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AIR is an eVTOL company on a path to making personal aviation a mass-market product — not a commercial fleet play. With a $35M+ order book, aircraft already delivered, and double-digit revenues projected for 2026, AIR is an outlier in a sector where most well-funded competitors have yet to generate meaningful revenue. On this episode of BUILDERS, we spoke with Rani Plaut, CEO and Co-Founder of AIR, about what it actually takes to commercialize deep-tech hardware — and why the discipline to follow real purchase orders, not internal conviction, has defined every major strategic decision the company has made.
Topics Discussed:
Why electric aviation has failed to reach mass market — and the specific friction points AIR is engineering around
How real inbound demand from the US Air Force, Israeli Ministry of Defense, and commercial cargo operators shaped AIR's unmanned-first strategy — before it was a strategy
Why AIR is the first eVTOL company to achieve certification — and what most competitors got wrong structurally
AIR's B2C OEM model and the deliberate use of primes to access B2B and B2G markets without distraction
The content discipline behind AIR's marketing: only publish events that already happened
GTM Lessons For Deep-Tech Founders:
Treat lack of revenue as a product signal, not a feature. The common narrative in deep-tech is that staying pre-revenue keeps you agile. Rani rejects this directly: "Six, seven years into development you should be having some serious relationship — AKA money flowing in the right direction." If customers aren't paying for something you can actually deliver, the market is telling you something. Don't mistake the absence of sales for strategic optionality.
A purchase order is the only valid market signal — everything else is noise. Rani is precise about what "following the money" means at AIR: not LOIs, not pilots, not cooperation agreements with small countries. A real purchase order for a first unit, followed by orders for more units of something you can actually deliver. Founders should draw that same hard line internally about what counts as validation.
Let customer inbound reshape your go-to-market before you formalize it. AIR's unmanned program wasn't a planned wedge strategy — the US Air Force, Israeli Ministry of Defense, and cargo companies in Asia and Europe came to them organically once the aircraft was flying. Rani's decision framework was simple: if a customer is paying in a significant way for something with a follow-on tail, it's an easy yes. The lesson isn't "be reactive" — it's that real demand surfaces faster than internal roadmaps when you have a working product and short feedback loops.
Concentrate your innovation surface area or you will fail. AIR innovates on the aircraft platform itself but deliberately uses established components wherever possible — motors, propulsion, materials. Rani's framing is worth internalizing: "If you innovate on motors, propulsion, battery, new materials — the chances for success drop exponentially." For founders building on multiple novel bets simultaneously, this isn't a risk factor, it's a near-guarantee of failure. Decide what you're actually inventing and buy or partner for everything else.
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Sponsors: Front Lines — We help B2B tech companies launch, manage, and grow podcasts that drive demand, awareness, and thought leadership. www.FrontLines.io
The Global Talent Co. — We help tech startups find, vet, hire, pay, and retain amazing marketing talent that costs 50-70% less than the US & Europe. www.GlobalTalent.co
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Don't Miss: New Podcast Series — How I Hire Senior GTM leaders share the tactical hiring frameworks they use to build winning revenue teams. Hosted by Andy Mowat, who scaled 4 unicorns from $10M to $100M+ ARR and launched Whispered to help executives find their next role.
Subscribe here: https://open.spotify.com/show/53yCHlPfLSMFimtv0riPyM
By Front Lines Media5
66 ratings
AIR is an eVTOL company on a path to making personal aviation a mass-market product — not a commercial fleet play. With a $35M+ order book, aircraft already delivered, and double-digit revenues projected for 2026, AIR is an outlier in a sector where most well-funded competitors have yet to generate meaningful revenue. On this episode of BUILDERS, we spoke with Rani Plaut, CEO and Co-Founder of AIR, about what it actually takes to commercialize deep-tech hardware — and why the discipline to follow real purchase orders, not internal conviction, has defined every major strategic decision the company has made.
Topics Discussed:
Why electric aviation has failed to reach mass market — and the specific friction points AIR is engineering around
How real inbound demand from the US Air Force, Israeli Ministry of Defense, and commercial cargo operators shaped AIR's unmanned-first strategy — before it was a strategy
Why AIR is the first eVTOL company to achieve certification — and what most competitors got wrong structurally
AIR's B2C OEM model and the deliberate use of primes to access B2B and B2G markets without distraction
The content discipline behind AIR's marketing: only publish events that already happened
GTM Lessons For Deep-Tech Founders:
Treat lack of revenue as a product signal, not a feature. The common narrative in deep-tech is that staying pre-revenue keeps you agile. Rani rejects this directly: "Six, seven years into development you should be having some serious relationship — AKA money flowing in the right direction." If customers aren't paying for something you can actually deliver, the market is telling you something. Don't mistake the absence of sales for strategic optionality.
A purchase order is the only valid market signal — everything else is noise. Rani is precise about what "following the money" means at AIR: not LOIs, not pilots, not cooperation agreements with small countries. A real purchase order for a first unit, followed by orders for more units of something you can actually deliver. Founders should draw that same hard line internally about what counts as validation.
Let customer inbound reshape your go-to-market before you formalize it. AIR's unmanned program wasn't a planned wedge strategy — the US Air Force, Israeli Ministry of Defense, and cargo companies in Asia and Europe came to them organically once the aircraft was flying. Rani's decision framework was simple: if a customer is paying in a significant way for something with a follow-on tail, it's an easy yes. The lesson isn't "be reactive" — it's that real demand surfaces faster than internal roadmaps when you have a working product and short feedback loops.
Concentrate your innovation surface area or you will fail. AIR innovates on the aircraft platform itself but deliberately uses established components wherever possible — motors, propulsion, materials. Rani's framing is worth internalizing: "If you innovate on motors, propulsion, battery, new materials — the chances for success drop exponentially." For founders building on multiple novel bets simultaneously, this isn't a risk factor, it's a near-guarantee of failure. Decide what you're actually inventing and buy or partner for everything else.
//
Sponsors: Front Lines — We help B2B tech companies launch, manage, and grow podcasts that drive demand, awareness, and thought leadership. www.FrontLines.io
The Global Talent Co. — We help tech startups find, vet, hire, pay, and retain amazing marketing talent that costs 50-70% less than the US & Europe. www.GlobalTalent.co
//
Don't Miss: New Podcast Series — How I Hire Senior GTM leaders share the tactical hiring frameworks they use to build winning revenue teams. Hosted by Andy Mowat, who scaled 4 unicorns from $10M to $100M+ ARR and launched Whispered to help executives find their next role.
Subscribe here: https://open.spotify.com/show/53yCHlPfLSMFimtv0riPyM