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🎙️ Episode 18 is live! This time we sit down with Matt McDonnell, Managing Partner & co-founder of Stellifi VC and host of the Navigating Complexity podcast, to talk about what founders often overlook when raising capital and chasing product-market fit.
Matt brings a rare dual perspective as both a real estate investor and a venture capitalist — and his advice cuts through a lot of the noise founders hear about what “success” should look like.
What do we cover?
1. Success sits at the intersection of curiosity and steep learning: founders who follow problems they’re genuinely curious about unlock growth, even amid uncertainty.
2. Choosing capital is choosing a business model. Venture funding is a “one-way door”: once you take it, your business must operate on VC timelines and growth expectations. Raise late, and only when aligned.
3. Product-market fit is lived, not declared. True validation comes from customer behaviors — referrals, expansions, and inbound demand — not just hitting abstract metrics.
Matt also shares why geography matters less than people think, how knowledge asymmetry can be both an advantage and a trap, and why continuous learning is a founder’s best defense in fast-changing markets.
🎧 Tune in for a candid conversation on building smarter, scaling with intention, and choosing the right capital for your journey.
By Edgar Baum🎙️ Episode 18 is live! This time we sit down with Matt McDonnell, Managing Partner & co-founder of Stellifi VC and host of the Navigating Complexity podcast, to talk about what founders often overlook when raising capital and chasing product-market fit.
Matt brings a rare dual perspective as both a real estate investor and a venture capitalist — and his advice cuts through a lot of the noise founders hear about what “success” should look like.
What do we cover?
1. Success sits at the intersection of curiosity and steep learning: founders who follow problems they’re genuinely curious about unlock growth, even amid uncertainty.
2. Choosing capital is choosing a business model. Venture funding is a “one-way door”: once you take it, your business must operate on VC timelines and growth expectations. Raise late, and only when aligned.
3. Product-market fit is lived, not declared. True validation comes from customer behaviors — referrals, expansions, and inbound demand — not just hitting abstract metrics.
Matt also shares why geography matters less than people think, how knowledge asymmetry can be both an advantage and a trap, and why continuous learning is a founder’s best defense in fast-changing markets.
🎧 Tune in for a candid conversation on building smarter, scaling with intention, and choosing the right capital for your journey.