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Around 20% of New Zealanders live outside of New Zealand. This is our “Diaspora” — and it’s one of the world’s largest, per capita. Not only is it large, it's insanely talented… early in their lives and careers, many of New Zealand’s most ambitious individuals realise— if they want to make a dent in the universe, they need to get out there… to study abroad, get the experience, build relationships to help them win on a global stage. Today, those estimated ~1M expats include some of our finest talent. They are founders, top operators/execs at industry leading companies. They are scientists and researchers working at the frontiers of science: artificial intelligence, synthetic biology; global leaders in business, culture, and society… entrenched in all corners of the world, walks of live… largely “heads down”, doing their thing. www.diaspora.nz

Profiling the founders, innovators, and emerging leaders of the great Kiwi expat community.


    • May 1, 2025 LATEST EPISODE
    • every other week NEW EPISODES
    • 42m AVG DURATION
    • 26 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Diaspora.nz

    S3 | E8 – Adrian Macneil (Co-Founder & CEO at Foxglove) on Developer Tools for Robotics, and Why Ambitious Kiwis Need to Go — and Come Back Smarter

    Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 52:01 Transcription Available


    Episode SummaryAdrian Macneil grew up packing kiwifruit in rural New Zealand, now he's building the core infrastructure powering the future of robotics. After leading engineering teams at Cruise and Coinbase, Adrian co-founded Foxglove, a developer platform used by robotics companies worldwide, from autonomous tractors to warehouse bots.In this episode, Adrian shares how Foxglove emerged from an internal Cruise demo, why robotics is finally having its “PC moment,” and what it really takes to build a startup that lasts. We cover:• How Cruise helped pioneer self-driving cars (and what went wrong post-acquisition)• Why developer tools are the missing layer holding robotics back• Lessons from Coinbase, Cruise, and scaling teams from 30 to 1,200• The case for Kiwi founders to leave New Zealand, at least for a while• What robotics startups can learn from the rise of SaaS• The value of building boring robots that just move riceWe also dive into Adrian's early days hacking e-commerce in Thailand, how government jobs don't prepare you for startups, and why he believes the robotics industry will 100x in the next decade.Time Stamps03:30 When an internal tool became a startup idea07:42 Cruise vs GM: Startup chaos inside a legacy giant12:47 Foxglove's customer base: From tractors to warehouses16:15 Why Foxglove won't build robots — and what they're building instead21:54 The “1980s PC” moment for robotics27:41 If not Foxglove — what robotics startup would Adrian build?30:15 From kiwifruit packhouses to automation inspiration36:35 Why ambitious builders still need to go to Silicon Valley41:36 The 10-year mindset needed to build a real company47:50 How the Kiwi diaspora can supercharge the next generationResources

    S3 | E7 - Xavier Collins (CEO at Wonder) on AI's creative revolution, building thriving marketplaces, and reshaping the film industry

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2025 55:20 Transcription Available


    Episode SummaryXavier Collins, London-born and New Zealand-raised, is no stranger to building marketplaces that scale. After early days at Uber, Xavier joined Nexus Notes before launching Deliveroo into dozens of UK cities and spearheading Turo's growth across Europe. Now he's applying his marketplace magic to the film industry with Wonder, an AI-native creative studio backed by Blackbird, LocalGlobe, and a host of world-class angels.In today's episode, Xavier takes us deep into the creative frontier of AI and storytelling, exploring how technology can unlock new levels of creativity, reshape entertainment financing, and give more filmmakers a voice. We cover:• How AI is redefining storytelling and enabling more scripts to reach production• Lessons from building successful marketplaces at Uber, Deliveroo, Turo, and Nexus Notes• The keys to marketplace success: seeding liquidity, focusing on quality supply, and defining user experience• Why the entertainment industry is overdue for disruption (and how Wonder is leading the charge)• How filmmakers and creatives can harness AI to amplify their visionWe also dive into Xavier's unique journey—from narrowly missing a consulting career to hustling his way through startups, and the unforgettable Cannes moment that launched Wonder.Time Stamps02:49 The Cannes moment: Realising AI will reshape filmmaking07:18 Using AI to rescue stories that wouldn't otherwise be told10:56 The life-changing phone call that sent Xavier into startups19:37 Early lessons on marketplace liquidity from Deliveroo and Turo25:52 Price, selection, and service: The three pillars of marketplace success32:16 Services vs SaaS: Rethinking business models in the AI age41:05 Financing films 101: Inside Xavier's other venture, Lumiere Ventures48:26 Xavier's advice to young people: Lean into AI nowResources

    S3 | E6 - Anton Jackson Smith (b.next) on building synthetic cells, programmable biology, and the future of biotech

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2025 51:34 Transcription Available


    Episode SummaryAnton Jackson Smith is a synthetic biologist, Stanford PhD, and founder of b.next—a startup building synthetic cells from scratch to make biology truly programmable. Think of it as rewriting life's codebase, with applications ranging from cancer treatments and diagnostics to lab-grown foods and smart crops.In today's episode, Anton breaks down what synthetic cells actually are (and why they matter), how his open-source platform Nucleus is changing the way biology is engineered, and why the future of medicine, agriculture, and climate tech might be written in DNA.We also dig into his journey, from coding in Queenstown and law school in Otago, to cutting-edge research in Silicon Valley, and how a random article on programmable E. coli changed everything.In this conversation, we cover:• How synthetic cells could power the next generation of therapeutics and diagnostics• Why biology needs its own “AWS moment” and how open source can unlock it• The real business model behind synthetic biology (and why it's not just science)• How Kiwi strengths in agriculture and biotech could shape a global future• What New Zealand needs to do to retain and return its brightest mindsAnton also shares his vision for a safer, more ethical bio-economy, and how we can build powerful new tools without repeating the mistakes of the past.Time Stamps01:21 What is a synthetic cell—and why should you care?06:44 How Anton fell into biology (thanks to an E. coli article in Vietnam)11:12 Why modifying real cells isn't enough—and what BNext is doing differently16:30 The near-term use cases: cancer, diagnostics, and food22:47 How Nucleus is creating the open-source toolkit for biology30:14 Three phases of BNext's business model: Boot → Build → Bazaar37:10 The big vision: programmable biology that saves lives44:18 What New Zealand's biotech future could look like47:30 Returning talent, building bridges, and bringing brains back homeResources

    S3 | E5 - From Law School to Leading the Future of Creator Platforms: How Georgia Rippin (Kold Open) Is Building the Next Wave of Mid-Form Video, and Sneaking Into Hollywood

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2025 42:17 Transcription Available


    Episode SummaryGrowing up in Wellington, New Zealand, with parents in the police force and government, a career in film and TV wasn't exactly on the radar for Georgia Rippin. But after studying law and Māori at Vic, she made a bold leap to New York, armed with only a suitcase, a dream, and a few blocks of Whittaker's chocolate that she used to slip into mailrooms of the biggest studios on the planet. That scrappiness paid off: Georgia wound up producing mid-form shows (those 10- to 20-minute episodic pieces that can eventually scale into full series), teaming up with major networks, and ultimately founding Kold Open, a platform reshaping how creators monetise their IP and get discovered.In this episode, Georgia digs into the pitfalls of legacy media, why YouTube fails episodic creators, and how AI-driven product placement might unlock new revenue streams for independent filmmakers. She also shares the real story of how she broke into the industry, from dressing like an assistant to cold-knocking on studio doors, and why she believes being just the right amount of naïve can be an entrepreneur's superpower. Finally, she offers insights for fellow Kiwis eager to chase creative careers on the world's biggest stages.Time Stamps00:00 – Intro02:16 – From legal briefs to scripts: Why she picked New York over LA04:18 – Mid-form explained: How shows like Workaholics and It's Always Sunny began08:01 – Why YouTube's algorithm hurts episodic creators—and how Kold Open fixes it10:20 – Cracking the first big studio deal: Lessons in hustle, grit, and chocolate bribes14:19 – Being ‘productively naïve': Georgia on forging a path without industry connections18:07 – AI's silver lining for indies: New tools that help with coloring, sound, and distribution25:37 – Rise of FAST channels: Why “free TV” is the next frontier for content creators31:53 – The founder journey: Building a startup in NYC and hitting sustainable revenue35:54 – AI-driven ad placement: Adding a digital Pepsi cup post-production (and getting paid)40:48 – Advice for aspiring Kiwi creators: Collaboration, comedic storytelling, and never giving upResources- Kold Open – Georgia's mid-form platform: https://www.koldopen.com- Georgia Rippin on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/georgia-rippin/- Viva La Dirt League (NZ's comedy YouTubers mentioned): https://www.youtube.com/c/VivaLaDirtLeague

    S3 | E4 - Bowen Pan (Common Room) on launching Facebook Marketplace, spotting hidden opportunities, and mastering the art of product

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2025 71:07 Transcription Available


    Episode SummaryBowen Pan's career is a playbook on turning hidden opportunities into global products. Currently the VP of Product at Common Room (a $52M Series B startup backed by Greylock and Index Ventures), Bowen previously shaped major products at Facebook and Stripe. At Facebook, he discovered latent buying and selling behaviour buried in groups, leading to the creation of Facebook Marketplace, now serving over 500 million people worldwide. Later, at Stripe, Bowen built their apps platform, creating an ecosystem empowering small businesses around the globe.Bowen's product philosophy hinges on ruthless curiosity, finding underserved markets, and cultivating teams focused on impact, not visibility. From his formative days at Trade Me in New Zealand, through launching ambitious new verticals at Facebook, to redefining payments at Stripe, Bowen shares how Kiwi generalism laid the foundation for his product-led approach.In today's episode, we cover:• How Bowen uncovered and scaled Facebook Marketplace from a simple SQL query• Why high-impact, low-visibility projects are career superchargers• How New Zealand shaped Bowen's holistic view of product building• The secret to spotting hidden user behaviour that others overlook• The skills you should build (and ignore) to be an exceptional product leader• Why truth-seeking is the greatest career skill of all• How Common Room is reinventing go-to-market by putting people firstWe also explore Bowen's thoughts on investing in passionate founders, the future of product management amidst AI-driven tools, and how Kiwi companies can better leverage global opportunities.Time Stamps00:32 Bowen's journey from Trade Me to Facebook, Stripe, and Common Room02:27 Spotting hidden opportunities: the power of latent user behaviour09:45 Building Facebook Marketplace from scratch21:00 How Bowen validated Marketplace's potential28:43 Stripe's mission and building a platform for SMBs35:43 What defines excellent product management?47:26 The future of product leadership in the age of AI55:18 How New Zealand shaped Bowen's global career59:25 Using New Zealand as a global testing ground01:03:55 Investing philosophy: finding founders with secret insightsResourcesBowen Pan's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bowenpan/Common Room - Reinventing go-to-market software: https://www.commonroom.io

    Joel Little (Grammy-winning producer) on making Royals with Lorde, creative collaboration, and why startups are like hit songs

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 49:29 Transcription Available


    Episode SummaryJoel Little is one of the world's top music producers, quietly shaping global hits behind the scenes - from co-writing Lorde's breakthrough "Royals" to producing massive tracks for artists like Taylor Swift, Imagine Dragons, and Khalid. Despite Grammys, multi-platinum records, and billions of streams, Joel remains remarkably down-to-earth, bringing a uniquely Kiwi sensibility to Hollywood and beyond.In this special live episode, Joel flips roles with early Trade Me engineer and investor Rowan Simpson, uncovering the striking similarities between creating hit songs and building startups. They dive into the art of discovering and shaping raw talent, how Kiwi humility can be a secret weapon (and sometimes a weakness), and the critical role that producers, mentors, and early supporters play in global success stories.In today's episode, we cover:• Joel's wild ride from recording Royals in two days to topping global charts, winning Grammys, and producing some of the decade's biggest songs• What music producers actually do, and why creative collaboration often feels like therapy• Why Joel sold his song catalogue (and how that's like a startup “exit”)• The parallels between startups and music: from finding product-market fit, to pivoting when something's not working, to knowing how to scale authentically• How Kiwi humility can be both a superpower and a stumbling block on the world stage• The backstory of Joel's non-profit Big Fan, building studios and stages for the next generation of Kiwi artistsWe also hear about Joel's own personal growth, from musician in Goodnight Nurse to world-renowned producer, and Rowan's perspective from the early days of Trade Me and Xero, reflecting on how creativity and business blend in unexpected ways.Time Stamps00:00 Intro01:19 Meet Joel Little: Grammy-winning Kiwi producer behind Royals, Taylor Swift, Khalid, and more03:07 What does a producer actually do? Joel breaks down his creative process10:22 The making of Royals: how a song recorded in two days became a global hit15:58 Life after Royals: from struggling musician to Grammy-winning producer19:08 Working with global superstars: Imagine Dragons, Khalid, Taylor Swift22:04 How Joel avoided the classic rockstar pitfalls (and stayed authentically Kiwi)23:12 Why Kiwi humility is both Joel's secret weapon and greatest challenge28:00 Early days at Trade Me - Rowan shares his journey from scrappy startup to Kiwi tech icon30:16 What Joel looks for in creative collaborators—and how startups can learn from his approach42:12 Selling his catalogue: Joel's version of a startup “exit”46:30 Big Fan: Joel's nonprofit building studios and stages for the next generation of artistsResourcesJoel Little's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamjoellittleRowan Simpson's Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rowansimpson/Big Fan – Joel's nonprofit for emerging Kiwi artists: https://bigfan.co.nzRoyals by Lorde (Grammy-winning single produced by Joel Little): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlcIKh6sBtcYoung Dumb & Broke by Khalid (Joel's biggest streaming hit): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IPfJnp1guPc

    Kathryn Zealand (Skip) on robotic exoskeletons, mobility for life, and spinning out of Google X

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 39:03 Transcription Available


    Episode SummaryKathryn Zealand founded Skip to help people stay active and independent through aging and injury, inspired by her grandmother's painful fall and the inadequate technology available at the time. Skip's flagship product, the MoGo, is an innovative, lightweight robotic exoskeleton that acts like an e-bike for walking, offering just the right amount of assistance, whether hiking up mountains or standing from a chair.Kathryn brings her unique perspective as a physicist-turned-founder and former project lead at Google X, Alphabet's moonshot factory, where she learned the art of rapid prototyping and building breakthrough technologies. In this conversation, Kathryn shares Skip's journey from idea to hardware startup, the nuances of building consumer robotics, navigating FDA approval, and tackling the manufacturing challenge of moving from prototype to scale.In today's episode, we cover:• How a personal mission became a company, and why mobility impacts mental health as much as physical well-being• What Skip's MoGo exoskeleton is and how it empowers people to reclaim active lives• Behind the scenes at Google X: spinning out projects, rapid prototyping, and taking big bets• Navigating the complex hardware funding landscape: equity, grants, pre-orders, and venture debt• The art and science of robotic mobility: why understanding user intent matters• Why Skip chose outdoor brands like Arc'teryx as their first partners, and what's next in consumer robotics• The skills Kat had to learn (and unlearn) to become a successful CEO and founderWe also talk about Kat's unconventional career path, from astrophysics to humanitarian law to deep-tech entrepreneurship, and her advice to aspiring founders looking to change the world with impactful technology.Time Stamps00:41 Meet Kat Zealand: Founder, physicist, and former Googler making robotic exoskeletons02:07 How a grandmother's fall became Skip's origin story03:32 Introducing MoGo: “An e-bike for walking”05:11 Why mobility technology impacts mental health and quality of life07:50 Partnering with Arc'teryx: From mountain trails to everyday use08:44 Preparing to scale: From 50 handcrafted prototypes to 10,000 units10:23 Navigating FDA approval and the medical vs consumer hardware divide12:53 The robotics software challenge: Predicting user intent accurately15:58 Behind the scenes at Google X: How Alphabet's moonshot factory works22:34 Spinning out from Alphabet: Lessons from Skip's journey24:00 Funding hardware startups: Venture capital, non-dilutive grants, and customer pre-orders34:37 Leadership lessons Kat had to unlearn as a Kiwi CEO in Silicon ValleyResourcesKathryn Zealand's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kathryn-zealand/Skip website and MoGo rentals & pre-orders: https://www.skipwithjoy.comGoogle X (Alphabet's moonshot factory): https://x.companyFounders, Inc – SF-based startup community: https://f.inc

    Jamie Beaton (Crimson Education) on scaling a global education empire, the future of universities, and AI's role in learning

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 63:08 Transcription Available


    Episode SummaryWhen Jamie Beaton co-founded Crimson Education, his goal was simple: help ambitious students get into the world's best universities. Fast forward ten years, Crimson has 800+ staff, global offices, and a suite of education platforms spanning admissions coaching, an international online high school, and AI-powered study tools.Jamie's personal journey is just as remarkable—Harvard undergrad, four master's degrees, a JD from Yale, a PhD from Oxford, a Rhodes Scholar. His expertise? Elite admissions, scaling global businesses, and the changing economics of education.In today's episode, we cover:• Why the traditional university model is broken and which institutions will survive• How AI is making elite education accessible (and why most schools aren't ready)• Why New Zealand's smartest students need to get out—and when to return• The right way to build a world-class company, from hiring to leadership• How top universities actually admit students (hint: it's not just grades)We also hear about Jamie's biggest mentors, his leadership lessons, and the future of Crimson Education after its recent Series D.Time Stamps01:11 The wildest education history: Harvard, Yale, Oxford & beyond03:40 Crimson's 10-year journey from a bold pitch to a global business06:48 How the real college admissions process works (and what most Kiwis get wrong)09:52 Buying vs. building: How Jamie makes big bets on acquisitions14:55 The myth of online education and why self-motivation changes everything18:08 How Crimson finds the next generation of ambitious Kiwis25:17 The AI revolution: Private tutoring for everyone—at 1% of the cost35:53 Is there a reckoning coming for the long tail of higher education?44:02 Why Kiwis need to get out—and when to do it56:06 The biggest leadership lessons Jamie had to unlearnResourcesJamie Beaton's Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamiebeaton/Crimson Education – Global admissions and education platform: https://www.crimsoneducation.org/Crimson Global Academy – Online international high school: https://www.crimsonglobalacademy.school/Revision Village – IB study resource platform: https://www.revisionvillage.com/Need-Blind Financial Aid at Harvard – How top universities fund students: https://college.harvard.edu/financial-aid

    S2 | E13 — Rhys Darby and Rosie Carnahan-Darby on championing Kiwi humour around the world, Tall Poppy syndrome, losing creative jobs to AI, and "going direct" with your fans to survive social media.

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 73:08


    Listen/subscribe on * Apple podcasts* Spotify He's been Murray Hewitt, Psycho Sam, Norman from Yes Man, Guy Mann, Hypno-Potamus, a stand-up comedian, a sit-down band manager, a children's book author, a soldier… and now Binkle-bonk the Tree Goblin in upcoming “Badjelly the Witch”

    S2 | E12 — Zak Holdsworth (Founder & CEO at Hint Health) on minimising waste in US healthcare payments, considering private equity vs. VC as a founder, Stanford GSB as a gateway to Silicon

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2024 56:35


    Listen/Subscribe on:* Apple Podcasts* SpotifyHint Health co-founder and CEO Zak Holdsworth retains a strong Kiwi accent - after all, he grew up on a farm near Gisborne. It was no ordinary farm, however, as Zak tells us.Considering his mother was a diplomat and his father an inventor and pioneer of pultrusion, Zak developed a taste for innovation in the wider world, and eventually headed off to Stanford Graduate School of Business to achieve his MBA. Zak worked briefly as a VC prior to joining the founding team ofWellnessFX in 2011, a California company which diagnosed health conditions through blood analysis.He then went on to co-found Hint Health in 2014 – a platform which has raised $64 in investment and today handles over a billion dollars worth of payments per year.Based in San Francisco, Hint is a vertical SaaS platform powering Direct Primary Care practitioners allowing them to to focus on patients in an industry which has until recently been far too dependent on the insurance system to cover patient costs and which - as Zak tells us - wastes more money annually than NASA's 60-year budget. Disrupting the $4 trillion US healthcare industry is a topic also shared by our previous guest Dr Zachary Tan.Zak joins us to share his ideas about finding and investing in disruptive startups, the future of cryptocurrency, and how New Zealand might be a great place to run the next Xero from.In today's episode, we discuss:* Hint Health's mission to step away from insurance, give everyone a transparent rate of costs and connect patients with unlimited access to primary care, telemedicine, urgent care and other services - the way Zak remembers it when he was a child in NZ* Getting into Stanford business school, realising which paths weren't ideal, before taking on US healthtech with Hint Health* How Zak's passion for startups included forays into venture capitalism as well as patenting a phone charger* The staggering percentage of each dollar Zak feels is wasted when handled through health insurance.* Reasons for lack of change in US healthcare* Becoming respected in the healthtech community with the Hint Summit annual conference* Whether the startup community's expectations of how quickly a startup should triple or 100x its revenue are fair expectations or not.* DeFi Summer, and lessons learned while investing in crypto currency* Faith in Bitcoin* Zak's balance between being plugged into Silicon Valley but having peace and tranquility to focus on his family.* …and whether New Zealand's tech startup ecosystem is ready to host another Xero.Referenced:* Hint Healthhttps://www.hint.com/* Stanford Graduate School of Businesshttps://www.gsb.stanford.edu/* The Hint Summithttps://summit.hint.com/Where to find Zak Holdsworth:* LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/zakholdsworth/X/Twitter https://x.com/zakholdsworth?lang=en This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S2 | E11 — Clint Van Marrewijk (Zelandez, SaferMe) ‘drills down' on mining South American lithium to drive us into the future and how his safety software company pivoted to enjoy massive growth.

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2024 43:00


    Listen/subscribe on:* Apple Podcasts* SpotifyClint Van Marrewijk (pronounced Marra-vick) is director and co-founder of Zelandez, a leading lithium brine technology company building cutting edge sensors and production plants for lithium brine mining operations in the ‘Lithium Triangle' of Bolivia, Chile and Argentina, as well as the USA and Canada. It's a long way from the Waihi dairy farm on which he grew up before undertaking a mechanical engineering degree then moving to Colorado and setting up a Kiwisaver scheme. If you don't know why people get so excited about lithium, it's because lithium ion rechargeable batteries are cleaner, greener, more powerful and longer-lasting than most other battery options. This is why lithium ion is the battery of choice for many of the world's top ten biggest companies, including Apple, Google and Tesla- and why the lithium battery market it worth USD 54.4 billion. Clint has been running Zelandez from Austin, Texas since his Kiwi-founded safety software company, SaferMe, entered the American market in 2019, having gone from strength to strength - including huge growth with its workplace sign-in and tracking tools, which were massively in demand during the recent COVID pandemic, spurring huge growth.Today Clint talks about SaferMe's journey, explains how the services Zelandez offers leave less of a toll on the environment and better lithium yield, and Clint gives advice for young people who want their career to take them from Christchurch to Colorado to the Lithium Triangle and beyond.In today's episode, we discuss:* Using oil and gas extraction techniques to get lithium brine out of the ground to help create the lithium-based batteries so many of our electric cars and digital devices rely on* The history of lithium use in batteries - who pioneered it, who has under-valued it, and how lithium is ready to be hugely valued as a commodity.* Advice on the right age to transition into an energy/minerals career.* How a degree in engineering led to working in investment analysis for Kiwi Wealth before Clint moved into SaaS startups.* How Clint's bank managers reacted when they saw how much he was investing in lithium extraction technology.* How SaferMe pivoted during the pandemic to sell contact tracing tools - backed by the NZ government - which could have resulted in up to 20x company growth.* Getting a business deal with a Fortune 500 CEO through a LinkedIn “spam note”* Fallacies in New Zealand's thinking about the best way to provide the cleanest electricity for the national grid.Referenced:* Zealandez: https://www.zelandez.com/* SaferMe: https://www.safer.me/* The Lithium Triangle: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithium_Triangle* Best practices for reinjecting brine during lithium extraction: https://www.zelandez.com/news/the-lithium-brine-industry-must-share-reinjection-best-practices/Where to find Clint van Marrewijk:* LinkedIn* Twitter This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S2 | E10 - Dr. Zachary Tan (Optain Health, Aegis Ventures) on navigating the U.S. healthcare system as a founder investor, venture studios, and why the eye is the key to preventative medicine.

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2024 36:26


    When Zachary Tan - actually, Doctor Zachary Tan - became president of Optain Health, the role combined three lifelong passions: treating patients, running future-focused tech businesses, and taking exciting risks with venture capital in one of the world's most important areas: the health of human beings.Zach's career has gone from strength to strength. He was in 2022 recognized by Forbes as 30 Under 30 for Healthcare & Science, before going on to be elected as a director of The Fred Hollows Foundation in the US.In today's episode, we chat through how one gap year away from medical school to run a future-focused healthcare business became a ‘gap decade,' what he learned from the differences between treating one patient in Sydney and working with a healthcare provider treating millions of patients in upstate New York, and how there is potential to massively disrupt the economics around insurance costs and the cost of treatment simply by examining a patient's retina.Zachary also tells us about two deeply significant businesses he's worked with on his journey: Osara Health, as well as New York's VC studio Aegis Ventures - of which he is a partner - and how he has currently settled on Optain to apply his passion.In today's episode, we discuss:* Leaving Auckland at age 17 for Queensland- then hearing the call of the United States, a healthcare industry worth four trillion dollars* Using the eye as a window to the body to detect and diagnose disease and save billions - as well as save lives* Tech solutions for New York' state's biggest hospitals* Using AI in healthcare to minimise admin for healthcare staff, speed up diagnoses, diagnose disease early and reduce costs on patients, insurers and everyone in-between* Investing in tech to tackle disparities between healthcare access for babies, adults, ethnic groups and other patient segments* How healthcare practitioners were forced to embrace telemedicine technology across the last five years as the Covid pandemic put pressure on staff to work remotely* What Zachary thinks could be improved in the intersection between patients, insurance and healthcare ‘payviders'* Steps to take when you're looking at doing business in America's healthcare sector and you need FDA approval.Referenced:* Optain Health: https://optainhealth.com/about/* Aegis Ventures: https://aegisventures.com/* Northwell Health: https://www.northwell.edu/* Osara Health: https://osarahealth.com/* The Fred Hollows Foundation: https://www.hollows.org/Where to find Zachary Tan:* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zacharytan/ This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S2 | E9 — Cameron Priest (Tradegecko, AMP, Neu Ventures) on scaling global SaaS businesses, the journey to a $100M acquisition by Intuit, what's next for AI + vertical SaaS

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2024 55:14


    Cameron Priest is the co-founder and former CEO of TradeGecko, an inventory and order management platform for e-commerce businesses that was acquired by Intuit in 2020 for around $100M. He's now building AMP, a company that acquires, rolls up, and scales Shopify apps - and incubating new ventures at the intersection of AI and vertical SaaS.In today's episode, we discuss:* Cam's journey from an NZ kiwifruit orchard to founding Trade Gecko, how they landed in Singapore.* Scaling a B2B product, including specific growth tools, frameworks they used along the way - so much of which is still relevant today, and eventual $80M+ acquisition by Intuit. * Building Amp and the strategy of acquiring "landing pad" businesses in the Shopify ecosystem, how - as acquirers - they assess, value, and execute an acquisition … including the use of debt, how to think about revenue multiples, etc.* The vision for a platform allowing businesses to build customized niche software* Reflections on ambition, the importance of a supportive ecosystem, and the potential for fostering innovation in New ZealandWhere to find Cam online:* https://x.com/cameronpriest* https://www.linkedin.com/in/cameronpriest/Listen on:* Apple Podcasts* Spotify Subscribe for more expat stories every Friday! Think of someone who would enjoy this episode? Hit share and send it to them- or send them our way! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S2 | E8 — Ryan Everton (Founder and CEO at TURN) on solving single use plastics at the world's largest events + fast food chains; raising from Ashton Kutcher & Live Nation; building with purpose.

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2024 29:02


    Ryan Everton is the founder and CEO at TURN, a San Francisco headquartered company pioneering reusable cup solutions for major events and fast-food chains. From growing up on a farm and selling meat pies at boarding school during the tuck shop prohibition — to tackling global plastic waste, building infrastructure to wash a million cups at a time (literally) … Ryan's journey embodies Kiwi ingenuity and entrepreneurial spirit.In this episode, we explore:* TURN's origins as “Globelet” .. and ideation journey through the Otago University “Audacious” business competition. * The journey from landing his first festival customers, through to partnering with Live Nation and rolling out across 36 festivals on the same contract… now on to Starbucks, Chick-fil-A. * How TURN achieves >90% cup return rates at events - building loyalty programs, rolling out powerful incentive mechanics.* Navigating the pandemic - seeing it as an opportunity to take stock, invest in R&D and rebranding, automating washing infrastructure, come out swinging on the other side. * Riding regulatory tailwinds — coming California restrictions on single-use plastics, and how they're positioning themselves to ride them.* Unlearning classic Kiwi habits to lead a global team. * Why grit is an important founder trait, and where he thinks it comes from (hint: back on the farm).* Philosophical reflections on purpose, success, and leaving a legacyWhere to find Ryan online:* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryaneverton/* Twitter/X: https://x.com/Valueroad Make sure you subscribe for more epic expat stories every Friday! Enjoying Diaspora.nz? Share this episode with a friend or family member: This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S2 | E7 — Min-Kyu Jung (Co-founder & CEO at Ivo) on creating AI-powered legal assistants; the journey from NZ corporate law to leading a hot Silicon Valley startup & why others should move there too.

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2024 31:01


    Min-Kyu Jung is the CEO and co-founder at Ivo, an AI contract law assistant for legal teams, which has raised $6.2 million in funding total from investors including Uncork Capital, Fika Ventures, GD1, Phase One, and Daniel Gross. Min-Kyu got the idea for Ivo (previously Latch) while working as a corporate lawyer in New Zealand, when he saw how much time, effort and money were spent drawing up agreements. His entrepreneurial streak got the better of him — drawn to what he saw as “low-hanging fruit”, under-optimised processes around him in the legal profession, he taught himself how to code in two months and took the leap to start a startup.Ivo works in Microsoft Word to explain legal terms, determine if clauses are market standard and instantly create a summary of an agreement to help speed up the process. After a cold outbound DM landed him an angel investment from Daniel Gross in San Francisco, he moved his whole team over for an initial three months — and never looked back. He thinks other kiwi founders - at least those who aspire to be at the frontiers of AI - should do the same, and issues a challenge to other founders to reflect on where they need to locate to maximise their chances of success.He's not afraid to roll up his sleeves and do the work to sell, get connected with people... even if that means lots of cold outbound: “Kiwis tend to be modest and avoid making impositions on others. You will need to overcome this cultural quirk and simply cold email / DM people you find interesting.” We talk about how social capital flows in the Bay Area, and how it helped him build a local network, recruit his team, land hundreds of customer conversations, and more: “The SF Bay Area has a strong culture of paying it forward. Successful people here are often willing to spend time and social capital helping founders with no network if they seem to be working on something interesting.” We talk about his thesis for AI product development, how founders should think about designing user experiences, how Ivo handles issues with Large Language Model (“LLM”) reliability and hallucinations, and how he's preparing to leverage ever more powerful AI models to his advantage in coming years. This was a fun episode to record — we look forward to your feedback!!  Where to find Min-Kyu online:* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/min-kyu-jung/* Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/mkjungKnow an expat we should feature on diaspora.nz? * reach out via david@diaspora.nz This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S2 | E6 — Rachel Carrell (Co-founder & CEO at Koru Kids) on building Europe's largest childcare platform, the joy of working on hard problems, having a baby during her Series A fundraise!

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2024 42:25


    Rachel Carrell is the founder & CEO of KoruKids, Europe's largest childcare platform— training, matching, and providing ongoing support to over 10,000 nannies across London.Rachel is one of the special ones. Driven to found the company by what she describes as a righteous anger over how childcare has been disrespected as infrastructure in society… Today, Koru Kids takes care of taxes, payroll, pension, holiday, nanny communications, activity ideas and a dozen other things that can come up when you're dealing with nannies… bringing down the cost for families, and helping kids have more engaging, enriching experiences. Joined by co-host Phoebe Harrop, we had a lot of fun with this episode: tracing Rachel's story from hustling chocolates and home-grown lottery schemes on the streets of Invercargill … to strategising her way into a Rhodes scholarship that helped her land a place— and finally “find her people” at the University of Oxford in the UK; and on to London, where she's been ever since… 22 years and counting, consulting with McKinsey, raising a family, building, investing in, and advising startupsWe explore how, counterintuitively, Rachel feels driven to consistently choose the path of most resistance … seeking the right kind of crazy … this shows up in stories from the founding of Koru Kids, to the time she had a baby in the middle of her Series A fundraise and was back out pitching the next day .. to how she thinks about talent development, scaling demand and supply in marketplaces, and more.Make sure you subscribe for more stories from the diaspora every Friday!

    S2 | E5 — Campbell Brown (Co-founder & CEO at PredictHQ) on helping the world's biggest brands predict demand; launching, scaling, and raising in the U.S.

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2024 41:40


    Campbell Brown is Founder & CEO at PredictHQ, based in San Francisco. PredictHQ help customers understand the catalysts behind any form of consumer demand, with a particular emphasis on real-world events. Today, they provide this “Demand Intelligence” to a who's who of global brands, airlines, and marketplaces like Uber and Airbnb, helping them optimise supply and pricing whether they're facing an anomalous weather event or Taylor Swift concert. Before founding PredictHQ, Campbell was part of the early team at GrabOne, where he saw first hand how sudden volatility in demand could affect business operations (for better or worse). He went on to join Online Republic as CMO, where he encountered the challenges of predicting traveller demand based on global events and weather conditions. This is the first repeat guest we've had on the pod… having recorded an episode for the very first season of diaspora.nz back in 2017. Since then, Cam raised another $33.5M USD, has substantially grown the team and product suite — it's been awesome to see this growth over the years. In today's episode, we discuss:* The journey from GrabOne to PredictHQ, and how past experiences shaped Campbell's understanding of data-driven business decisions.* PredictHQ's evolution from focusing on the travel industry to diversifying across various sectors including parking, transportation, and accommodation.* Building models on top of event data to provide unique intelligence and enable businesses to become context-aware.* The importance of selling value over features, and focusing on the impact a product can bring to a customer's business.* Exploring different pricing models, including category-based and consumption-based approaches.* Challenges and strategies for managing a multi-location team and fostering company culture across New Zealand and the US.* The pros and cons of having a New Zealand-based versus US-based top company, and navigating international tax implications.* Campbell's fundraising journey and advice for approaching investors, including the importance of warm introductions and treating fundraising like a sales process.* Balancing work and family life in the US, and tips for building community when moving abroad.Where to find Campbell:* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/campbellbrown/* Twitter/X: https://x.com/campbellbListen & Subscribe on:* Apple Podcasts* SpotifyLearn more about Diaspora.nz: * Around 20% of New Zealanders live outside of New Zealand. This is our “Diaspora” — and it's one of the world's largest, per capita.* And not only is it large, it's insanely talented: Early in their lives and careers, many of New Zealand's most ambitious individuals realise— if they want to make a dent in the universe, they need to get out there… to study abroad, gain experience, build relationships.* Unfortunately— as they go, many drop off the “domestic NZ” radar…* We're here to surface and share their stories, create opportunities to meet and support each other along the way, on and offline.* Read the full announcement post here - and hit subscribe for more episodes every Friday! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S2 | E4 — Privahini Bradoo (Co-founder of Plank, BlueOak) on turning Kiwi ingenuity into deep tech success, engineering with AI, and identifying “force of nature” talent in NZ.

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2024 37:42


    Privahini Bradoo is the co-founder and CEO at Plank — helping companies build and scale AI-enabled engineering teams + training the next generation of computer scientists. Born in India, Privahini immigrated to NZ in her school years. Her time with us down-under was impactful… while pursuing a degree in Biomedical Science, then PhD in Neurogenetics and Drug Discovery at the University of Auckland, she also led the establishment of the Spark business competition (now Velocity); and co-founded Chiasma, an organisation dedicated to linking the biotech academic community with industry.Drawn back off-shore in 2006, Privahini landed a Fulbright scholarship to pursue an MBA at Harvard Business School, and then settled back in the San Francisco Bay Area, joining Lanzatech as one of the first commercial hires in the U.S.In 2011, Privahini co-founded BlueOak Resources to revolutionise how we treat and recycle end-of-life electronics - raising ~$50M from Kliener Perkins and others along the way.In today's episode, we discuss:* From brain science to business: Privahini's unexpected career leap.* the early days of Auckland's startup scene and Velocity business competition. * Lessons from LanzaTech and BlueOak… navigating the complexities of deep tech startups, systems thinking across the supply chain of inputs/outputs, recycling industrial waste. * The future of AI - engineering, revolutionizing remote work, COVID as an accelerating force at Plank.* Optimism in the face of global realities.* How to foster 'force of nature' talent in NZWhere to find Privahini Bradoo:* LinkedIn * Twitter/X * University of Auckland Graduate Stories* KEA - World Class New ZealanderTimestamps:(00:00) Intro(01:43) Privahini's origin story(04:30) Inside the Velocity programme(09:34) Journey at LanzaTech(13:30) The birth of BlueOak(14:51) The reality of e-waste recycling(19:43) Lessons in deep tech(23:11) Founding Plant to help businesses build remote e(25:45) Plank's intelligent engineering strategy(28:10) How to keep up with rapid changes in AI(29:27) Nurturing NZ's entrepreneurial forces of nature(32:07) The second-time founder mindset(35:08) Advice for Kiwi entrepreneurs(36:13) How to help Privahini This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S2 | E3 — Paul Copplestone (Co-founder & CEO at Supabase) on why open source is an unfair advantage; raising $116M to build the tech stack for AI startups/indie developers; living in Southeast Asia.

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 32:55


    Paul Copplestone is the co-founder and CEO at Supabase, the “open source Firebase alternative for building web and mobile apps.” If you were wondering what that means or why you should prioritise a listen— in Paul's words: “if you're going to build your next startup, you'd probably choose us … and we'll provide all the tools you need to get started: a Postgres database, authentication system, file storage… the works.”Today, Supabase is prolific. One of the most commonly called out products by makers on Product Hunt; one of the most redeemed Y Combinator “perks” with nearly a third of the most recent YC batch using it; they've secured a place as back-end infrastructure of choice for many founders setting out to build AI-centric applications.Paul has come a long way from his family farm near Kaikoura. Before Supabase, he co-founded South East Asian-based home-services startups ServisHero and Nimbus For Work, and participated in Entrepreneur First, Singapore. Today, he & co-founder Ant have raised $116M and lead a globally distributed company with 80 employees over 30+ countries. With their ambition and vision, it's clear they're just getting started.In today's episode, we discuss:* Paul's journey from NZ to Malaysia and now Singapore.* Building and scaling Supabase as a globally distributed team.* The impact of AI on software development, and what to use if you're getting started today.* Underrated benefits of open source for recruiting, growth, and how to think about product development.Links:Supabase:* Supabase website: https://supabase.com/* Supabase on Twitter/X (great follow) https://x.com/supabase* $80M Series B announcement: https://techcrunch.com/2022/05/10/supabase-raises-80m-series-b-for-its-open-source-firebase-alternative/Paul:* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paulcopplestone/* Twitter/X: https://x.com/kiwicopple* Blog: https://paul.copplest.one/blog/ (so much good stuff in here)* GitHub: https://github.com/kiwicoppleTimestamps:(00:00) Intro(01:18) Paul's origin story(04:05) Founding ServisHero in Malaysia(06:23) Joining the Entrepreneur First program(08:58) Why founders should think about setting up their HQ in Singapore(09:57) Founding Supabase(11:36) The benefits of open source(13:43) Insight into Supabase customers and how AI is changing the game(15:33) How open source helps with recruiting(18:18) Taking a “product led growth” approach to enterprise customers.(21:12) When/how Supabase will “cross the chasm” as it matures into a enterprise customer base.(22:19) How AI is changing devtools(24:09) Paul's angel investing thesis(26:33) Thinking about companies like countries(28:59) Paul's favourite blog posts from his personal archive(31:06) How we can be helpful to Paul!Subscribe at diaspora.nz to receive new episodes every Friday! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S2 | E2 — Victoria Ransom (Co-founder of Prisma, Wildfire) on her journey to a $450M acquisition by Google, reinventing school at Prisma & what's next for education.

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2024 47:27


    Victoria Ransom is the Founder of Prisma — a cohort-based online school: “preparing 4-12th graders for a rapidly changing future, with an accredited, project-based virtual program where kids build real community.” Raised on an asparagus farm near Bulls — Victoria's journey over the past few decades is a truly inspiring one... she founded and led Wildfire, a social media marketing platform which rose to prominence helping brands build their presence on Facebook, before being acquired by Google for $450M in 2012; was honoured by President Obama as a “Champion of Change” for her accomplishments as an immigrant entrepreneur and innovator, picked up an MBA from Harvard; was named #19 on Fortune Magazine's 40 under 40 list, and so much more.In today's episode, we discuss:* The early days building Wildfire - building a culture and company that customers love as much as the product* How the Google acquisition went down, integration and operating inside the belly of the beast afterwards * What's wrong with the current education system, why Victoria chose to exit the system + build a new school for her family. * Strategies for developing resilience in children and what to expect in the future of education. Referenced:* Forbes 40 under 40 (2012): https://fortune.com/ranking/40-under-40/2012/victoria-ransom/* Google's $450M acquisition of Wildfire: https://techcrunch.com/2012/07/31/google-acquires-wildfire/* Obama White House - A Nation of Entrepreneurial Journeys: https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/blog/2013/06/04/nation-entrepreneurial-journeys* Prisma: https://www.joinprisma.com/* Wildfire: https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/wildfire-interactiveWhere to find Victoria online:* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/victoriaransom/* Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/victoria_ransomTimestamps:[00:00] Intro[01:37] Three traits of a great founder[03:31] Victoria's origin story[05:59] Pivoting from investment banking into adventure travel[08:37] Building and scaling Wildfire[11:46] Bootstrapping before raising money[12:30] Wildfire's path to acquisition[17:16] Why life after acquisition was challenging[19:29] Prisma's origin story[24:41] Inside Prisma's education model[30:19] The challenges of teaching kids resilience[32:28] Prisma's potential to scale[37:34] Will college education become obsolete?[39:24] Victoria's biggest role model[40:38] What it's like founding a company with your partner[42:04] Advice for Kiwi entrepreneurs[43:49] What's next for Victoria and Prisma[44:58] How to help Victoria This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S2 | E1 — Hamish McKenzie (Co-founder and Chief Writing Officer at Substack), on the Future of Media, Navigating the Culture Wars, and Empowering Creators.

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2024 38:32


    Hamish McKenzie is the co-founder and Chief Writing Officer at Substack.Substack is building a “new economic engine for culture” — enabling writers, podcasters, and now video creators to publish and monetise their content directly through subscriptions. Today, newsletter creators on Substack have over 35 million active subscriptions, including 3 million+ to paid content. The Company has gone from strength to strength, reaching near “verb” status synonymous with online newsletters— and most recently raised capital at a $650M valuation.Before Substack, Hamish was Lead Writer at Tesla — going on to author “Insane Mode: How Elon Musk's Tesla Sparked an Electric Revolution to End the Age of Oil”, and a journalist writing for publications in New Zealand, Australia, Hong Kong, Canada, the UK, and the US. Hamish hails from Central Otago and attended the University of Otago.In today's episode, we discuss:* Hamish's journey from NZ to the US, key influences and inflection points* Substack's role in the future of media, and how they see the vision unfolding* Building Substack, and challenges along the way including culture wars, content moderation, and echo-chambers.* How AI is changing content creation, and how they're gearing up to support creators in a future dominated by* lessons, insights from his time at Tesla, working with Elon Musk, and authoring “Insane Mode”Where to find Hamish McKenzie:* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hamishmckenzie/* Substack: https://substack.com/@hamish* Website: https://hamishmckenzie.com/Timestamps:(00:00) Intro(00:57) Building “a new economic engine for culture”(02:29) Hamish's journey from Otago to journalism(05:57) Covering China, the Olympics, and Tencent(06:51) The disruption of social media(09:15) How Substack started(12:20) Substack's business and pricing model(19:26) Winning culture wars(22:50) The controversy of content moderation(26:24) Why Elon tried to nuke Substack(28:50) Working for Elon and Tesla(30:00) Substack's thesis(32:17) Solving echo-chambers(33:23) How Notes is taking on Twitter/X(34:16) Why AI won't replace content creators(35:49) How to help Hamish(37:06) Hamish's recommended Substacks(38:14) OutroSome of Hamish's recommended Substacks for Kiwis This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S1 | E5 — Thomas Harding — Co-founder & CEO of Mish Guru on the future of Snapchat and Building a Remote Team

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2017 29:43


    Today we catch up with Tom Harding, Founder and CEO of Mish Guru, the startup leading the charge in helping brands effectively develop, monitor and monetise content through Snapchat's platform. Before empower brands to tell better stories through Snapchat, Tom was co-founder of Sitesorted and has been involved in the Lightning lab incubator back in New Zealand after a dual degree in engineering at Canterbury.In this episode David and Tom chat about what they're watching in growing their business, a deep dive on building successful remote teams and doing business as a Kiwi in New York.Huge thank you to Sam Ragnarsson for the intro that made this episode possible, and we hope you get a lot out of this episode with this great Kiwi founder making waves in the US. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S1 | E4 — Mike Forster, Founding Team at Onfido, on how charging customers more makes a startup stronger, understanding big brand marketing, and angel investing at the bottom of the world

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2017 18:44


    Mike Forester - on how charging customers more makes startup stronger, understanding big brand marketing, and angel investing at the bottom of the world by Diaspora.nz This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S1 | E3 — Steven Banerjee, Founder of Mekonos on enabling the next wave of genomic medicine, and jumping from accademia to startups

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2017 17:54


    Steven Banerjee - Founder of Mekonos on enabling the next wave of genomic medicine, and jumping from accademia to startups by Diaspora.nz This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S1 | E2 — Campbell Brown, Founder of PredictHQ on the information economy and what it takes to crack the US market.

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2017 20:42


    Campbell Brown - Founder of PredictHQ on the information economy and what it takes to crack the US market. by Diaspora.nz This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

    S1 | E1 — Alex Kendall - Co-founder of Wayve.ai on Machine Vision and the Future of Autonomous Driving

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2017 23:11


    Alex Kendall - Co-founder of Wayve.ai on Machine Vision and the Future of Autonomous Driving by Diaspora.nz This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.diaspora.nz

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