Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - EP #30 Venture Capital in 2023 w/ Dakin Sloss
Episode Date: February 23, 2023In this episode, Dakin and Peter discuss tips for new entrepreneurs, how to build a successful company and the power of venture capital for the economy. You will learn about: 04:37 | The story o...f Prime Movers Lab 22:25 | The 'do's & don'ts' for new entrepreneurs. 35:47 | Ambitious Vs. Conservative: creating balance for your company. Dakin Sloss is a venture capitalist, founder, entrepreneur, and philanthropist. He is the founder and General Partner of Prime Movers Lab, a VC startup that’s become the world’s leading partner in breakthrough scientific startups. Learn more about Prime Movers Lab. _____________ I only endorse products and services I personally use. To see what they are,  please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: Levels: Real-time feedback on how diet impacts your health. levels.link/peter Consider a journey to optimize your body with LifeForce. _____________ I send weekly emails with the latest insights and trends on today’s and tomorrow’s exponential technologies. Stay ahead of the curve, and sign up now:  Tech Blog _____________ Connect With Peter: Twitter Instagram Youtube Moonshots and Mindsets Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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hi everybody peter d mandis here with moons Mindsets. We're about to enter a
podcast with a dear friend, Dakin Sloss, a venture capitalist, philanthropist, entrepreneur. He runs
Prime Movers Lab. It's a billion dollar fund that unlike other venture capital funds is going after
solving the world's biggest problems. We're going to be diving into, as an entrepreneur, what is a venture capitalist looking for? Tricks and trades, the do's and don'ts, the way that they go through
their process of how you reach them, how you present to them, how you value the deal with them,
and ultimately, how do you get to a point of capitalizing your company? We're going to be looking at some of Prime Movers Labs' most exciting companies in space,
in hypersonic and supersonic aviation, in fusion, in brain-computer interface,
in energy production and storage and carbon capture.
You know, they are looking at some of the most exciting companies on the planet
that they've backed and taken from startup to public.
This is an opportunity for any entrepreneur who wants to understand the inside baseball of, you know, the venture capital funding.
Listen up.
You know, as I like to say, rather than starting a photo sharing app, go and build something that can change the world, that can make a dent in the universe.
All right, now to our podcast with Dakin Sloss, the founder and creator of Prime Movers Lab.
Welcome to Moonshots and Mindsets.
I'm here with a friend, a venture capitalist, an entrepreneur, a philanthropist.
And I'm excited about this conversation, Dakin.
We're going to talk about the lifeblood of entrepreneurs,
capital, coursing through their veins, their moonshots, their ideas, help them go big,
and hopefully not go home. Where are you today? Thank you for having me, Peter. I'm in Miami at
the moment. Really appreciate you having me on and excited to chat with you. Yeah, no, absolutely.
You know, one of my premises for this podcast is to inspire entrepreneurs to go bigger than they have before.
With all due respect to those people who are in the photo sharing app business,
I keep on saying we don't need another photo sharing app.
Go after something that is going to change the world, impact the lives of a billion people.
I like to say the world's biggest problems, the world's biggest business opportunities. And when I think about a venture
fund that has that as a principal precept, I do think that Prime Mover Labs, PML, your fund,
that's foundational for you, isn't it? Yeah. Here at Prime Movers Lab, we only invest in
breakthrough scientific inventions that have the ability to transform billions of lives. That's literally our mission.
You were a bit of an inspiration, as you know, Peter, for starting the fund and encouraging me
to go even more moonshot in the things that I was building. And yeah, I mean, I think it's quite
clear at this point, we're at this threshold as a human civilization, and photo sharing is not
going to move us forward.
We need to address the world's most important problems, climate change and aging population,
the mental health pandemic, changing demographics, making goods and services cheaper, expanding into
space. And these are opportunities, of course, as you said, to produce huge businesses and thus
huge portions. But also, when you build a company, they're all actually really equivalent difficulty.
It's going to be a decade long process
if you're going to build something meaningful.
And you might as well build something
that's going to meaningfully make people's lives better.
It's just so much more rewarding,
so much more fulfilling to know
that you're really making a contribution to the world.
Yeah, in this podcast,
I really want to talk through advice for entrepreneurs
at every stage, at the seed, at Series A, B, and so forth.
And what ultimately makes for a great company to back?
I want to hear your points of view, what you're looking for, what you're not, tips and tricks, but also just to help get entrepreneurs on the right path.
And so let's jump in.
I want to talk about a number of things.
First off, the name Prime Mover Labs, where did that come from?
So I think we're both a bit of fans of Ayn Rand.
Yes, we are.
And it comes from Howard Rourke's speech in The Fountainhead in a courtroom where he is
talking about the prime movers, the inventors of the wheel, the people who brought fire to civilization.
And really why we started Prime Movers Lab was to be the place where prime movers, people who are breakthrough scientific inventors, can come and not just get capital, but get real partnership where they actually have the hands-on tools across PR,
marketing, government relations, sales, fundraising, and not to put it lightly,
but like the shoulder to cry on over that long journey as you go through the ups and downs of the startup game and a partner that you can really turn to at every step along the process
to help you build this company and help you enjoy the process of building that company.
You said that, and it's interesting, right? Because you only, I mean,
historically, people think about venture capitalists as a place to go get money.
They're also a means for filtering and vetting, but it sounds like you're offering a lot of
additional services beyond that to the companies that you're backing. Let's start with some of the
basics here. How much capital do you have under management? How many companies have you backed
thus far? And I want to dive into sort of the through line on your philosophy.
Yeah, it's about $1.2 billion under management. We have a few early stage funds, we have a growth
stage fund, and we've done a ton of SPVs and basically been around for now almost six years.
We've done 40 companies roughly. The most of the capital sits in about 15 companies. You know,
our philosophy is to be very concentrated and we'll start at the C round, do the A, do the B,
even do the C. And we've ended up with companies where we have a hundred plus million dollars into
them, a couple of them that are kind of the core things that we focus our time and attention around. Yeah. And if you were going to say you've invested in
40 companies, how many have you seen over that period of time? Just to give people a sense of
the ratio, when you go into a venture capitalist, you know, all things being equal, what's your
chance of getting capital? 6,000. It's a lot harder than getting into Stanford or Harvard.
Wow. Yeah. And I think those numbers are a little out of date.
It's probably more like 8,000 at this point.
I just don't have the latest ones.
40 out of 8,000.
And so the principal focus of backing sort of world-changing,
billion-person, high technology, high science,
I mean, some of these ideas must be crazy ideas at the end of
the day. I like to say the day before something is really a breakthrough. It's a crazy idea.
And do you back stuff that other funds think is too crazy and don't want to?
Yeah, definitely. I mean, I think in the last couple of years, some of that stuff has gotten
a little more in vogue. So maybe our craziest things don't even seem so crazy anymore as more money has flown into deep
tech. But we have a space-based solar company, for example, which if you asked anybody about that,
you know, 24 months ago, they would have thought you were just totally nuts. I think there's now
actually a couple of different companies that are tentatively pursuing that. But we think we have the
best team and the best technological approach for that. But we think we have the best team
and the best technological approach for that.
And we actually have something out there on our website,
which people should check out,
which is our Breakthrough Science Roadmap,
where we take the six areas broadly that we focus on,
energy, transportation, infrastructure, manufacturing,
human augmentation, and agriculture.
And we go for each of those areas,
what's going to happen over the next decade,
two decades, three decades. And we've broken down a few hundred different technologies that are kind
of coming to market, whether it's like advanced lithium extraction, or brain computer interfaces,
or cleaning up oceans. And that roadmap gives us a context of what's the right level of crazy
to back, you know, there might be something like asteroid mining that I know you're excited about,
that probably isn't a current decade thing, that's probably a 2030s thing. And so come the end of this decade, we may invest in an asteroid mining company. Today, it might be a little too early for venture scale returns.
about whether it was too early.
He said he would buy the liquid oxygen from us if we delivered it,
but he said it's too early and he was right.
He hasn't been wrong about many things,
but we can get there later.
I think Marc Andreessen said this really well.
You know, every idea we see as venture capitalists
is a good idea.
It's really just a question of timing.
And so even the crazy like things that we see
that we pass on for the idea reason,
they're usually good ideas.
Like most of the things
that we're looking at, 99% of these are going to happen at some point in time. And a lot of
our project is essentially figuring out what is overly enthusiastic, wishful thinking,
and what is real technology here now today that's going to make an impact on people's lives.
You know, a mutual friend of ours, and you backed in a number of his companies, Bill Gross. I've had him on my stages. He's been an ex-Prize supporter.
I've worked as CEO of one of the Idealab companies. Bill had done a study that he
presented at DLD and at TED, in which he looked at all the different parameters of
successful companies and failures, looking at, you know,
is this a first-time CEO, how much capital went in, what field they were in, and said,
what was the key factor of the successful companies? Do you remember what the answer was?
Oh, my answer is I didn't give up. Are you going to say timing?
Timing, yeah. It is timing. Yeah mean, it's like Airbnb and Uber materialized.
The idea wasn't new.
It had been conceived of before,
but after 2008 when people wanted to earn additional money,
after that came down SpaceX after the space shuttle accident,
the commercial crew contract allowed them to get into
business if they hadn't won that that would have been a difficult slog and being an entrepreneur
who i i'll use a phrase from ray kurzweil who lives long enough to live forever so to speak
right if you've got income and you're a break-even and you have long enough to intercept new business ideas and opportunities.
So I assume that's the sort of stuff you look at.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
I mean, if you're talking about kind of our criteria for the companies that we're investing in.
Yeah.
I mean, we basically look at companies, I'll give it to people very directly, through four lenses.
It's the team, technology, business, business and deal kind of going in reverse order. You know,
an early stage fund has certain valuation and ownership criteria that it needs to achieve.
A growth fund has slightly different ones. Those valuations have changed dramatically in the last
12 months as the market has changed. If you go to the business, we're looking for things that can
be $10 billion plus businesses. I think that's clearly the case for all the kinds of technologies that we're investing in.
But when you just, as an entrepreneur, if you're communicating with a venture capital firm,
you have to understand power law returns.
As a venture capitalist, even though you're really excited about all your portfolio,
you're assuming that if there's 10 or 15 companies, one or two of them are going to hit.
And the one or two that hit have to be big enough to kind
of help you produce a five extra 10x fund, whatever you've kind of marketed to your LPs and the
timeframe that you have. For us, that's a 10x fund, which means you really need to see investments
that can be 100xs. And if we're investing initially at 10, 15, $20 million valuations or less,
then you got to see $10 billion plus outcomes as possibilities when you account for dilution.
Those are kind of like the check the boxes things. The two things that we spend the majority of our
time evaluating at the early stage is the team and the technology. On the technology,
we really think of a spectrum of risk. So there's science risk, engineering risk,
and commercialization risk. If it's at the point of science risk, it's still in a lab,
in a context where it's pretty difficult to predict,'s at the point of science risk, it's still in a lab in a
context where it's pretty difficult to predict, even as the inventor of that technology, how long
is it going to take to market? How much is it going to cost? Because you're still in the fundamental
invention process. And the level of uncertainty is such that it's actually generally better suited
for an incubator, an accelerator, a government grant is often what's funding that kind of
research. When we like to enter is right at that inflection point between science risk and
engineering risk. Because at that point, the market still doesn't have a lot of people out
there who know how to price this and how to assess these types of companies and support them. But
you've gone through this major inflection point where now you can sit down and make an engineering
plan and understand how long it's going to take to get to market.
So that's kind of our typical entry point.
And then we help companies overcome that engineering risk, build the product, and then, of course, commercialize and scale it.
And I'll talk more about the team piece, too, if you'd like.
Sure.
I definitely do.
I want to get into some of the do's and don'ts.
So you've got a first-time entrepreneur who's listening to this, and they have a great idea.
Maybe they have raised some seed capital from friends and family.
Maybe they funded it themselves.
You want to talk through, first off, the stages of capitalization of a company.
You started that a little bit, but let's, you know, just to
give some entrepreneurs a sense of when should you be going out and actually presenting to a
venture capitalist with the hope that you might get an investment? Yeah. So typically, right,
there's two or three people who will start a company, split up the equity 50-50 or a third,
a third, a third, or something like that. And then you, you know, maybe put in some of your own money as a founder to fund it or don't take a
salary for a period of time, you get to the point where you've got something that you can show off.
So that this is no longer just an idea. It's gotten to the point where there's something to
show off. Maybe now you bring some friends and family in for a couple hundred thousand dollars.
Maybe you actually go get some professional angel investors these days for a couple hundred thousand dollars, even a million bucks.
What you really have got to aim to get to at that point is being able to show a professional venture capitalist that this is not a science project.
This is a business.
This is a business.
With customers and a business model.
There's two ways of showing that.
One is go get customers.
Go get revenue.
Of course, that's the best way to show that.
But even more subtly, and a lot of these types of companies, you know, I mean, we're an investor in supersonic and hypersonic jet companies that just have no chance at the time that we're initially investing of having customers lined up.
That's not going to be the case.
But you can tell from the founder's mindset, and I love that this podcast has the focus on mindset
in this. We have a very simple thing we're kind of screening for is, is the founder in love with
their technology? Or is the founder in love with their customer? And if you're a technical founder,
the number one mistake you can make is come tell us everything about how exciting your technology is as your starting point.
Come tell us about your customer.
Come tell us about the pain point that they're experiencing.
And then explain how your technology solves that problem.
Let me put an exclamation mark on top of this, right?
Because I can't express that enough.
At the end of the day, there are so many companies where the founder falls in love with a widget, a technology, a science,
and then they're out there searching for a solution. And that's a formula for failure.
There's a great video of Jeff Bezos over the course of the first 20 years of Amazon,
basically saying, all we care about is our customers, making our customers happy.
What do they want?
What do they need?
Serve their customers over and over and over again.
That's his massive transformative purpose
is serve the customers.
And whatever makes them,
you know, whatever you can provide for them,
I think his business plan is anything that's cheaper,
faster, better, you know, more variety.
Amazon will do.
Also to slow down a little bit what you said early on,
at the start of a company, don't be going to a venture capitalist with an idea,
right? If you have an idea, you're going to fund that early on by sweat capital,
meaning nights and weekends, putting a few dollars and shekels in. And then at the next stage,
when you're bringing in some potential partners or
looking for capital to develop the idea further, maybe it's developed some software, maybe it's
developed a prototype, you're typically going to go to the people who know you and love you best
and who are backing you, not your idea. They're backing you. I trust you, Dakin, and I'm going
to back you on this because I know you can be successful. They know nothing about the idea, right?
And that's your friends and family round, angel round.
And then they have, when they're coming to you, they have a minimally viable product, some customers lined up.
It's a wide variety given the types of things that we do.
You know, we have two nuclear fusion companies.
You know, we were the first investor in one of those nuclear fusion companies.
And at that point, they had a really ambitious vision
and a team that had kind of, you know,
collectively hundreds of years of like the right expertise
and a plan, like a really well thought through roadmap
of how are they going to do this over the next two decades
to make commercial fusion viable.
Hard to have like a really built out proof of concept given the scales of capital that were
required in that case. But they had a lot of research to show you that it was possible.
That's kind of like the far extreme. I think more typical would be we've got some, you know,
if you take a aviation company, there's like a small model scale of the plane that demonstrates the proof of concept on a technical level.
Now they're going to go through years of building it, certification and bringing it to market.
Or if it's a energy technology company, they've done like a bench scale kind of prototype that shows that the science works.
And now it's a question of can you manufacture it at a large enough scale and cheap enough to actually have the unit economics add up for going to market.
That's your story early.
You do some seed funding and seed stage funding has a valuation in what bracket would you imagine?
You know, it could be any.
We've entered at companies like a $5 million valuation all the way up to a $30 million valuation for seed rounds. I think you're seeing in the market today,
at least that it's more in that kind of like 10 to 20 range again, given a tough macro headlines.
Sure. And then series A and series B follow on later stage investing, how would you bracket those?
Yeah. So, I mean, first off for everyone, like these letters and names are made up and you have
to recognize that and not get too rigidly stuck on anything. But generally, Series A, so SEED, you are backing a team with a proof of concept. Series A,
there's some sort of customer traction, right? By the time those kind of aviation companies I was
talking about at Series A are raising Series A, they have some LOIs from airlines or from the
defense community or some customer that validates there is a significant customer demand and the kind of business model through which that is going to be monetized.
Probably very early revenue or no revenue in some cases.
And these are going to be valuations that are in the 25 to max $100 million valuation range.
And again, those numbers have come down 40% in the
last eight months. So probably more like 25 to 60 at the moment. And then series B, you have you
have customers, you have revenue, you have some sort of validation. And again, with deep tech,
it's going to look a little different than a software as a service company. But there's revenue. And that could be a contract with a customer for pre-orders. That could be
a joint development agreement. And those valuations, once you get into Series B and
Series C, there's such a widespread because it's so dependent upon what the company is doing.
But you're looking at north of a $75 million valuation and And some series Bs have been very high.
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All right, let's get into the do's and don'ts. So first time entrepreneur comes in and presents,
so we'll talk about in-person versus Zoom in a minute.
And he's making a classic mistake.
You mentioned one classic mistake,
which is being in love with your technology
versus the customer.
Other big mistakes that entrepreneurs make
coming in without the experience?
Well, I wouldn't say this one's necessarily recognized
as a classic, but I think it's a pretty important one.
If I'm giving a presentation,
the first thing I do is I ask a lot of questions. And I make sure I understand the person I'm presenting to, what matters to them? What are their decision making criteria? What
are the language and tools and patterns that they like to use when they're speaking? And I'm
speaking to someone for their benefit, right? We often get caught up in hearing our own voice
and lose track of who is our audience.
What is that actually matters to that audience?
And I think a lot of entrepreneurs
would benefit from pausing
and doing a lot more custom.
Like when you're fundraising,
it's customer, a customer is the investor
and you should do customer discovery
and understand what are they like?
What are they not like?
What are the things that are going to land for them in a presentation?
So that's one of the top ones that comes to mind.
I think another would probably be if you have a team, making sure that the team is presenting
together and it's flowing well amidst the team.
Often at an early stage, so much of the investment thesis is the team.
And you can see with a team in a live presentation,
are they in a good sync? Or is one person just running over another person kind of verbally?
What would an entrepreneur who's presenting to you do to impress you? Or what have they
done to impress you? Is there something that stands out in mind like that was impressive?
Yeah. So one is videos and or actual tech demos are really helpful things at this stage where
you can kind of visually see this like long-term vision as it's going to come together.
The second is order books.
I mean, a lot of what we end up getting most excited about is company comes to you with
a billion dollars of LOIs.
And as you dig in on those, they're not like made up LOIs that are like loosey goosey. It's like, if you build this,
it's going to have a customer base. And then the thoughtfulness of the engineering roadmap,
right? These are all fundamentally boiled down to like pretty big, hard, hairy engineering
challenges. And the question is, how well has somebody thought through what's it going to take,
who you're going to have to hire, what are the most challenging parts, how much is it going to cost?
Yeah. Yeah. When you speak about a book of business, you know, one of the companies you
backed, Energy Vault from, again, from Bill Gross. I was so blown away when I heard the book of
business that he had set up. Oh my God. We'll get to that. We'll talk about some of the companies that PML has, has backed that are epic successes. Um, in-person versus zoom,
it used to be all in person. Are all your presentations now over zoom?
Initial conversations tend to be over zoom, but we won't invest without, uh, without an in-person
meeting between a founder, uh, or CEO and multiple of the partners. And that's just
because there's something that doesn't get captured over video that's really important
to kind of assess. We're signing up for a long-term relationship. It's like a marriage
and many ways harder to get out of than a marriage. And there has to be good chemistry
between our team and the team that we're backing because we're not just giving people money and
saying goodbye. We're getting involved and we're not just giving people money and saying goodbye.
We're getting involved and we're really helping.
Slides versus no slides.
Do you see teams or entrepreneurs coming in and just speaking to you and having a conversation
versus depending on a slide deck?
And how long should they be pitching?
Give me a sense of that mix that works well that you recommend.
I'm always more impressed by a conversation than a set of slides, but that's a personal
thing.
There's other people who like slides.
I think it fundamentally, again, it comes back to that customer discovery point of when
I was a founder, I built two companies myself.
I would ask somebody, do you like slides or do you like just having a conversation?
And let your audience tell you how it wants to be sold.
And don't do it like your way, do it their way.
Length of time, I always find it challenging if somebody's talking for more than a few minutes without there being some back and forth.
I think you just don't know what impact you're having and whether it's actually effective communication. So that's, that's also
part of why I don't like the slides is it tends to depersonalize an interaction rather than
allowing mutual engagement to occur. Yeah, no, I find that so important to be able to, you know,
have a, you connect and have a relationship with the individual, understand how they think, and steer the conversation in a way that's important for you.
You know, jockey versus horse, I mean, they're both important, right?
The entrepreneur versus the field that they're in, the customers that they're serving.
I assume you want both.
the customers that they're serving. I assume you want both, but can you talk a bit about sort of the jockey versus horse calculus that you do?
Yeah, it's a both. We have backed, and we've done this from learning. We've backed founders
that we loved that were in areas that just didn't have the momentum required to build something big and the right timing and doesn't
work. And we've backed some founders that I would not back again, even if they were in huge areas,
because they just didn't have the mindset required to adjust and adapt and adapt and
ultimately succeed. So it's a both, you know, we want people who are, oh, please go ahead.
You know, I was just gonna say, yeah yeah, of course it's, it's both,
but end of the day, if you've got a great team,
that team will pivot and find a solution, right?
If you have a lousy team and a great marketplace, you've made a bad investment.
Totally. And what we've, I mean,
what we've often found is because of the level of expertise we have in the areas
that we invest and the way we engage with founders is even in the process of doing diligence with world-class founders, they are
learning and growing and shifting in that process. And hopefully we're contributing something that
helps them narrow in or refine a strategy or refine a tactic. And you see the pivoting,
micro pivoting happening. Ideally, you don't want to have to make huge pivots. You want to make
micro pivots and like that adds up to the huge pivot. And those micro adjustments are happening often
in the diligence process. And that's a good sign to us. We don't want somebody who's like,
here's my plan. I'm not listening to any feedback whatsoever. We want somebody who's like,
here's the big picture strategy and I'm going to do whatever it takes to get there.
And this is my current thinking. What can I learn? Okay, cool. I'm going to do a slightly different.
Let's talk about how deals get to you. I'm assuming that who introduces a deal to you
matters versus, I mean, that's part of the signaling, right? Versus something coming in
as a cold email or into your website. How do you find deals and how do the deals come in and how
important is the introduction to you? Yeah, we've done zero cold email or introduction deals, even though that represents thousands of those deals in the pipeline.
It's just not going to happen ever.
We have such a large volume of high quality introductions coming from folks like yourself and other folks that we trust and rely on.
And if you're not getting an introduction from somebody that already knows us and that we've already done some sort of business with, it's almost impossible.
Meaning that's the first filter, right?
If someone, if an entrepreneur or an idea is strong enough, they should be able to overcome that hurdle.
Yeah.
So deals are, you know, the split between deals that you hear about and go after versus ones that are inbound.
How does that feel?
I mean, this has changed over time.
You know, in 2018, we were kind of hustling and going after everything.
Today, we basically end up established as one of the preeminent deep tech funds out there.
And so pretty much everything is coming to us.
There's not a lot of us going out and needing to chase something now.
And what that boils down to is what we talked about before is the commitment we make to founders is the least useful thing we provide as capital.
And I think we've delivered on that for a lot of great folks like Bill and other serial entrepreneurs.
I know one of the companies that you backed, I was a co-founder of Vaccinity.
We'll talk about that.
PML provided a huge value throughout the entire startup process.
And that was awesome.
I want to talk about my entrepreneur mindset, right?
There's the entrepreneur who's excited.
There's an entrepreneur who has passion and purpose.
And then there's the entrepreneur who's obsessed.
What are you looking for in the mindset of that entrepreneur that you want to back?
Looking for a few things.
Number one is what's driving them.
I'm looking for people who are driven by a desire to grow personally and a desire to
contribute to the world.
These are drivers that will basically fuel a person endlessly.
Um, you might hit like a particular plateau, but ultimately that'll kick back in and you
just keep wanting to give more
and grow more. And that's what's necessary to make big, big things happen. Second thing I'm
looking for is somebody who's really resilient. There is no way you're building a major world
changing company without falling flat on your face a number of times every year on the way to
getting there. And you've got to basically start to learn to hear no,
as not right now, or that person hasn't figured it out yet, or I got to try something else, rather than that actually causing you to stop. We joke, you know, people need to run through walls.
And, and then the third thing is being really adapted. And it's kind of like a weird
contradiction, the most successful entrepreneurs, or oxymoron are both unbelievably resilient. They're not going to take no for an answer and they're extremely flexible
and adaptable. So they're not going to take no for an answer in getting to that big long-term
vision, but all of the tactics, all of the things around hiring, firing, sales, government relations,
all the specifics, they're willing to take new information and learn and adjust and shift.
And we specifically test for that. And like the process that we go through with people is making sure they get some sort
of feedback and they get some no's and they have to push through them and they get some sort of
feedback. And that feedback is useful feedback and they act on it and they adjust. And if they're
not willing to do that, then they might be successful somewhere else, but they're not
the right partner for us. You know, one piece of advice for entrepreneurs, and I got this message, I'll tell the story
briefly. I was at MIT. I was running my first organization ever, Students for the Exploration
and Development of Space, SEDS, which grew into a global college group. And I was trying to raise
money to print a monthly newsletter. This is back before the internet. This is when you actually used a printing press in the US mail office. And I went to Draper Labs, which had a lot of money.
And I met with the head of Draper Labs and pitched him on like $5,000 a year to do printing and
mailing of our newsletters to our chapters. And he, you know, on the way out, you know, he said,
I'm sorry, I'd love to, but we're not in a position to make donations. And I was he, you know, on the way out, you know, he said, I'm sorry, I'd love to,
but we're not in a position to make donations. And I was like, you know, okay. And I was literally
walking out the door, had opened the door partially, and I paused and I said, well,
you can't make a donation, but could you have a, do you have printing facilities and mailing
facilities? Could you print our newsletters and mail our newsletters for us? And he said, absolutely. And we got probably $10,000 a year
versus 5K worth of services for the next five years. And the lesson I learned in that is whenever
you get a no, don't stop there. Walk away with something, even if it's a, what would it take for me to come back and get a yes,
or what's the most brutal advice you can give me? You know, another short story is I'm on stage
interviewing Elon at a Goldman Sachs event. One of the things he said that I'll never forget,
he said, my friends tell me what's great. My best friends tell me what sucks you know so can you get brutal truth from somebody
because that's that's worth a lot yeah i mean a number of stories that come to mind of the same
lesson and genre but i think at the end of the day if you really think about it uh to to succeed
you're going to have to fail a lot of times in order to get there.
And really what entrepreneurship boils down to is can you fail really gracefully? You know,
the people who are great entrepreneurs fail constantly and their failures just become
learning and fuel rather than something that gets stuck with a bunch of emotional baggage,
like a lot of other people have. And if you can kind of get excited about like failure equals,
I'm growing, then you're going to succeed at everything in life, but particularly in entrepreneurship. For me, Dakin, it was with the Ansari XPRIZE. Before it was the Ansari XPRIZE. 150 no's.
They're the same stories for Google and for a multitude of companies.
You've got to keep going.
You have to believe in your deal and your company and your vision enough to keep going.
One of the things that makes you different, Dakin, and I love you and the team there for it,
is your moonshot vision, your billion-person vision,
your desire to go big, and ambitious versus conservative.
So how do you dial that?
I mean, one of the questions, and if I come in to you
with this crazy-ass vision of putting like 100,000 satellites in low earth orbit,
which our friend Greg Weiler did.
And we funded it.
And you funded it.
So I'm trying to give advice to the entrepreneur here who wants to go big, doesn't want to
build a photo sharing app, but they don't have the experience yet or the track record that Greg had, Greg Weiler had.
But so how do they balance audacity and vision and like, you know,
going to go mine asteroids out there with actually starting and building a company?
It's a great question.
So, and my advice might surprise you a little, but
I'd say if you're, if you're a first time entrepreneur, you should not be going after
the same scope of problem as, uh, as a Greg there, Greg started and built other companies
that were simpler companies and learned valuable lessons about hiring and firing and scaling and
fundraising and the basics. And a lot of our philosophy is making sure the founder
and the mission are good fits. You know, if we're going to go put 100,000 satellites in
low earth orbit, like nobody has ever done before, that person better know how to do all the basics
of company building, so that you're not having to stumble over those issues, and can just focus on
how effing hard it is to do the thing that they've set out to do.
And even for myself, if I look back, my first company was a software company called OpenGov that was delivering government budgeting and planning software.
That super useful mission.
I'm really proud of what we've done there.
And nowhere near as hard as my second company that was delivering oil and gas modeling and
optimization technology that involves some really fundamental scientific incorporations into that software. And no one here is hard as doing hardware venture
capital. And so you have to progress in your own career and build your skill set. And there's
nothing wrong with that. Like, I remember in my early 20s thinking like I wish and sure Elon had
some of this like of like when he was building PayPal, I wish I was doing the rockets now.
And you kind of got to get over that of like, you're not going to do the rockets until you get the basics down.
And there are enough interesting hardware and biotech problems today that you could go after
some of those problems that are platform plays and maybe don't have quite the same level of
difficulty or are tackling a little niche within that as your first company if you're younger,
and build off of that success to kind of set yourself up for the longer term thing. That's one approach. Second approach,
which if you really do want to do it now, go partner. Like if you're like a fantastic
inventor of something and you want to go for the moonshot now, go partner with a Greg or a Bill
Gross or somebody who has Peter, somebody who's done it before. And you're going to give away a little bit of economics, but it's well worth it to be
able to bring to market and have somebody there as a day-to-day mentor to help you kind
of get over the basics and focus on commercializing your technology.
Yeah, I mean, it's important to realize a lot of the biggest companies on the planet,
realize a lot of the biggest companies on the planet, which are billion person companies like Microsoft, like Apple, like Facebook, were started by first time entrepreneurs in the early 20s.
So the situation is there. I wouldn't say there are many hardware companies that have done that
because then if you're going to put a ratio of the degree of difficulty to a software versus hardware company what would you say ten to one
yeah at least hardware is hard so if you're looking at starting a hardware
company I like to say if you're gonna build a hardware company come prepared
with a large bankroll you know the only way that Elon really got SpaceX going was he had $100 million out of
his PayPal, you know, 140 he made and put into Tesla and into SpaceX and would never have gotten
it going there. And he ran out a couple of times and had to get Peter and others to jump in.
After the third failure, he scraped together enough money for a fourth attempt on the Falcon 1 and succeeded and then won the government contract from NASA that allowed him to give birth to SpaceX.
This is why partnering with somebody who's already had success can be such a good strategy here, because at the end of the day, there's doing the thing and there's funding the thing.
And even if you actually have much of the skill set to do the thing, if you've never raised the money at the volumes that we're talking about before,
that is its own project. And you really need somebody who has some track record. Once you
start getting into the much bigger dollar figures that are involved. So if it's a very capital
intensive business, it almost certainly is going to require a seasoned entrepreneur.
Yeah. And the other option option is can you start in the
software business build something that is cash flow positive and then start
building your hardware vision on the margin by stealing time until you have
an MVP something to show and have a track record and then raise the capital
there right another way to do it for sure you can have the long-term, but not jump into the fire right away. So a lot of entrepreneurs are probably right now
saying, I want to build something. I want to build a world changing company. I'm excited.
I'm passionate. I want to do something in one of the, you know, the global grand challenge areas.
And they come to you, Dakin, and they say, hey, Dakin, where should I build a company?
You know, where are the biggest opportunities, unmet needs?
How would you answer that?
Well, I mean, a couple of things.
First is I think the best entrepreneurs do have gravity towards a particular area.
And so it is really hard to build fantastic companies. And I would encourage people to make
sure they are connected enough to the problem they're solving. So I would never encourage
someone to solve the problem I think is important. They got to solve the problem they think is
important. That caveat aside, the two kind of obvious things to focus on today is something
around energy transition. There are trillions of
dollars going into a change in the fundamental infrastructure of our world across nuclear,
wind, solar, geothermal, energy storage, vehicles, the utilities, electric aviation,
all of these things. And so there's just like, you can come up with 100 different
things that are happening there. I just finished a blog on energy. And by the way, PML's blogs are amazing.
And I just finished one on sort of the future of where energy is going over the decade ahead. And
it is ripe for entrepreneurs, right? To build on the margin, build in the center of it. It's huge.
Yeah. And on the software side and the
hardware side. Totally like endless possibility. And the second thing, broadly speaking, would be
we're undergoing a extraordinary revolution in biology and biological engineering. And we look
at this kind of in two areas. But the fundamental building block is just, if you think about what we invest in any of it, like space, the cost of transportation
has come down by a factor of 10, is going down by another factor of 10 in the near order,
maybe even more, depending on where Starship ends up.
And that just opens up this whole new economy.
If you look at biology, the cost of sequencing the human genome has come down orders of magnitude.
So these are different.
A million fold.
A million fold.
Yeah.
These are different analogs of Moore's law.
That was what was driving kind of the software revolution.
And you're seeing that software revolution now in hardware and in bio because of the
follow-on effects of that.
And so in bio, some of the things we're most excited about is longevity medicine.
We obviously have talked a lot about that area, and it's something really near and dear to your heart, where we are starting to understand aging
as a disease and what are the causes of aging that we can address directly. So instead of tackling
cancer or a heart issue, we're tackling the cellular mechanisms that have led to degradation
of the body or degradation of a particular organ well in advance and actually prevent them. And
this is obviously really exciting. And then the second thing is our understanding of neuroscience
has progressed so much in the last 20, 30 years. And probably the single greatest challenge we face
as human beings is now that we have so
much abundance in the West, how do we actually enjoy it? How do we remain happy? How do we not
fall into the traps of depression and anxiety that hundreds of millions, probably billions of
people have? And I think there are extraordinarily exciting things happening in psychedelic medicine,
brain computer interfaces, non-basis devices to address this that are only going to continue to accelerate
over the coming decade. Yeah, no, I agree. And I love the fact that you centered your thesis areas
there, also transportation. On the abundance side, I'm using my abundance mug today,
and it says on the back, how would you live life if there was no scarcity? And so that's,
I think, where we're where
we are heading you know technology is a force that takes whatever used to be scarce and makes
it abundant over and over again i just want to pause there and say remind everyone uh basically
if you're if you're listening to this podcast no matter what exactly uh where someone sits in like
the current socioeconomic system there there is no more scarcity.
Like we actually have transcended that as like a Western civilization. If you told somebody
a thousand years ago that the poorest person in the U.S. was going to have a cell phone or a
computer and toilet paper and this thing that like flushes their like refrigeration,
kings would have given up their leadership of countries or whole segments of the globe to have that.
And I think it's just important to pause and remember that regularly that we've already made it.
Like this is all bonus at this point.
And, of course, there are people with more than me and you and there are people with more than me and you, and there are people with less than, uh, less than us, but focusing on who has more or less when everyone already has so much gets the wrong
mindset. Yeah, I agreed. And I think one of the questions is if there isn't scarce, if there isn't
abundance in an area, um, are you the entrepreneur that will create abundance in that area? One of
the companies I love, um, I know the founder, founder, Martin, he's going to be speaking at Abundance
360 this March, is the Diamond Foundry.
And they basically have built the capability to build perfect diamonds.
You know, do you want a five carat perfect diamond, a 10 carat, 40 carat perfect diamond?
You know, eventually it will be dollars per carat.
It's going to redefine it, and they're building now diamond wafers.
And so, you know, aluminum used to be the most scarce metal on the planet
because of the energy required to turn bauxite into aluminum.
And so everything becomes, you know, we're seeing, you know,
something may not be available, but technology
makes it available. And so that's something I'm asking entrepreneurs all the time. What do you
see as scarce that you could make abundant? A brief note from our sponsors. Let's talk about
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Go to mylifehorse.com backslash Peter for your discount. I want to go to inside baseball,
if that's the right term. I'm not a sports person on deal analysis here. And if you don't mind
being open with it, you said you're seeing thousands of deals per year or have seen
thousands of deals and you're investing in you know one in a thousand one in one in four thousand
whatever that number might be so an entrepreneur comes to you um and through a mechanism scores a, an hour long, uh, virtual pitch.
Is that the first step?
Um, usually it's like a quick conversation with a member of the team over zoom to get
to know them as humans.
Frankly, that's where we start our process.
Um, and then we'll go on to more details about the technology and the business.
How long before an AI pitches you and it's no longer getting to know them as a human,
but it's an algorithm you're investing in?
Well, I don't know.
That seems like a little ways off to me, I think.
But we're doing humanoid robotics investments right now.
So let's see.
I saw that.
That's awesome.
So I introduce someone to the PML team. They say, sure, Peter, we'll listen to it. The CEO, the entrepreneur, has a meeting with a member of your team. What happens next?
I mean, roughly speaking, our process is there's an introductory screen where you're kind of getting to know the person.
There's a second screen that's much more business and technology and deal focused.
If it passes those two things, one of the partners who leads the firm, there's four of us, advocates for the deal.
And then we go do a deep dive.
And that's where we really allocate significant resources.
First in the deep dive on founder references, business business um customer references deal deal all that stuff and then the last thing we actually look at ironically enough
is the technology because it takes the most time you know like when we go do a deep dive on and
we'll do it in like layers but when we go do a full deep dive on a technology that might be two
or three people's full-time job for three weeks, and full-time is like three times full-time.
And it could be months, you know, if there's not a sense of urgency.
There's usually a sense of urgency.
So that's kind of how we make sure that we're not investing in a Theranos
or Cleantech in the mid-2000s,
is really understanding that technology, the patents,
the intellectual property, and engineering plan. But we backload that to make sure that everything else checks out before
we spend the time and resources on that. So you come back now to an entrepreneur and say,
we're interested. And there's a concept of leading a deal versus participating in a deal.
That entrepreneur has, without question, gone and spoken to other venture capitalists as well.
Well, that entrepreneur has, without question, gone and spoken to other venture capitalists as well.
Let's talk about when you decide to lead and what happens if, you know, do you find yourself in situations where you're the sole advocate?
You know, five, six, ten other venture funds have said, no, we don't like it, but you do, or, you know, there's a, almost like a herd mentality here. Like, you know, people jump on the deal that everyone else wants to get into or shun the deal
that no one else wants to get into. How does that, uh, that mindset work? Yeah. So we exclusively
lead, we don't follow and we're, we're unique. I mean, uh, probably if you're on my team, the one
question or one thing, you know, not to say is like, this person's interested or this person's not interested in terms of other firms.
That has no sway for our decision-making process. Most firms, it does. Most firms are like,
who has invested before? Who will invest later? We're asking a very different question of,
what is the right answer here? And it's so easy in venture capital to get stuck in a herd mindset.
So I've kind of like forbidden that. And when someone, they'll get a look for me of like, why are we focusing on
that? That's not like the thesis is we know how to assess these things. We don't need to rely on
somebody else's perspective. Now, you do have to understand, are there other sources of capital
available so that you're not going to be the only funder indefinitely? And what are the milestones
that a company is going to hit where somebody else can realize, you know, maybe at a growth stage and
come in. So it's not like it's totally binary. But we just don't function that way. And it is unique.
I think a lot of other firms do get caught up in the, I know this guy and this guy is in or is out.
And there's validity in that, right? Like there's a legitimate
approach there. It's just not the approach that we're taking. We kind of view ourselves as best
in class at assessing these types of technical risks. Love that. Now let's talk about how a deal
gets priced. You know, I'm not sure if entrepreneurs understand the dynamic here. You know, you've made
up a number in your head that you think the company is worth based upon how much time you put in, how big the market is.
But at the end of the day, how many of the deals are you pricing as the lead venture capitalist versus the entrepreneur saying, I'm looking for this much money at this valuation?
It's always us pricing it.
Yeah, I mean, obviously founders have what they're looking for.
And we're very
upfront with people as well. We're not going to be the cheapest source of capital. 80% of our time
last year went into supporting the portfolio and 20% into making new investments. That's atypical.
That's not how most firms are working. We are really working closely with our companies. And so
often the thing we challenge people on if there is a disconnect on valuation is what do you think you would need to give to get us as part-time members
of your team incentivized to come work on this company and add that on top of whatever dilution
you're kind of expecting to get from a financing. And that's how a lot of our founders think about
it. If they wanted to sell 15% of the company, but we need 20%, is the 5% extra that
they're giving worth the incremental odds of success of making this a hundred extra, a thousand
X bigger company in partnership with us? And that's kind of like our focus.
Got it. And then at the end of the day, you do want to bring other investors in with you, right?
You're not looking to be the sole investor. So, um, typical check size for, uh, that you'll put into a company if it's raising,
you know, if it's raising a $10 million, uh, you know, late seed, early a round.
Yeah. I mean, uh, frankly, Peter, we will often at seed or late seed like that. We will do a full
thing. Um, if there's a $10 million, we can do $10 million, but we'll, we'll do anywhere from five to 10.
And it depends who are the other folks that are around the table that are
interested.
If there are other folks that are around the table and interested,
we make space and we want to have others who can help,
but we're comfortable at least in the early stages,
doing it all ourselves.
And then as we get into later stages,
bringing in other folks that can help with those later stages. If you were to say out of 10, out of the average 10 deals that you've invested in,
how many succeed, wildly successful? You alluded to this earlier in terms of the power laws of a
return to a fund, but what do you typically are seeing? What is a best in class venture
capitalist expect out of 10 deals? Well, I'll give you straight math from one of our funds. So our first fund was raised in 2018,
15 C deals. We followed on to five of those companies as series A's where 75 or 80% of
the capital ended up in those five companies. Of the other 10 companies, five are zeros at this
point, five and a half, six years in. Five are still operating and we'll see what happens with them.
Don't know. I guess that three of them have raised up rounds, I guess. So they'll be
either decent or good exits. Two others probably go to zero. So half basically of the portfolio,
if you're tracking that, ends up at zero. And then of the five that we put most of the money into,
tracking that ends up at zero. And then of the five that we put most of the money into,
three of those are breaking out as huge successes. And that's like a really good ratio. I would not bet on that happening every time. Usually you get one or two, but three are breaking out as
huge successes. So you get something like one to three, really good out of those 15.
Another seven, five to seven that are like, okay, and then everything else is yours.
So, I mean, and that's one of the reasons, again, if you're an entrepreneur going to
present to venture capitalists that the venture capitalist needs to own enough of the company
early on so that if you're the breakout success, that's going to make up for the other 80% who are
not. Hey everybody, this is Peter. A quick break from the episode.
I'm a firm believer that science and technology
and how entrepreneurs can change the world
is the only real news out there worth consuming.
I don't watch the crisis news network I call CNN or Fox
and hear every devastating piece of news on the planet.
I spend my time training my neural net, the way I
see the world, by looking at the incredible breakthroughs in science and technology,
how entrepreneurs are solving the world's grand challenges, what the breakthroughs are in
longevity, how exponential technologies are transforming our world. So twice a week,
I put out a blog. One blog is looking at the future of longevity,
age reversal, biotech, increasing your health span. The other blog looks at exponential technologies,
AI, 3D printing, synthetic biology, AR, VR, blockchain. These technologies are transforming
what you as an entrepreneur can do. If this is the kind of news you want to learn about
and shape your neural nets with, go to demandist.com backslash blog and learn more. Now back to the episode.
Some fun questions here. Craziest idea you've ever been pitched
or craziest ideas you've ever been pitched. If you have a few categories.
I mean, we had somebody, us this thing for, like, terraforming the moon using nuclear to kind of, like, blow up, like, spots on the moon and, like, create, like, infrastructure beds from that.
It sounded pretty wild.
we've had uh folks that are looking at uh i mean what i don't even know how like in some ways i don't know how to answer the question because everything we're doing is nuts yeah like i was
gonna say like we're opening people's schools and putting implants in but yep that's uh that's part
of the the brain computer interface stuff um so it it. So we are totally comfortable with things
that other people are not comfortable with,
and we're really understanding,
not like shock face value of an idea,
but there's lots of things that sound shocking at first.
And I think if we were talking five years ago
and you said somebody was going to be able to write
at like with an AI, the level that ChatGP gpt is writing at i think we would have both agreed
at some point in the next 20 years i don't know that we would have thought five years from now
that it would have been the case yeah or if you'd asked the question you know 18 months ago uh it's
it's insane that any companies come in that are fundamentally disrespecting the laws of physics
i'm curious yeah yeah those ones we have to pass on.
I mean,
I have a soft spot for those because I personally suspect that we,
I mean,
I know that we don't,
the laws of physics today or our current laws of physics.
And at some point we will have a new understanding of the laws of physics.
So I,
as a physicist always get curious,
maybe I'm talking to like the next Einstein that's,
that's onto something.
There does tend to be a strong correspondence though, between the companies that are presenting things that require new laws of physics and some very weird behavior.
So far, I don't think I've found the guy that is actually presenting new laws of physics.
my life and I'm curious if you've, if you've had this where you're in the midst of the meeting and you're like, I value my time more than, uh, being overly polite and like stop and say,
I just need to end the meeting here right now and go. Have you, have you broken off meetings
in the midst? Yeah. I mean, I think one of the benefits of, uh, being a couple of years into
this is there are people who screen those things out. The, the, that doesn't have to happen anymore. The venture capital businesses has changed over the
last two to three years and a lot in the last six months. How would you describe that?
In the last two to three years, probably the main changes, there's a lot more funds.
Um, you know, it used to be, is there a glut of funds? There's probably too many right now. And you've got people.
Look, in a low interest rate environment, venture capital is a very attractive thing for any investor to invest in.
And you had a lot of people enter who probably are not going to last as durable brands kind of in this through multiple cycles.
Because in the last six months, markets have corrected heavily last
12 months, you have series B and series C valuations down 70 to 80%. You have series A
down 40% C 20%, which means that a lot of people who've invested over the last few years are
sitting on portfolios that look good on paper, but are not actually good, and are going to have
trouble going to raise more money. So you're going to see a number of the new funds shut down. But then there are people who started in this period of time, who have the
right kind of companies in the portfolio and will weather the storm and come out the other side.
And it's positive. You know, I somebody wrote a blog post the other day about juice cleanses,
you know, and how it's an opportunity to cut the fat. And that's what's happening in the industry
right now. And it can be painful in the moment, a few days in, you know, when you're like just starting to get really hungry from the juice cleanse.
But when you look back on it afterwards, you've ended up in a much stronger position as a result.
And, you know, one of the advice for the companies I've invested in and the companies I'm on the board of, the companies I've co-founded is where the last six months was, you know, top up the tanks. Your goal is to be able to survive the next two or three years and really build the company until we're out of this, out of this doldrums, if you would.
For sure. At the end of the day, not running out of cash is your number one job as the founder. And if you can get profitable, fantastic. If you can't
raise enough money to get to the point that you can get profitable.
I'd love to share some of your fun companies that you've led and backed because they're
extraordinary companies that sing to my heart, so to speak, right, as moonshot companies.
I'm not sure we want to start, but let's cover a number of them and give a sort
of a top level description. And if there's a story as a piece of advice for entrepreneurs,
as you're telling that, that would be great. Where do you want to go?
Maybe let's start with a couple of the Bill companies, since we've mentioned them before.
Bill Gross, the CEO of Idealab in Pasadena, one of the most consummate entrepreneurs. And I'll just, you know, just for a moment,
Bill comes up with his own ideas and he's one of the most prolific thinkers and entrepreneurs
on the planet. We'll typically back them with a quarter million dollars and put a team together
and incubate them inside of Idea Lab on Union Street and then spin them out uh a few classics you've backed uh talk about them
yeah so we've done now five energy technology companies together uh heliogen energy volt
carbon capture water from air and flowing energy and kind of going through those um heliogen is
basically industrial solar where he can kind of take and concentrate solar energy
and get up to temperatures north of 1,000 degrees Celsius
so that he can use this to break down thermochemical bonds
and steel production, cement production, glass production,
and ultimately produce green hydrogen
cheaper than any other means out there is the thesis.
And I think a good story on this is
Bill has started this company three times.
This is the third iteration of it. And at the end of the day, the best entrepreneurs are so focused on I'm going to make the world this particular way that even if they fail twice, they build the company again.
Prior times, the unit economics were not there.
The market was not there.
The technology was not there.
At this point, we believe that it is there.
And we have validation of that with significant customer traction.
So that's an exciting one.
I love going to the roof of Idealab.
And there he's got the mirror units.
And it's, you know, it's material sciences and AI tracking software that matured to be able to do this.
And then the market's maturing, right?
At the same time that you might be engineering and
designing it the world's changing and people's and tax credits are changing and people's you know
needs are changing absolutely um second one is energy volt yeah so this is grid scale energy
storage you know if solar and so at this point solar and wind are cheaper than fossil fuels
the problem is they're intermittent and so you need some way to store the energy
that is generally being produced at a time of day that isn't the time of day that it is needed most.
And if you look to like lithium ion batteries, the cost is prohibitive.
So what they figured out how to do is basically make a more efficient form of gravity storage,
like hydro, where they basically take a crane and move around blocks, again, using computer vision to very efficiently store and then
put the energy back into the grid when it's needed. And Energy Vault and Heliogen have both
gone public, both have major, major, you know, billion dollar plus many billions, tens of billions of dollars of order book behind the
idea and have gotten to the point where they're not just ideas, they're demonstrated technologies,
and now they're just scaling them out to that customer base.
Yeah, love it. What's next on your list?
Carbon capture. Carbon capture is-
Another bill company.
Exactly, yeah. It's a direct air capture company, So they're pulling CO2 out of the air.
And probably two interesting stories from this.
One is between the time that we invested first and a later investment, they basically completely
pivoted the technology.
And when they brought in a CEO, he was just telling the story at our annual investor conference
last week.
When they brought in a new
CEO, he basically said, guys, we're about to go scale this thing. You got 60 days to check. Is
there anything we want to change? And the team basically came back, built a totally new version
of the system that was significantly more efficient before they went to go scale. And I think
it was a great... We often think that making changes is going to take longer or be harder than it may actually be
and having a culture where there's space to experiment and as a leader you're actively
encouraging experimentation even as the company grows and taking risks like that worst case
scenario you keep scaling the current technology you have not a big deal but you give people 60
days man that company is going to be so much bigger as a result.
And the second thing is, for a lot of these areas, you've got to pay attention to regulatory.
Regulatory is one of the number one drivers, obviously, with carbon capture.
So it's a bit of an unfair example.
But when I invest in this company, to be frank, I was pretty skeptical.
I liked Bill and I liked the area.
But there wasn't the Inflation Reduction Act yet.
And you were kind of hoping that the technology was going to get cheap enough to match up with the current subsidies. Last year with the Inflation Reduction Act, it's basically five
times the amount of incentive for removing CO2 from the air that took this from like a good heart story to probably
one of the most profitable businesses in the portfolio um overnight because of that change
and by the way this goes this goes back to the the the concept of timing like living long enough
to live forever right and it's like when do you start your company and can you continue it?
Do you have enough capital or revenue to keep going until the world shifts in this way to make it much more profitable?
For sure.
So that's a good sampling of some of the bill companies.
How about the Greg Weiler companies?
You've got a couple of Greg Weiler investments here.
Yeah, we've got two. One is called Toronto Wireless. So they basically have built a way to deliver
fixed wireless to people's homes that's significantly cheaper than laying fiber and
uses unlicensed spectrum. So you don't have to go buy a bunch of spectrum. And it's kind of like magical almost where basically they send signal through noisy spectrum and they can reconstitute
the signal out of that noisy spectrum. Um, which, which basically has allowed them to go from
nothing to a hundred million dollars in revenue and, you know, less than a 24 month period and
scaling super fast. Yeah. It's, it's the power of computation and, uh, and
algorithms. Um, and, uh, and his newest company, uh, we're, I'm an advisor for some of the companies
here, but e-space in particular, which, you know, having spent 30 years in the space business,
when I first heard Greg's pitch here, it was like, dude, you're insane.
when I first heard Greg's pitch here, it was like, dude, you're insane.
Yeah, no, I mean, Greg, Greg is insane, but right. And I, Greg likes to keep things relatively quiet on, on companies. So I don't know how much to say other than he's figured out a next generation of
satellite design that significantly reduces the cost and has a lot
of customer interest at this point. And hopefully he'll be sharing a lot more publicly soon.
One of the coolest things is basically, it might be a way to address the space debris problems that
we have out there. He's been public about this, where basically the satellites are designed to,
if they get some
sort of debris in them, entrap it and then kind of gracefully return through the atmosphere,
which is, you know, not the core actual use case, but a pretty exciting way to make space sustainable.
I think the other public item he said is it's 100,000 satellite constellation,
public item he said is it's a hundred thousand dot a hundred thousand satellite constellation which is impressive right i mean historically back in the first satellite constellations like
iridium at 66 satellites um by the way it was supposed to be 77 satellites which is the atomic
number for iridium and then they change it to 66 which is the atomic number for dysperosium but it
didn't sound as good as iridium so i don don't think they changed the name, but you know, it used to be like, you know,
10 to a hundred satellite and then come Starlink with, uh, with, you know,
tens of thousands. And, uh, here comes Greg with a hundred thousand.
And ultimately cheaper than Starlink by a significant amount.
Yeah. Um, though Starlink is up and operational and looking forward to Greg getting his up and
going,
uh, you want to head towards the brain? Yeah. So we've done a lot of stuff in neuroscience,
but I'll flag two things there. One is a company called Paradromics that's building brain computer
interfaces. They have their kind of, yeah, it's fantastic. They, I think they have the best
technology in this space for addressing, uh, the populations that really need this medically. If you look at
folks who've had a stroke and can't communicate, this can really become a way to restore full
communication abilities. And they've demonstrated this in animals and should be moving into humans
in the very near future. And then, you know, probably the area I'm most passionate about,
again, I think about the world very simply is there are a lot of people who actually already have enough stuff today. And of course, spreading further abundance to them is great. But the number one problem they face is enjoying what they already have.
where I do a lot of my philanthropic work that don't have basic needs met. And that's a real problem and a real opportunity to serve and to contribute. But in the West, the number one thing
we're facing is a mental health pandemic. You know, there are hundreds of millions of people
diagnosed with depression and anxiety. It's probably actually billions when you look at all
of the kind of moderate effects of this. And there is one tool that we've known for thousands of years,
that in a single couple of hour session can basically radically shift that and that's
psychedelic medicine. And in the 50s and 60s, it became LSD is actually people don't realize this
LSD is the most studied compound in human beings on the planet. And what you're seeing now is a
new psychedelic revolution, where basically people are producing novel psychedelic compounds that can help with anxiety, depression, PTSD, and maybe have less psychedelic effects, be shorter acting, and actually fit in a single psychotherapy session with a therapist so that this could scale to hundreds of millions of people. And the data that's coming out of the clinic right now on MDMA, psilocybin, and some of these next generation psychedelics is so promising that you have
therapists who've been prescribing SSRIs for a long time, clamoring to how do they get access?
How do they get their patients into clinical trials? And we invest in a company called
Gilgamesh that we think is the best at these next generation psychedelic compounds. And we
also invest in a company called Beckley SciTech
that has some other ones that are also complimentary.
Anything else you want to flag for the community here?
Your favorite children?
One other one is Axiom Space,
founded by another kind of serial entrepreneur
who's built quite a few exciting things, Cam Ghaffari.
And he's got Intuitive Machines,
which is landing stuff on the moon.
Quantum Space, which we backed, which is building kind of the infrastructure of cislunar space between here and the moon.
And Axiom Space, which we backed, which has got basically a replacement for the space station.
And they've won that contract and are in the process of kind of delivering on that you know one of the things i find so fun and exciting uh now is the idea that space companies
and fusion companies are venture-backed companies that's insane right these things that are always
like you know they're the long haul government research projects that move at, you know, snail's pace. I mean, there's
something like 70 fusion-backed companies and there are, you know, dozens of VC launch companies.
I mean, it's amazing. It's amazing. And that means that the entrepreneurs and the technology
need to have created a convincing enough case that, you know, there
is a relatively decent chance of a near-term return, which means the speed at which the
stuff is moving.
You're in a fusion company too.
Two, yeah.
Focused Energy, which is laser-based fusion.
And recently, like probably one of the most exciting things that happened last year in
human history is NIF, the National Ignition
Facility in Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, achieved net gain. Nobody had ever actually
demonstrated net gain before in fusion. And it basically took what was a science problem and
made it a very expensive engineering problem. And we had been fortunate enough to have some
of the foresight for that and backing kind of the best laser-based team and approach out there. And then we also did back Commonwealth Fusion, which has gotten a lot
of press and is a magnet-based fusion approach as well. Okay. Last chance, any other?
I think we've covered a good number there. I guess the last would be aviation.
Okay. You got to talk about, you got to talk about boom.
Yeah. So I'll start with Venus and then boom so venus is hypersonic jets and this really today starts as a defense
application but the promise is you know la to tokyo in an hour where you basically launch
something like a space plane up kind of above the atmosphere and then it rides waves basically
along the edge of the atmosphere it skips along the top of the atmosphere yeah yeah yeah and uh so we're we're kind of the the initial investors in that and then
a little more near term is boom supersonic which actually i was basically one of the first angel
investors in back in 2012 2013 and then by the time i had started prime movers it had matured
enough to where we did like a growth stage investment in this. And Blake is just a phenomenal example of everything you're looking
for in a world-class entrepreneur. He has, no matter what has come up, figured out how to tackle
the issue. It can be capital issues, team issues, technology issues, partnership issues, some of
which were public last year. and he just always finds a way
through um and they're they're delivering a supersonic jet and they're delivering one that
is economical and that there are pre-orders to the tunes of billions actually tens of billions
of dollars for at this point and really at this point you know that the plane is going to be built
as long as they have the capital for it and the capital is coming together. Yeah. I mean, if there's, I was going to say, if there's a category of company that I go and say are too hard, just insane, right?
Hypersonic and supersonic aircraft and doing it within a small private company and not, I mean, the reason it can be done is because it's in a small private
company versus a Boeing or McDonnell Douglas or Lockheed and so forth, but still insanely
difficult. And, um, you know, I think the size of your cojones, I think is the right French term
for taking on projects like that is amazing. Well, I, I always like to joke, uh, naivete is
a good compliment for the kinds of things that we do. And we have some amount of courage and some amount of ignorance that comes with maybe not having watched some of the failures so spectacularly from the past.
But either way, yeah, we've taken on some big projects. And I think we're really fortunate that at least so far a number of them are panning out.
But we've got a lot more work to do to make them reality still, too.
Extraordinary.
So watch this channel for world-changing billion-person opportunities.
holds out as it has and I hope it does where you're seeing you know two out of ten three out of ten then some of these companies that portend for an exciting
future are going to materialize as well all right the question I ask every guest
at the end of the podcast which is you know if we were going to do a PML X
prize or a Dakin sloths X Prize, you know, $100 million challenge out there that want to inspire entrepreneurs, philanthropists to go and focus on solving a problem that's stuck or needs to be accelerated.
What would you want to do it on?
Raising consciousness.
that many of us have touched probably either through being with children or meditation or yoga or an incredible accomplishment or psychedelic medicine,
an experience that kind of transcended our everyday consciousness,
where we really embodied and were aware that we're not just the little simple creature that we appear to be,
and that there is this vast interconnectedness between all of us. Imagine a way of making it possible for a day-to-day basis for most people
to be living in that state of consciousness. That's the world that I want to live in.
And it's not pumping DMT into the bedroom while you sleep.
Well, somebody might submit that to the XPRIZE, but I think there'd be some side effects of that too.
So it's basically that through your day, you are, you know, we have amazing books like The Power of Now and The New Earth that portends to the idea and the power of being present.
new earth that that portends to the idea and the power of being present by the way one of the technologies i use for being present i don't have it on now but i have a watch that on the face it's
not a you know apple watch it just says now just print it on the face so that if i'm i wear it on
weekends or on vacations and when i go to see what time it is it says now okay you know be present
because we're always driven by our schedule and what we have to do next instead of being present.
So that's the tech now.
Take me beyond that one second.
So you want through the day at various points for some amount to be connected with the higher level of sort of the infinite wisdom out there?
Yeah, I mean, I'm not proposing, I have thoughts about particular solutions, but I'm more kind of
proposing, I take the question as like, what is the most important problem we face as human beings,
and that is worth directing everyone's attention and awareness to, and living as our deepest selves,
and bringing that level of kind of caring, compassion,
and awareness to our moment to moment being. At the end of the day, if we were all doing that,
it matters a whole lot less what's happening with any particular technology.
That's kind of what we're all after in a certain sense.
In my book that I wrote, Futures Faster Than You Think, I closed out the book talking about the future of
brain-computer interface, BCI, the side of work that Paradromics is doing, and said, you know,
in the future in which I'm connected to the cloud, and you're connected to the cloud, and a billion
people are connected to the cloud, we're becoming conscious, connected to each other at a, you know,
a new level, sort of a meta level. that would be an interesting solution to it as well.
For sure.
Yeah. Buddy, where can people go and learn about the work that you're doing and your team is doing
at Prime Mover Labs?
Yeah. If you just go to our website, it's www.primemoverslab.com. So Prime Movers with an
S and then lab.com.
And the roadmaps you mentioned there, take a second and describe those. Because I think
for any entrepreneur who's looking for how do I get inspired? Where should I be going? What
does the future look like? These roadmaps are amazing.
Yeah. So we basically realized we've been looking at all of these opportunities,
and they broke down into 100 plus sectors that we were kind of analyzing.
And we thought it would be helpful to us to understand what's our view on green hydrogen.
Is that a 2020s, a 2030s, a 2040s thing on psychedelic medicine, on any of these particular
areas? And so we went and kind of took all the research we had done and published and organized
that into this roadmap that takes each of the key technologies we think are coming over the next few decades and maps out how we expect them to evolve and what
are like the current investable theses versus future ones and we are not omniscient so i'm
sure there's lots of stuff that we're wrong about but we'd love for people to check it out and give
feedback and ask questions and engage with it and we recently held a conference uh in the fall
with 40 academics kind of giving their
perspectives and takes on entrepreneurs and other folks in the industry, trying to kind of refine
and hone this to make sure we're presenting as viable of a vision of the future as possible.
Beautiful. Ladies and gentlemen, a dear friend, a brilliant venture capitalist and entrepreneur,
philanthropist, Dakin Sloss. Dakin, thank you for joining me today, buddy.
Yeah, thank you, Peter. It was good to connect.