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Building a Bridge Across the Valley of Death

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Manage episode 504916212 series 3533520
Content provided by Walter Thompson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Walter Thompson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Frontier tech startups don’t fail because the science is bad — they fail because no one needs what they’re building.

In this episode, Roadrunner Venture Studios CEO/co-founder Adam Hammer explains how to avoid that fate.

We talk about why the U.S. struggles to turn research into startups, why being right isn’t enough, and what it really takes to cross the Valley of Death between lab science and real-world demand.

Along the way, Adam shares practical insights for first-time founders, including:

  • How to test whether your problem is painful enough to sell
  • What the studio model offers that VCs and accelerators can’t
  • Why most technical founders struggle with pitching — and how to fix it
  • And what scientists need to unlearn to become CEOs

If you’re building something deep, hard, or new — don’t skip this one.

RUNTIME 41:11 EPISODE BREAKDOWN

(2:32) How a career spanning national labs, venture capital, and startup leadership led to Roadrunner Venture Studios.

(7:46) “ Our goal is to compress all the mistakes that you would make in a three-year period into a year.”

(8:50) The three frontier tech sectors Roadrunner focuses on: advanced energy, advanced manufacturing, and advanced compute.

(10:28) Why it’s so hard to translate lab science into sustainable, venture-scale businesses.

(13:49) Adam shares ideas for bridging America’s structural gap in commercializing frontier tech.

(16:38) “ Roadrunner serves as a de-risking mechanism for ideas and for people.”

(21:12) “ In science, you win by being right. But in startups, you win by being useful.”

(24:23) What Adam looks for in a pitch deck.

(27:15) When it comes to sourcing founders and ideas, “ we are as early as it gets.”

(31:54) Why Roadrunner Venture Studios set up shop in New Mexico.

(34:16) If he could fix one common founder misconception, what would it be?

(36:26) “ There's nothing innate that predetermines whether somebody can or cannot be a founder.”

LINKS SUBSCRIBE

📥 Get the Fund/Build/Scale newsletter on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/7249143254363856897/

📸 Follow Fund/Build/Scale on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fundbuildscale/

Thanks for listening!

Walter.

  continue reading

89 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 504916212 series 3533520
Content provided by Walter Thompson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Walter Thompson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Frontier tech startups don’t fail because the science is bad — they fail because no one needs what they’re building.

In this episode, Roadrunner Venture Studios CEO/co-founder Adam Hammer explains how to avoid that fate.

We talk about why the U.S. struggles to turn research into startups, why being right isn’t enough, and what it really takes to cross the Valley of Death between lab science and real-world demand.

Along the way, Adam shares practical insights for first-time founders, including:

  • How to test whether your problem is painful enough to sell
  • What the studio model offers that VCs and accelerators can’t
  • Why most technical founders struggle with pitching — and how to fix it
  • And what scientists need to unlearn to become CEOs

If you’re building something deep, hard, or new — don’t skip this one.

RUNTIME 41:11 EPISODE BREAKDOWN

(2:32) How a career spanning national labs, venture capital, and startup leadership led to Roadrunner Venture Studios.

(7:46) “ Our goal is to compress all the mistakes that you would make in a three-year period into a year.”

(8:50) The three frontier tech sectors Roadrunner focuses on: advanced energy, advanced manufacturing, and advanced compute.

(10:28) Why it’s so hard to translate lab science into sustainable, venture-scale businesses.

(13:49) Adam shares ideas for bridging America’s structural gap in commercializing frontier tech.

(16:38) “ Roadrunner serves as a de-risking mechanism for ideas and for people.”

(21:12) “ In science, you win by being right. But in startups, you win by being useful.”

(24:23) What Adam looks for in a pitch deck.

(27:15) When it comes to sourcing founders and ideas, “ we are as early as it gets.”

(31:54) Why Roadrunner Venture Studios set up shop in New Mexico.

(34:16) If he could fix one common founder misconception, what would it be?

(36:26) “ There's nothing innate that predetermines whether somebody can or cannot be a founder.”

LINKS SUBSCRIBE

📥 Get the Fund/Build/Scale newsletter on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/7249143254363856897/

📸 Follow Fund/Build/Scale on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fundbuildscale/

Thanks for listening!

Walter.

  continue reading

89 episodes

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