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🧠Erik’s Take
In this follow-up to his interview with Victor Almeida, Erik zooms out to reflect on what building a digital business really looks like in Latin America—and what North American entrepreneurs often take for granted. From basic infrastructure challenges to deep-rooted cultural wisdom, this episode is a powerful reminder that hardship often breeds the greatest human capital. And behind Victor’s startup dream is a deeper calling: to create opportunity where access has long been limited.
🎯 Top Insights from the Interview
đź§© The Personal Layer
Erik’s reflection is rooted in humility—he acknowledges how much he’s taken for granted living and building in the U.S. The conversation made him reevaluate the assumptions baked into the startup ecosystem: bandwidth, funding, listing infrastructure, even social trust around digital tools. He draws a powerful connection between Victor’s “desert power” analogy (from Dune) and the strength of communities forged through challenge.
Erik also shares a deep appreciation for the emotional backbone of Victor’s journey: his mom’s push to “go outside and take risks,” and his uncle’s mantra to “plant a tree, write a book, build a business, and have a kid.”
đź§° From Insight to Action
🗣️ Notable Quotes
“Plant a tree. Write a book. Build a business. Have a kid. That’s a life well lived.” — Erik, reflecting on Victor’s uncle’s wisdom
“Scarcity breeds resilience—and that’s what creates the best human capital.” — Erik Berglund
“Most of us assume access to digital tools is universal. It’s not. That assumption is a privilege.” — Erik Berglund
“Victor’s not just building a startup—he’s building infrastructure where none exists.” — Erik Berglund
“You only need one win—and your life changes completely.” — Victor Almeida
đź”— Links & Resources
By Erik BerglundSend us a text
🧠Erik’s Take
In this follow-up to his interview with Victor Almeida, Erik zooms out to reflect on what building a digital business really looks like in Latin America—and what North American entrepreneurs often take for granted. From basic infrastructure challenges to deep-rooted cultural wisdom, this episode is a powerful reminder that hardship often breeds the greatest human capital. And behind Victor’s startup dream is a deeper calling: to create opportunity where access has long been limited.
🎯 Top Insights from the Interview
đź§© The Personal Layer
Erik’s reflection is rooted in humility—he acknowledges how much he’s taken for granted living and building in the U.S. The conversation made him reevaluate the assumptions baked into the startup ecosystem: bandwidth, funding, listing infrastructure, even social trust around digital tools. He draws a powerful connection between Victor’s “desert power” analogy (from Dune) and the strength of communities forged through challenge.
Erik also shares a deep appreciation for the emotional backbone of Victor’s journey: his mom’s push to “go outside and take risks,” and his uncle’s mantra to “plant a tree, write a book, build a business, and have a kid.”
đź§° From Insight to Action
🗣️ Notable Quotes
“Plant a tree. Write a book. Build a business. Have a kid. That’s a life well lived.” — Erik, reflecting on Victor’s uncle’s wisdom
“Scarcity breeds resilience—and that’s what creates the best human capital.” — Erik Berglund
“Most of us assume access to digital tools is universal. It’s not. That assumption is a privilege.” — Erik Berglund
“Victor’s not just building a startup—he’s building infrastructure where none exists.” — Erik Berglund
“You only need one win—and your life changes completely.” — Victor Almeida
đź”— Links & Resources