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The Tech Trek

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The Tech Trek
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606 episodes

  • The Tech Trek

    Trust but Verify, How Great Tech Leaders Delegate

    2026/1/21 | 26 mins.
    Mek Stittri, CTO at Stuut, breaks down a leadership skill that sounds simple but gets messy fast, trust, then verify. You will learn how to delegate without losing control, how to stay close to the work without becoming a micromanager, and how AI is changing what it means to review and own technical outcomes.

    Key takeaways
    • Trust and verify starts with alignment, define success clearly, then keep a real line of sight to outcomes
    • Verification is not micromanagement, it is accountability, your team’s results are your responsibility as a leader
    • Use lightweight mechanisms like weekly reports, and stay ready to answer questions three levels deep when speed matters
    • AI is pushing engineers toward system design and management skills, you will manage agents and outputs, not just code
    • Fast feedback prevents slow damage, address issues early, praise in public, give direct feedback in private

    Timestamped highlights
    00:41 Stuut in one minute, agented AI for finance ops, starting with collections and faster cash outcomes
    01:54 Trust without verification becomes disconnect, why leaders still need to get close to the details
    03:42 The three levels deep idea, how to keep situational awareness without hovering
    06:33 The next five years, engineers managing teams of agents, system design as the differentiator
    11:40 Feedback as a gift, why speed and privacy matter when coaching
    16:54 The timing art, when to wait, when to jump in, using time and impact as your signal
    19:43 Two leaders who shaped Mek’s leadership style, letting people struggle, learn, and then win
    23:29 Curiosity as the engine behind trust and verification

    A line worth repeating
    “Feedback is a blessing.”

    Practical coaching moves you can borrow
    • Set the bar up front, define the end goal and what good looks like
    • Build a steady cadence, short weekly updates beat occasional deep dives
    • Calibrate your involvement, give space early, step in when time passes or impact expands
    • Make feedback faster, smaller course corrections beat late big confrontations
    • Use AI as a reviewer, get quick context on unfamiliar code and decisions so you can ask better questions

    Call to action
    If you found this useful, follow the show and share it with a leader who is leveling up from IC to manager. For more leadership and hiring insights in tech, subscribe and connect with Amir on LinkedIn.
  • The Tech Trek

    Insurance is really just a big data problem

    2026/1/20 | 23 mins.
    Michael Topol, Co-founder and Co-CEO at MGT Insurance, explains why insurance is quietly becoming one of the most interesting data and AI problems in tech.
    We get practical about turning messy legacy data into usable signals, how agentic tools change decision making, and why culture and team design matter as much as the models.

    MGT Insurance is building a fully verticalized AI and agentic native insurance company for small businesses, pairing experienced insurance operators with top tier technologists. Michael breaks down what changed in the last few years that makes real disruption possible now, and what modern product delivery looks like when prototyping is cheap and iteration is fast.

    Key takeaways

    • Insurance is a data business at its core, but most incumbents cannot use their data fast enough because it lives across silos, mainframes, and old systems.
    • Modern AI lets teams combine internal data with public signals to speed up underwriting and improve consistency, without losing human judgement.
    • Vibe coding and rapid prototyping collapse the gap between idea and implementation, bringing product, engineering, and the business closer together.
    • Senior talent gets more leverage in an AI driven workflow, and small teams can ship faster by focusing on problem solving, not just building.
    • Pod based teams, fixed outcome planning, and strong culture help regulated companies move quickly while staying inside the rules.

    Timestamped highlights

    00:44 What MGT Insurance is, and what “AI and agentic native” means in practice
    02:09 Why small business insurance matters more than most people realize
    06:06 The real blocker for incumbents, data exists but it is not usable
    08:55 Vibe coding in a regulated industry, where it helps first
    12:54 Requirements are shifting, prototypes bring teams closer to the real problem
    17:26 The pod structure, plus the Basecamp inspired approach to scoping and shipping
    20:52 Better, faster, cheaper, why AI finally makes all three possible
    22:11 Where to connect, and who they are hiring

    A line you will remember

    “Insurance is really just a big data problem.”

    Pro tips you can steal

    • Build cross functional pods early, include a domain expert, a technical product lead, and a senior engineer from day one.
    • Scope for outcomes, not perfect specs, then let the team decide the depth as they build.
    • Use AI to automate collection and synthesis, then keep humans focused on the decisions and trade offs.

    Call to action

    If you enjoyed this one, follow the show and share it with a builder who is trying to ship faster with a smaller team.
  • The Tech Trek

    How VCs Really Pick Winners in Open Source and AI

    2026/1/19 | 25 mins.
    Marco DeMeireles, co founder and managing partner at ANSA, breaks down how a modern VC firm wins by being focused, data driven, and allergic to hype. If you want a clearer view of how investors evaluate open source, mission critical industries, and AI categories, this is a practical, operator minded look behind the curtain.

    Marco explains ANSA’s focus on what they call undercover markets, from open source and open core businesses to defense, intelligence, cybersecurity, healthcare IT, and infrastructure companies that become deeply embedded and rarely lose customers. We also get into how they raised their first fund, why portfolio concentration changes everything, and how they push founders toward efficiency and profitability without killing ambition.

    Key Takeaways
    • In open source, two things matter more than most people admit: founder DNA tied to the project, and what you put behind the paywall that enterprises will pay for
    • Concentration forces rigor, fewer bets means deeper diligence, clearer underwriting, and more hands on support post investment
    • Great early stage support is not just advice, it is people, capital planning, and operating help that changes outcomes
    • AI investing gets easier when you start with category selection, avoid fickle demand, then hunt for non obvious wedges in real workflows
    • Long term winners tend to show compounding growth, improving efficiency, real demand, durable business models, founder strength, and an asymmetric risk reward at the price

    Timestamped Highlights
    00:00 Marco’s quick intro and what ANSA invests in
    00:36 Undercover markets, open source, and mission critical industries explained
    01:54 The two open source filters that change how ANSA underwrites a deal
    03:31 Why open source can work in defense, plus the Defense Unicorns example
    05:29 How a new firm raises a first fund, and what the right LP partners look for
    10:50 The three levers ANSA pulls with founders: people, capital, operations
    15:22 Marco’s six part framework for evaluating investments
    17:39 How to tell who wins in crowded AI categories, and why niche wedges matter
    21:41 The first investment they will never forget, and the air gapped cloud problem

    A line worth stealing
    “You can’t outsource greatness. You can’t outsource people selection.”

    Pro Tips
    • If you are building open source, be intentional about what is free versus paid, security, compliance, and auditability tend to earn real pricing power
    • If your business depends on paid acquisition, test a path to organic growth early, it can unlock profitability and give you leverage in fundraising and exits
    • In crowded AI spaces, pick a wedge where documentation is heavy, complexity is low, and ROI is obvious, then expand once you own that lane

    Call to Action
    If this episode helped you think more clearly about investing and building, follow the show, subscribe, and share it with one founder or operator who is navigating funding, pricing, or go to market right now
  • The Tech Trek

    AI That Actually Improves Customer Experience

    2026/1/16 | 28 mins.
    AI is everywhere, but most teams are stuck talking about efficiency and headcount. In this episode, Dave Edelman, executive advisor and best selling author, shares a sharper lens, how to use AI to create real customer value and real growth.
    We get into the high road vs low road of AI, what personalization should look like now, and why data has to become an enterprise asset, not a bunch of disconnected departmental files.

    Key Takeaways
    • Efficiency is table stakes, the real win is using AI to build new experiences that customers actually want
    • Start with customer friction, find the biggest compromises and frustrations in your category, then design around that
    • Personalization is no longer limited by content scale in the same way, AI changes the economics of tailoring experiences
    • You do not always need one giant database, modern tools can pull and connect data across systems in real time
    • Treat data as an enterprise resource, getting cross functional alignment is often the hardest and most important step

    Timestamped Highlights
    • 00:46 Dave’s origin story, from early loyalty programs to Segment of One marketing
    • 03:33 The high road and low road of AI, growth experiences vs spam at scale
    • 06:51 Where to start, map the biggest customer frustrations, then build use cases from there
    • 16:31 The data myth, why you may not need a single mega database to get value from AI
    • 21:31 Data as a leadership problem, shifting from functional ownership to enterprise ownership
    • 25:14 Strategy that actually sticks, balancing bottom up automation with top down customer led direction

    A line worth stealing
    “Use those efficiencies to invest in growth.”

    Pro Tips you can apply this week
    • List the top five customer frustrations in your category, pick one and design an AI powered fix that removes a compromise
    • Audit your data reality, identify where the same customer facts live in multiple places, then decide what must be unified first
    • Run a simple test and learn loop, create multiple variations of one experience, measure what works, and keep iterating
    • Put strategy on the calendar, make room for a recurring discussion that is not just metrics and cost cutting

    Call to Action
    If this episode helped you think differently about AI and growth, follow the show, leave a quick rating, and share it with one operator who is building product, data, or customer experience right now.
  • The Tech Trek

    The New Go To Market Playbook

    2026/1/15 | 25 mins.
    Amanda Kahlow, CEO and founder of 1Mind, joins Amir to break down what AI changes in modern sales and go to market, and what it does not. If you lead revenue, product, or growth, this is a practical look at where AI creates leverage today, where humans still matter, and how teams actually adopt it without chaos.

    Amanda shares how “go to market superhumans” can handle everything from early buyer conversations to demos, sales engineering support, and customer success. They also dig into trust, hallucinations, and why the bar for AI feels higher than the bar for people.

    Key takeaways

    • Most buyers want answers early, without the pressure that comes with talking to a salesperson
    • AI can remove friction by turning static content into a two way conversation that helps buyers move faster
    • The hardest part of adoption is not capability, it is change management and trust inside the team
    • Humans still shine in relationship and nuance, but AI can outperform on recall, depth, and real time access to the right info
    • As AI levels the selling experience, product quality matters more, and the best product has a clearer path to win

    Timestamped highlights

    00:31 What 1Mind builds, and what “go to market superhumans” actually do across the full buyer journey
    02:00 The buyer lens, why early conversations matter, and how AI gives control back to the buyer
    06:14 Why the SDR experience is frustrating for buyers, and where AI can improve both sides
    09:42 Change management in the real world, why “everyone build an agent” gets messy fast
    13:04 Why “swivel chair” AI fails, and what real time help should look like in live conversations
    15:52 Hallucinations and trust, plus the blunt question every leader should ask about human error
    22:26 Competitive advantage today, and why adoption eventually pushes markets toward “best product wins”

    A line worth sharing

    “Do your humans hallucinate, and how often do they do it?”

    Pro tips you can use this week

    • Start with low stakes usage, bring AI into calls quietly, then ask it for a summary and what you missed
    • Build adoption top down, define what good looks like, otherwise you get a pile of similar agents and no clarity
    • Focus AI on what it does best first, recall, context, and instant answers, then expand into workflow and process later

    Call to action

    If this episode sparked ideas for your sales team or your product led funnel, follow the show so you do not miss the next one. Share it with one revenue leader who is trying to modernize their go to market motion, and connect with Amir on LinkedIn for more clips and operator level takes.

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About The Tech Trek

The Tech Trek is a podcast for founders, builders, and operators who are in the arena building world class tech companies. Host Amir Bormand sits down with the people responsible for product, engineering, data, and growth and digs into how they ship, who they hire, and what they do when things break. If you want a clear view into how modern startups really get built, from first line of code to traction and scale, this show takes you inside the work.
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