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Imagine waking up every day knowing your job is to suffer on purpose because that’s the price of building something that can dominate a category. Brad Cowdrey (OPM 49) explains why startups aren’t glamorous, why GenAI changes what “coding” even means, and how his company eveoy aims to let brands “fill stores with people” on demand.
Brad describes himself as a deeply hands-on angel/operator often acting as CEO, CTO, and sales driver because he likes control, speed, and talent development. His core philosophy: don’t just write code; build systems that write code, a mindset he learned early while working around supercomputing. Today, he’s pushing engineers to shift from “coding” to higher-level thinking: prompting, agent swarms, and automation patterns that amplify output in the GenAI era.
He traces his start to Colorado Springs’ military-tech ecosystem, where, as a teenager, he got unusual access to hardware, operating systems, repairs, and low-level computing forming a fearless “just learn it” habit: call experts, ask questions, and build anyway. That foundation led to a lifelong obsession with data: he sees data as the exhaust of human behavior and prefers scientific decision-making over intuition dressed up as analytics.
He also shares a leadership model: startups move through distinct phases of construction, prototyping, operations and the CEO must change tools, tone, and org design accordingly. His daily resilience practice is simple but rigorous: reconnect to life goals every morning, pick 1–2 must-win actions for that day, and compound progress. OPM’s lasting value for him is the people, global perspectives, long-term friendships, and even meeting his co-founder.
Here are the Top 10 Takeaways from the conversation:
Books: Good to Great
By Sohin ShahSend us Fan Mail
Imagine waking up every day knowing your job is to suffer on purpose because that’s the price of building something that can dominate a category. Brad Cowdrey (OPM 49) explains why startups aren’t glamorous, why GenAI changes what “coding” even means, and how his company eveoy aims to let brands “fill stores with people” on demand.
Brad describes himself as a deeply hands-on angel/operator often acting as CEO, CTO, and sales driver because he likes control, speed, and talent development. His core philosophy: don’t just write code; build systems that write code, a mindset he learned early while working around supercomputing. Today, he’s pushing engineers to shift from “coding” to higher-level thinking: prompting, agent swarms, and automation patterns that amplify output in the GenAI era.
He traces his start to Colorado Springs’ military-tech ecosystem, where, as a teenager, he got unusual access to hardware, operating systems, repairs, and low-level computing forming a fearless “just learn it” habit: call experts, ask questions, and build anyway. That foundation led to a lifelong obsession with data: he sees data as the exhaust of human behavior and prefers scientific decision-making over intuition dressed up as analytics.
He also shares a leadership model: startups move through distinct phases of construction, prototyping, operations and the CEO must change tools, tone, and org design accordingly. His daily resilience practice is simple but rigorous: reconnect to life goals every morning, pick 1–2 must-win actions for that day, and compound progress. OPM’s lasting value for him is the people, global perspectives, long-term friendships, and even meeting his co-founder.
Here are the Top 10 Takeaways from the conversation:
Books: Good to Great