hearing both the VC and founder viewpoints and experiences when it comes to finding and supporting the best talent.

    So, whether you’re a founder starting to scaling your team, a hiring manager looking for top talent, or simply curious about how diverse teams are tackling the planet’s most pressing challenges, this series is for you.



    1:50 - Where was Natcap in the People journey when you joined and where are you today?


    5:22 - How have you stayed true to your scientific and academic roots, and progressed without alienating early employees?


    8:43 - What challenges have you faced over the last couple of years when it comes to building out the team?


    11:18 - How did you plan your benefits package and what did you decide to include, particularly in light of a tighter budget as a startup?


    13:38 - How much did you consult with the team about what to include in the benefits package?


    15:14 - Where did you not do onboarding so well and what have you learnt and changed during the process?


    19:43 - How did you ensure that managers were able to take over onboarding as the company grew?


    23:24 - As your strategy and headcount have changed, how have your company values had to evolve?


    30:01 - Did you have any external support when finalising your branding, values and mission?


    32:16 - How do your values feed into your recruitment process?


    34:34 - How intentional were you when it comes to gender diversity and were there challenges?


    39:03 - How have things changed from a People perspective now that you’re post-Series A?


    41:41 - Have the characteristics and experience of team members changed in light of Series A and has the team changed overall?


    43:28 - What have been your key learnings from the last couple of years and what advice would you give to early-stage founders for team building?


    48:26 - Would you advise starting to hire before closing a round, as you did with your Series A, and did that room to hire slower make it better?


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  • Filling a role is about more than just sending a job ad out into the world. How do you attract the best people to apply? And once you have them, how do you keep them? This is where your employer brand can play a big part.

    Graham Quinn is a specialist in crafting irresistible employer brands and employee experiences. He has conducted employer brand audits, built communications strategies for entire culture and values refreshes, and has created engaging marketing to attract underrepresented groups in tech and improve diversity.

    He is also now a partner with Flexa, the company working to help people find truly flexible workplaces, where he contributes to thought leadership and works with Flexa-listed companies to improve their employer brand and attract top talent.

    During this series, we’ll be discussing the art of building strong, high-performing teams to give your startup the best foundation possible.

    I’ll be speaking to industry experts about inclusion, employer branding and establishing culture, plus I’ll be hearing both the VC and founder viewpoints and experiences when it comes to finding and supporting the best talent.

    So, whether you’re a founder starting to scaling your team, a hiring manager looking for top talent, or simply curious about how diverse teams are tackling the planet’s most pressing challenges, this series is for you.


    Open Org



    1:54 - Basics of employer brand and what it means


    4:56 - Is it ever too early to start thinking about employer brand?


    8:43 - Where do you see companies get things wrong, and how can people starting from scratch avoid the pitfall of internal experience not matching up to the front the company presents externally?


    11:58 - For smaller organisations does it make sense to bring someone in to achieve an unbiased view of your culture and brand?


    17:08 - Thinking about who you’re not for, is as important as knowing who you are for when it comes to employer brand and attracting talent.


    21:17 - How do you specify your culture and who would be a good fit for your team but also be inclusive and encourage diversity?


    23:28 - How can choice of language convey employer brand and culture? Is swearing okay?


    28:23 - What are some easy wins in employer brand that early-stage startup founders can act on to get started?


    32:00 - Where do personal brand and employer brand meet?


    38:58 - Do reviews on sites like Glassdoor really make a difference?


    46:15 - Should you ask about company culture in a 1:1?


    48:24 - As a company grows, who should own employer brand and how often should it be revisited?


    50:56 - Should this be continuously looked at as part of C-suite or broad meetings?


    53:06 - What one thing should early-stage founders do to get started with this?


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  • Creating an inclusive workplace is vital, not just for employee wellbeing but also to increase innovation and creativity, which are key in the climate tech space.


    Ed Jervis is the CEO at Inclusion Crowd and the founder of the Inclusion Think Tank. He has worked with an array of businesses ranging from complex multinational organisations through to non-profit and startups.


    He works with leaders to coach them in creating company cultures that thrive and offer team members psychological safety. He also guides them to form internal staff groups, attract and retain diverse talent, and helps clients to foster meaningful connections with their stakeholders.


    During this series, we’ll be discussing the art of building strong, high-performing teams to give your startup the best foundation possible.


    I’ll be speaking to industry experts about inclusion, employer branding and establishing culture, plus I’ll be hearing both the VC and founder viewpoints and experiences when it comes to finding and supporting the best talent.



    1:21 - Do we need to discuss inclusion more and not place all focus on diversity?


    5:19 - People are talking about DE&I but not always executing. Where is the disconnect?


    11:48 - Is it ever too early to start thinking about DE&I? e.g. when it’s just the founders.


    15:04 - A good place to start is telling your own story and experiences with DE&I and modelling what you want to see.


    18:07 - How do you create a psychologically safe environment?


    21:44 - Don’t forget to look at things through a commercial lens sometimes to create connections


    26:39 - Does AI have a place in increasing diversity in recruitment when it comes to vetting and screening?


    32:52 - How can people communicate better right from the start at the job ad?


    37:13 - How do you maintain DE&I as the team grows and make sure you don’t lose sight of it in the chaos of growth?


    41:55 - Are regular 1:1s or surveys worth it as a way to assess your culture and how people feel working in your company?


    47:40 - What resources would you recommend for people to learn more about DE&I? 


    50:35 - How do identify that there even is a problem? How can you expand your mindset to recognise the problem to start with?

    So, whether you’re a founder starting to scaling your team, a hiring manager looking for top talent, or simply curious about how diverse teams are tackling the planet’s most pressing challenges, this series is for you.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • During this series, we’ll be discussing the art of building strong, high-performing teams to give your startup the best foundation possible. 

     

    I’ll be speaking to industry experts about inclusion, employer branding and establishing culture, plus I’ll be hearing both the VC and founder viewpoints and experiences when it comes to finding and supporting the best talent.


    With fundraising being so crucial to any startup, it’s important to understand how VCs see talent and assess it not only when making their investment but also beyond, when things start to scale.  

     

    We’re starting this series with Heidi Lindvall, a general partner and investor at Pale Blue Dot. Over her career, she has herself built SaaS and B2B companies, and has run two accelerators helping founders to scale. Now the other side of the table, she focuses on pre-seed and seed startup investments. 

     

    Pale Blue Dot is a seed-stage climate tech VC that backs visionary founders, building future-shaping businesses.



    2:06 - Heidi’s experience of building teams as a previous founder.


    4:40 - Were there any advisors or resources you used to learn how to pull a team together?


    10:55 - How to handle realising you’ve made the wrong hire.


    14:46 - Would you advise working with a business coach or advisors when first starting out?


    18:16 - Why did you move into accelerators?


    22:18 - What stage did you take people into the accelerators?


    23:11 - What were the common themes that you saw companies struggle with from a team and hiring perspective?


    25:00 - How can founders assess whether someone is a good fit for a startup?


    29:02 - Competing on salary at early-stage companies.


    31:58 - What would your advice be around offering equity at early stages?


    33:36 - From a VC perspective, how important is the team when assessing an investment?


    37:28 - How important is the advisory board and can that offset gaps in a founding team when you’re assessing an investment?


    41:24 - Where have you seen team building and hiring done well in your portfolio at Pale Blue Dot?


    44:49 - Should you always be recruiting and building a talent pipeline?


    47:16 - How involved do you get in hiring with your portfolio companies?


    48:49 - Do you see hiring challenges differ between locations or are they fairly universal?


    50:08 - What is one final key piece of advice you would give founders when it comes to hiring?


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  • For the final episode of series six, was joined by Pippa Gawley, Founding Partner at Zero Carbon. They are investors in early-stage companies that are on a mission to fix climate change through deep science innovation. They look for hard-tech solutions that have the potential to make half gigaton-level reductions of CO2e at scale; and have vision-aligned, ambitious teams to go with them.


    Across this series we will be discussing the challenges around scaling deep tech solutions within climate. I’ll be speaking to Investors, Founders, Venture Builders and other key ecosystem players all focused on scaling and commercialising groundbreaking, deep tech innovations.


    We will explore how to prepare for the challenges that deep tech companies often face around fundraising, scaling, team building and commercialisation; and we’ll hear from stories of those who have successfully scaled to Series A and beyond.



    2:04 - How did you come to investing from engineering?


    7:48 - What was the state of the ecosystem in climate tech and investment in the UK when you started out?


    10:47 - What differences have you noticed between the US and the UK. Given that you’ve lived in both places?


    13:04 - What is your investment thesis and has it changed over time?


    14:29 - How do you assess a startup’s potential impact when they are still so early-stage?


    18:04 - Is there a timescale that you expect companies to be able to prove their impact?


    19:36 - What common threads do you see across your portfolio companies that made them a good investment proposition and made them successful?


    22:41 - Do you support companies with building out their team to ensure they have the skillset needed to progress?


    24:41 - What key challenges do you see deep tech companies face?


    27:55 - Do you feel the needed infrastructure is there to take these companies beyond seed-stage?


    30:29 - Is there more that corporates could or should be doing to engage at early-stage?


    31:55 - What do you think prohibits corporates from getting involved?


    36:37 - What solutions within deep tech climate are most exciting to you and where do you see big potential?


    39:18 - How to contact Pippa and Zero Carbon Capital.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • For the penultimate episode of series six, I was joined by Katya Constant, the Head of The Climate Brick. The Climate Brick is an initiative set up by EQT Ventures and Contrarian Ventures to accelerate the at-scale deployment of climate tech by introducing the "missing manual" (a playbook for scaling and funding seven different climate tech archetypes based on data from over 3,000 companies) and uniting the ecosystem through building the largest cross-stakeholder community. 


    Across this series we will be discussing the challenges around scaling deep tech solutions within climate. I’ll be speaking to Investors, Founders, Venture Builders and other key ecosystem players all focused on scaling and commercialising groundbreaking, deep tech innovations.


    We will explore how to prepare for the challenges that deep tech companies often face around fundraising, scaling, team building and commercialisation; and we’ll hear from stories of those who have successfully scaled to Series A and beyond.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.


    https://climatebrick.com/ 



    1:48 - Katya’s journey from investment banking through to climate and career coaching 


    9:51 - What themes have you seen across the successful businesses you’ve been involved with, that has separated them from those that haven’t survived?


    15:01 - What was important to you from an investor perspective when you were at Systemiq?


    19:02 - What do you see as being the key financial challenges that deep tech companies face?


    23:19 - What advice would you offer to founders in the early stages, to help them de-risk things and show it to investors.


    25:49 - When do you think a startup should think about having a CFO in place either permanently or fractionally?


    28:37 - What is the Climate Brick?


    33:47 - What were your key learnings from doing research for the Climate Brick?


    35:42 - Do you find that corporates are as keen to collaborate as the rest of the investment community?


    37:19 - Are there certain industries or locations where communication across the capital stack is better and climate could learn from?


    38:28 - What led you to move into coaching founders and where do you add value?


    42:08 - Do you work with individuals or with founding teams?


    43:17 - What common challenges do you see founders face when you’re coaching, are there recurring themes?


    47:08 - What advice would you give early-stage founders around what to start thinking about and practising now, that will help them face those challenges in the future?


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • I’m joined by Dr. Luke Charbonnier-Bevan from Zinc, an inception stage, impact-led investor. They invest at the start of new ventures that are tackling some of the most pressing and complex problems facing the health of people and the planet. 

     

    Across this series we will be discussing the challenges around scaling deep tech solutions within climate. I’ll be speaking to Investors, Founders, Venture Builders and other key ecosystem players all focused on scaling and commercialising groundbreaking, deep tech innovations.


    We will explore how to prepare for the challenges that deep tech companies often face around fundraising, scaling, team building and commercialisation; and we’ll hear from stories of those who have successfully scaled to Series A and beyond.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.



    1:49 - What is Zinc and what are the different arms of it?


    3:30 - How is Zinc different to other VCs?


    6:07 - If you come across founders with a good idea but it needs a bit of work before you write that first cheque, do you put them through the venture builder first?


    9:08 - How does Zinc support with helping deep tech companies to access lab space to develop their products?


    11:32 - What are Zinc looking for in investments?


    14:07 - What support do you offer companies when the founding team perhaps aren’t working so well together?


    16:59 - Do you think it’s better to invest in an A team with a B idea, than a B team with an A idea?


    20:02 - How much deep tech are you starting to see come through the venture builder?


    22:44 - How does the mix of stages of companies affect the community of the venture builder, because everyone is at different points in their journey?


    25:58 - What are the most common risk factors you see when assessing deep tech propositions, and how could founders start to counter those risks?


    28:58 - How good do you think the UK is at supporting commercialisation of spin outs?


    34:03 - Technical risk in deep tech across the technical readiness scale


    35:25 - What investors want to see for deep tech


    37:08 - How do you show that a deep tech company is scalable?


    40:07 - At pre-seed stage, what minimum level of commercial traction would you expect a company to be able to demonstrate?


    44:42 - What locations does Zinc invest in, UK-only or European too?


    45:50 - What are you excited about for the rest of the year and 2025?


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  • Francesco Perticarari is a deep tech super angel, community leader and founder of Silicon Roundabout Ventures. SRV's mission is to back entrepreneurs who are to shape the next-generation of technology and to provide superior returns to investors through venture capital funds. They do this by capturing the explosive growth of early-stage deep tech startups in the UK.


    Across this series we will be discussing the challenges around scaling deep tech solutions within climate. I’ll be speaking to Investors, Founders, Venture Builders and other key ecosystem players all focused on scaling and commercialising groundbreaking, deep tech innovations.


    We will explore how to prepare for the challenges that deep tech companies often face around fundraising, scaling, team building and commercialisation; and we’ll hear from stories of those who have successfully scaled to Series A and beyond.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.



    1:46 - Francesco’s journey from computer science to investment 


    4:02 - Francesco’s work establishing a 15k-strong deep tech community across Europe before setting up the fund


    6:05 - Why is deep tech a good investment?


    10:29 - What was it like raising your first solo VC fund?


    15:07 - What are you looking for in a good investment prospect?


    18:04 - What is your due diligence process like?


    22:31 - Why do you think Europe has such good potential for deep tech and do you think Europe is well-positioned to support from a wider ecosystem perspective?


    28:12 - How Israel has supported tech founders and what we can learn from them.


    30:57 - What would you like people to understand about the risk level within deep tech, and how to mitigate it?


    35:08 - What do your portfolio companies have in common, whether that’s themes, founding teams, the problems they’re solving etc.?


    41:15 - What support does Silicon roundabout offer to founders and why are you a good person to have on the cap table? 


    45:33 - Why have you decided to build your fund in public?


    49:07 - How have you found 2024 for deep tech investment and how do you see the market developing in 2025 and beyond?


    53:40 - What are you excited about for the rest of the year and how can people get in touch with you?


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • I’m joined by Dave Wardell, Chief Commercial Officer at measurable.energy, a company working to eliminate wasted energy in buildings via their combination of hardware and software. Dave is responsible for commercial operations, from marketing awareness, lead generation and business development to onboarding and customer satisfaction.


    Across this series we will be discussing the challenges around scaling deep tech solutions within climate. I’ll be speaking to Investors, Founders, Venture Builders and other key ecosystem players all focused on scaling and commercialising groundbreaking, deep tech innovations.


    We will explore how to prepare for the challenges that deep tech companies often face around fundraising, scaling, team building and commercialisation; and we’ll hear from stories of those who have successfully scaled to Series A and beyond.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.


    https://measurable.energy/



    1:51 - About measurable.energy, who is the solution for and what problem is it solving?


    3:55 - Dave’s career journey to where he is today


    4:59 - Where measurable.energy was with product market fit at the point Dave joined, just post-Series A


    6:48 - How things at ME have evolved commercially over the year since Dave joined


    10:50 - What is the software element that combines with the hardware of ME?


    12:55 - What have the difference been over your career as you’ve moved from pure software and SaaS into a hardware-software blend?


    15:23 - Do customers have a view of the ME software platform and data?


    18:10 - What is the focus at ME post-Series A?


    20:40 - What should pre-Series A businesses be thinking about from a commercial perspective?


    23:31 - At what point should a commercial leader be brought in if there isn’t one within the founding team? And at what point does a sales function need to be established?


    26:13 - Where are you currently at ME and what are the future plans?


    29:22 - What changes could there be from a wider economic or regulation landscape perspective that could remove blockers for companies trying to scale?


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • In this episode, I speak with Fahmida Khan, Innovation Specialist from Prosemino, the UK's first climate tech venture builder with lab space, offering pre-seed capital, specialising in electrochemistry, hydrogen, energy storage and advanced materials.


    Across this series we will be discussing the challenges around scaling deep tech solutions within climate. I’ll be speaking to Investors, Founders, Venture Builders and other key ecosystem players all focused on scaling and commercialising groundbreaking, deep tech innovations.


    We will explore how to prepare for the challenges that deep tech companies often face around fundraising, scaling, team building and commercialisation; and we’ll hear from stories of those who have successfully scaled to Series A and beyond.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.



    2:08 - Fahmida’s journey from academia to venture building


    18:08 - How is Prosemino different to other venture builders?


    23:05 - Why Prosemino isn’t cohort based


    24:27 - What support is on offer around commercial aspects of business e.g. marketing, finance, commercialisation, business planning etc.?


    27:54 - Why have you chosen to invest in startups so early in their journey, unlike other venture builders who usually invest at the end of a cohort program?


    32:43 - Does Prosemino help with non-diluted funding?


    34:18 - What is the new Prosemino lab space like and what’s on offer?


    37:26 - What makes a business a good fit for Prosemino?


    42:23 - Are there common themes amongst the companies, ideas, founders or values that work with Prosemino?


    45:05 - How long are companies incubated for and what is the alumni relationship?


    48:44 - What improvements need to happen to help startups go further, faster?


    53:10 - Would it help if there were more academics in investment and investors working in academia?


    56:33 - How to join and contact Prosemino?


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  • For this episode, I'll be joined by Dr. Stafford Lloyd, Innovation Lead for Clean Growth Strategy at Innovate UK - they are working on ways to catalyse private investment in climate tech. 

     

    Across this series we will be discussing the challenges around scaling deep tech solutions within climate. I’ll be speaking to Investors, Founders, Venture Builders and other key ecosystem players all focused on scaling and commercialising groundbreaking, deep tech innovations.


    We will explore how to prepare for the challenges that deep tech companies often face around fundraising, scaling, team building and commercialisation; and we’ll hear from stories of those who have successfully scaled to Series A and beyond.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.



    1:45 - Stafford’s career path so far from aeronautics to Innovate UK


    10:17 - What was the landscape like before you started your work at Innovate UK when it comes to driving corporate investment into climate?


    15:29 - What solutions have Innovate UK come up with to drive investment flow and combat risk aversion?


    19:02 - How do advance market commitments work well and how are you applying them to climate innovation?


    23:06 - Innovations in concrete production and using advance market commitments to encourage investors


    28:09 - Do you look for problems or solutions first, when trying to get advance market commitments (AMC)?


    33:28 - How have AMCs been received by VCs when they’re looking to invest?


    35:04 - Could AMCs work when securing other types of funding e.g. debt financing?


    36:57 - What time scale is your current pilot running across and what is success for you?


    39:13 - How does this AMC pilot scale beyond Innovate UK?


    41:37 - What challenges do you commonly see deep tech businesses facing?


    45:47 - Blending public and private investment


    47:43 - What are you excited about for the rest of this year?


    48:11 - Is there anything you think could be changed or improved to drive the pace of innovation?


    51:58 - How to contact Stafford and Innovate UK


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  • For this episode, I spoke with Puja Balachander, Director of Venture at Carbon13, the venture builder for the climate emergency.


    Across this series we will be discussing the challenges around scaling deep tech solutions within climate. I’ll be speaking to Investors, Founders, Venture Builders and other key ecosystem players all focused on scaling and commercialising groundbreaking, deep tech innovations.


    We will explore how to prepare for the challenges that deep tech companies often face around fundraising, scaling, team building and commercialisation; and we’ll hear from stories of those who have successfully scaled to Series A and beyond.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.


    https://carbonthirteen.com/



    2:14 - What is Carbon13?


    4:39 - What challenges do you see deep tech startups facing?


    8:24 - How is gaining commercial traction different for hardware than software, and what can hardware companies do to gain that traction?


    14:55 - If a team doesn’t have existing knowledge within the team about commercialisation, how can they gain it and upskill themselves?


    20:00 - What skills would a startup need as a minimum within the founding team for you to be interested?


    23:55 - How does the support you give differ for deep tech than someone building a software-based business?


    28:58 - What are the differences in IP with deep tech and what support do you give with de-risking and defensibility?


    31:50 - How do you offer lab space within Carbon13?


    33:05 - Are there any companies that you’ve seen come through Carbon13 that have done particularly well and what do you think set them apart?


    37:20 - Showing your learnings to investors.


    39:57 - What things do you think could be improved within the funding landscape for hardware companies to allow them to access the necessary funding?


    41:53 - Are those that aren’t from an academic background at a disadvantage when it comes to grant writing?


    44:38 - What thresholds do you need to meet for debt financing?


    48:20 - What are you excited about for the rest of this year and what are the Carbon13 application dates?


    50:20 - Where can people go to make applications to Carbon13?


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  • In this episode, I’m joined by Ian Lee, Innovations Project Lead at UK Power Networks. He is building corporate partnerships with startups that are innovating in the energy sector and beyond.


    Across this series we will be discussing the challenges around scaling deep tech solutions within climate. I’ll be speaking to Investors, Founders, Venture Builders and other key ecosystem players all focused on scaling and commercialising groundbreaking, deep tech innovations.


    We will explore how to prepare for the challenges that deep tech companies often face around fundraising, scaling, team building and commercialisation; and we’ll hear from stories of those who have successfully scaled to Series A and beyond.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • For the first episode of series 6, I spoke with Shiladitya Ghosh, co-founder and COO at Mission Zero Technologies (DAC), who are working to scale affordable direct air capture, and have gone from lab to commercial plant in under three years!


    Across this series we will be discussing the challenges around scaling deep tech solutions within climate. I’ll be speaking to Investors, Founders, Venture Builders and other key ecosystem players all focused on scaling and commercialising groundbreaking, deep tech innovations.

    We will explore how to prepare for the challenges that deep tech companies often face around fundraising, scaling, team building and commercialisation; and we’ll hear from stories of those who have successfully scaled to Series A and beyond.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.



    1:55 - Intro to Shil and his background


    2:23 - What is Mission Zero about, what are you building and why is it exciting?


    4:48 - Where did your passion for climate come from? Was your intention to always move into that space?


    8:03 - How did you came together with your co-founders and how did you find your inspiration?


    12:36 - How did you find a good lab space?


    15:41 - How did you fund the lab space?


    16:09 - How did you build relationships with investors and partners for such an early-stage technology, what do you think gave people confidence in you?


    21:51 - Tell us about the plug-and-play aspect of what you’re doing


    23:42 - How can you be sure that you’re partnering with companies who will use your technology for the right reasons? What is your due diligence process?


    28:19 - How did you get from self-funded R&D to commercially funded opportunities and partnerships?


    34:04 - How was the process of your Series A raise and what challenges did you face?


    38:50 - What has your Series A unlocked for you? What do the next 12 months look like?


    41:48 - What is the current make-up of your team?


    43:02 - What do you think you did well in building the team and culture, and what were the challenges you faced?


    46:46 - How important is it to you that new hires are mission-aligned and how they will fit with your culture?


    51:02 - What are the main challenges you see on your way to Series B?


    53:49 - Where do you see gaps for helping deep tech in the climate ecosystem, particularly in the UK?


    57:04 - How positive do you feel about us scaling these CDR technologies to where we need them to be?


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  • For this final episode of Funding a Better Future: Angel Investment Insights for Founders and Aspiring Investors, I spoke with Neda Sahebelm, angel investor and founder of Keshty. As an I/O psychologist and working-class woman of colour, she lives to achieve more with less and has helped the likes of FOX, National Geographic and Multiverse scale incredible teams. Now she's sharing that experience with many more via her company, Keshty.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.


    Angel Investing School



    2:05 - Neda’s career so far


    5:17 - How did all your past experience get you to setting up Keshty?


    6:56 - What came first, the desire to invest or the desire to set up Keshty?


    9:46 - How did you learn how to angel invest?


    12:59 - How did you decide on your thesis and has it evolved since you started investing?


    15:08 - What were your initial steps after completing Angel Investing School?


    17:57 - What have been your biggest lessons so far?


    21:14 - In what ways have you been able to get involved in your investments beyond just giving them a cheque?


    23:43 - How has your angel investing made you a better advisor to businesses who come to you via Keshty?


    27:12 - How do you manage investing alongside running your own business?


    30:10 - What are you excited about or planning for the rest of this year?


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  • For this episode of Funding a Better Future: Angel Investment Insights for Founders and Aspiring Investors, I spoke with Andy Ayim, founder of Angel Investing School and most recently, Open Angel. He works to diversify and democratise access to angel investment, and teaches people how to take their first steps towards becoming investors.


    Please note - when discussing his early experiences with investing, Andy's audio drops out just as he mentions his first encounter. This experience was with Arlan Hamilton at Backstage Capital.


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.


    Open Angel


    Angel Investing School



    3:43 - Andy’s journey into investing


    9:35 - Arriving at investing and seeing a thesis in action


    10:23 - Why do people struggle to close funding rounds? 


    11:41 - How Angel Investing School came to be


    14:21 - How did Open Angel come about?


    18:12 - Being a ‘life adventurer’


    22:15 - How to access Open Angel, what you can learn and what the goal is


    23:58 - What are the potential barriers to entry for investing?


    28:44 - Andy’s lessons from the last four years of investing and niching his thesis


    34:23 - Do you need a thesis to get started?


    38:00 - Crowd funding as a route into angel investing and what to be wary of?


    40:53 - Basics to start thinking about if you want to move into angel investing


    44:21 - What are you excited about for the second half of this year? (Developing talent and leaders)


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  • For this episode of Funding a Better Future: Angel Investment Insights for Founders and Aspiring Investors, I spoke with Molly Allington, CEO and Co-founder of Albotherm, about the fundraising process and in particular, the due diligence experience..


    Video versions of this and previous episodes are available here.


    Albotherm.com


    2:09 - How Molly came to set up Albotherm


    3:09 - How did you go from it being a summer project to a fully-fledged business?


    4:26 - How did you decide it was time to raise initial funds after grants?


    6:29 - What did your first round of funding unlock for you in progress?


    7:33 - What is Albotherm developing


    8:45 - Will you venture into offering your coatings in other industries?


    9:34 - How did you know it was time to raise a seed round?


    10:55 - What was your strategy for the seed raise?


    12:10 - How did you value the business for a raise and how did you decide how much to raise? 


    15:34 - What kind of objections did you come up against?


    17:22 - What was the due diligence process like?


    19:06 - What did due diligence teach you about your business?


    20:06 - How did you know what to pull together in advance?


    21:13 - When did you put a board together?


    22:08 - How has angel investment played into things?


    23:45 - How do you stay in touch with investors?


    24:13 - How frequently and how deep do you have to go with financial and impact reporting?


    25:27 - What were your biggest learnings from fundraising?


    27:57 - How did you clarify your messaging and how did it evolve over the process?


    29:48 - What did you need to have in your data room?


    31:23 - What did your seed round enable you to do, and what are you excited about coming up?


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