Startup Stories from the Treehouse

Todd Gagne
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Apr 9, 2026 • 51min

How a Serial Entrepreneur Built a News Product by Ignoring Everything Big Media Does

Kira Shishkin, founder of Informed.now, built a news product designed to be used for just thirty seconds a day—five bullet points, no images, no feeds. On a recent episode of Startup Stories from the Treehouse, he shared the principles behind this approach. His core lessons: obsess over the problem your customers share, not their demographics. Force a "Day One Hypothesis" and iterate from real feedback rather than waiting for certainty. Use Minimum Viable Information to protect decision-making speed. Make advisors useful by sharing written memos instead of open-ended questions. Trace news and industry information back to primary sources. And narrow your appeal deliberately—filtering out misaligned users upfront saves more than converting them ever will. Unexpected users like farmers and Uber drivers validated the product's real market: anyone who wants to feel informed but hates the news cycle. Listen to the full episode on Startup Stories from the Treehouse and try the product at informed.now. Subscribe to the Wildfire Labs Substack for podcast summaries and more insight on building a tech startup.
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Mar 26, 2026 • 54min

Revenue First, Perfect Later

Technical founders often overbuild in isolation, polishing products no one has validated. Adam Link — three-time founder, Coinbase IPO alum, angel investor, and now head of Fireweed Capital — learned that revenue, not perfection, creates opportunity. Ship early. Let it be imperfect. Sales isn’t a dark art; it’s debugging human problems. Identify the pain, confirm it exists, and offer a fix. Remember the “3% rule”: only a small fraction of your market is ready to buy today — focus on them. Beware the “dangerous middle,” where too much runway kills urgency. Revenue pressure drives clarity. Investors don’t just fund products; they fund competent, coachable founders who understand their numbers and have learned from failure. And in the AI era, prototypes beat pitch decks — execution speed is the new advantage. Above all, build from financial stability so you can take smart risks. CTA: Stop polishing. Ship something this week, talk to ten real users, and let the market shape what you build. Subscribe to the Wildfire Labs Substack for podcast summaries and more insight on building a tech startup.
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Mar 12, 2026 • 47min

The Hidden Superpower Early Founders Overlook: Why Your Message Matters More Than Your Tools

Justin Rashidi, co-founder and chief strategy officer at CEDEX and founder of SeedEx, is a data-driven growth and marketing consultant. He explains that outbound succeeds when the message is razor‑clear, not flashy channels. He recommends listening calls to learn industry vocabulary, testing narrow ICPs, practical AI automations, and hiring truth-tellers while pushing sales before ops.
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15 snips
Feb 26, 2026 • 1h 3min

The Four Pillars of a High-Performance Startup: Lessons from an Operator Who’s Scaled Companies from $4M to $350M

Tim Butler, founder of GrowthFire and operator who scaled teams and go-to-market engines, shares the four pillars of high-performance startups. He talks hiring with scorecards, validating demand before building, prioritizing go-to-market execution over product perfection, and crafting a culture of safe failure and consistent leadership.
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Feb 12, 2026 • 43min

Marketing Foundations: Building for Scale Before You’re Ready

Many startups waste marketing budgets due to unclear messaging and a fuzzy Ideal Customer Profile (ICP), not poor execution. Kae Kronthaler-Williams, a veteran marketing executive, advises founders to nail messaging, niche their focus, and build foundational infrastructure before scaling ad spend. Her 90-day plan: clarify messaging through customer interviews, validate ICP with targeted outreach, and set up tracking systems for key metrics. Only after achieving 60-70% deal pattern repeatability should founders expand beyond their initial segment or invest heavily in paid channels. Diverse teams help avoid blind spots and create resonant messaging. To scale responsibly, start small, prioritize alignment across marketing, sales, and customer success, and measure pipeline contribution—not just leads. Audit hiring practices for bias to strengthen your team and marketing outcomes.Ready to build a repeatable pipeline and avoid wasted spend?Learn more from Kae at kaewilliams.com or connect on LinkedIn and Substack! Subscribe to the Wildfire Labs Substack for podcast summaries and more insight on building a tech startup.
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Jan 29, 2026 • 45min

Why Your Customer Data Is Lying to You

In this episode of Startup Stories from the Treehouse, Andy Sitison of Share More Stories shares hard-earned lessons from transitioning out of systems integration into building an AI-driven company. His core insight: surveys optimize answers, not understanding. By focusing on why customers behave the way they do—and designing for candor—founders can uncover motivations that drive real differentiation. Andy also brings realism to AI adoption, arguing that 30–40% automation is both powerful and practical, while human judgment remains essential. He explains how “cellular AI” preserves context, why services-to-product transitions take 2–3 years, and how founders outside tech hubs must deliberately stay sharp. The throughline is patience, precision, and deep customer empathy. Today, call one customer and ask why they hired you. Record it. Listen twice. Let their motivation—not your roadmap—guide your next move. Subscribe to the Wildfire Labs Substack for podcast summaries and more insight on building a tech startup.
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Jan 15, 2026 • 26min

Startup Stories - Season 4 Kickoff: What’s Next for the Podcast

Since launching their podcast, Mike and the author have published 54 episodes, evolving from uncertain beginnings to delivering sharp, relevant insights for founders. Season three saw a major shift: 90% of guests were inbound, prompting growth in interviewing skills and richer conversations on AI, product management, and capital trends. Consistency in publishing proved crucial, while analytics showed their audience is global, signaling the decline of geographic barriers for founders. However, challenges remain: podcast listenership lags behind their Substack readership, and they need to create more short-form content to meet founders where they are. Season four will focus on real-world AI applications, stories from capital-efficient founders outside major hubs, and rethinking product management for the AI era. The shift toward capital-efficient startups benefits both founders and smart investors. If you’re a founder building something unique—especially outside the usual tech hubs—reach out to share your story with Wildfire Labs! Subscribe to the Wildfire Labs Substack for podcast summaries and more insight on building a tech startup.
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Jan 8, 2026 • 54min

The Rise of the Domain Expert Founder: Why Industry Insiders Are Winning the Startup Game

In this end-of-year bookend episode, co-founders Todd Gagne and Mike Vetter of Wildfire Labs recap the key themes and trends they've observed with founders in their program over the past year. They dive deep into the rising necessity of deep domain expertise for founders, sharing compelling examples like AgSense (FinTech for ranching) and The Journeyman (wildland firefighting). The conversation explores the massive impact of AI and agents in collapsing the barriers to entry, making development faster, and driving a 'first-principles' rethink of traditional workflows to eliminate unnecessary steps. Finally, they discuss the psychological drivers of entrepreneurs, contrasting the unsustainable but high-octane "dirty fuel" (e.g., control, seeking fame) with more enduring, "clean fuel," and the importance of community to navigate the stresses of the startup journey, all contributing to the trend of creating more capital-efficient startups. Subscribe to the Wildfire Labs Substack for podcast summaries and more insight on building a tech startup.
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Dec 18, 2025 • 50min

The 15-Year Bootstrap: How Credibly Built a Fintech Without VC Money (And Why Culture Beats Capital)

Ryan Rosett, CEO of Credibly, shares how he built a thriving fintech without relying on venture capital, emphasizing that culture and transparency outlast quick funding. By bootstrapping through crises, leveraging modular microservices, and blending human expertise with AI, Credibly processes millions in loans rapidly and securely. Their hybrid in-office culture fosters innovation and knowledge sharing, while their Midwest roots provide cost and loyalty advantages. Rosett urges founders to prioritize discipline, modular tech, and trust-based culture over rapid fundraising. His journey proves that sustainable growth and resilience come from smart decisions, not just capital.Want to see how Credibly’s human-first, tech-smart approach can help your business? Learn more about their small business lending solutions at credibly.com. Subscribe to the Wildfire Labs Substack for podcast summaries and more insight on building a tech startup.
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Dec 4, 2025 • 51min

From Zero to Product-Market Fit: Essential Product Management Lessons for Early-Stage Founders

Shobit Chubb, Founder and CEO of Intentional Product Manager who helps PMs grow from tactical contributors to strategic leaders. He explores product-market fit and the 40% ‘would fight to keep’ heuristic. He stresses deep customer closeness, turning vision into measurable strategy, and using AI to cut busywork and prototype faster. He also covers pricing, unit economics, and building company AI practices.

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