Sandesh Patnam, Managing Partner at Premji Invest, breaks down how long duration capital changes the way you evaluate companies, founders, and moats. We talk about what most growth investors miss, why product strength still matters, and how to separate real AI businesses from thin wrappers in a noisy market.
Premji Invest is a captive, evergreen fund built to grow an endowment that supports major education work, which gives the team flexibility on time horizon and partnership style. Sandesh shares how that shows up in diligence, how they think about backing contrarian founders, and why the best companies in this AI era may still be ahead of us.
Key Takeaways
Focus on the long arc, not quarter by quarter optics, founders make better decisions when they are not trapped in short term metrics
In growth investing, TAM models and KPI spreadsheets can distract from the core question, does the product have real strength and an expanding roadmap
Enduring outcomes often come from backing a contrarian view early, then helping it move from contrarian to consensus over time
Evergreen capital changes behavior, you can slow down, build relationships, and partner across private and public markets instead of treating IPO as the finish line
In AI, separate the stack into data center, foundation models, and applications, then look for defensibility like vertical depth, data moats, and compounding usage value
Timestamped highlights
00:38 Premji Invest explained, evergreen structure, one LP, and why public markets can be part of the journey, not the exit
04:47 Two common growth investor lenses and what gets missed when product and roadmap do not lead the thesis
08:48 Partnership mindset, building trust, and being the first call when things get hard
12:48 The contrarian to consensus path, what creates alpha, and how to support founders through the lonely middle
19:54 Why rushing decisions is a trap, and how flexibility changes when and how you can partner with a company
20:55 AI investing framework, three layers, what looks frothy, what can endure, and where moats still exist
26:48 The cost of intelligence is collapsing, why this may still be the early internet moment, and what that implies for the next wave
A line that stuck with me
“We want to be the first port of call when the seas are turbulent.”
Practical moves you can steal
Pressure test the roadmap, ask when product two ships, what adjacency comes next, and what tradeoffs change at scale
When evaluating AI apps, demand a defensibility story beyond the model, look for proprietary data, vertical workflow depth, and value that improves with usage
Treat speed as a risk factor, if you cannot complete your churn cycle of doubt and validation, step back rather than force certainty
Call to Action
If you liked this one, follow the show and share it with a founder, operator, or investor who is building in AI right now. For more conversations at the intersection of tech, business, and execution, subscribe and connect with me on LinkedIn.