Powered by RND
PodcastsArteInvestment Climate

Investment Climate

Alex Shandrovsky
Investment Climate
Último episodio

Episodios disponibles

5 de 12
  • Foodini: Dylan McDonnell shares how to get funded in 2025
    Foodini: Dylan McDonnell shares how to get funded in 2025Investment Climate Podcast: Fundraising Playbooks From Food Tech CEOs and VCs In this podcast series, Alex Shandrovsky interviews investors about benchmarks for funding Alt Proteins in 2025 and uncovers the investment playbooks of successful Climate Tech CEOs and Leading VCs.Podcast Host Alex Shandrovksy is a strategic advisor to numerous global food tech accelerators and companies, including alternative proteins and cellular agriculture leaders. His focus is on investor relations and post-raise scale for agrifood tech companies. This podcast is syndicated through our media partners, Foodtech Weekly and Vegconomist.Episode 47: Foodini: Dylan McDonnell shares how to get funded in 2025This episode features Dylan McDonald, CEO of Foodini, a dietary-intelligence platform that powers truly personalized menus by mapping recipes down to ingredient level so diners know exactly what they can (and can’t) eat when dining out. Fresh off a $1.8M raise led by Untapped Ventures, Dylan explains why Foodini prioritized the B2B data layer first—standardizing opaque restaurant recipes and products—so consumer experiences can be accurate at scale. He shares case studies across SMBs, hotel groups, stadiums, and events showing personalized menus lift revenue and retention, cut staff questions by ~60%, and reduce costly mistakes, while Foodini’s disclaimers keep liability clear. We dig into defensibility (the recipe/ingredient data moat and AI tagging), how to answer “why won’t the majors just build it,” and what actually moved investors despite early low revenue: hard proof that personalization drives results. Dylan closes with what Foodini needs next—pilots and partnerships with online ordering platforms, multi-unit restaurant groups, stadiums, universities, and airlines.Key Facts Foodini:Goal: To empower individuals with food allergies, intolerances, and dietary preferences to dine safely and confidently, no matter where they are in the world.Recently  raised $1.8M led by Untapped Ventures and joined by Sister Ventures, MVP Capital Partners, and Solvable Syndicate.Alex’s Top Findings:The Cold Form That Closed a Lead. Lead investor came not from a warm intro but via a cold website form—rare, but proof to keep all channels open. “ They say when it comes to meeting your lead investor, it's warm introductions. It goes without saying is by far the most success we've had, just even in terms of getting meetings top of funnel. But ironically, I met our lead investor via a form on their website. It was one of those that actually came off. I completed a form. Their team got back to me, had a meeting, and from there, the rest is history. So just goes to show, even though a lot of the time those things don't come off, every so often they do."AI + Health: Investor Fit Beyond Capital. The lead’s AI focus and partner’s passion for wellness made them a “perfect combo” for Foodini’s thesis. " They [lead investor]  were a relatively new fund here in California with an AI focus, and AI is obviously very core and fundamental to what we do and our ability to scale our solution accurately. We did some research on them and their main partner there, who was also a guy who had a lot of interest in wellness, health, longevity, and lifestyle. So we quickly identified that the combination of that AI focus plus that vision in terms of health, wellness, longevity was the perfect combo for us.”ROI Case Studies Across Verticals. Enterprise, SMB, hotels, stadiums—all showed stronger retention, revenue lift, and fewer staff questions when Foodini was implemented. " Our data is showing that personalizing the menus and giving that experience to the consumers can drive revenue by as much as 15- 20% bottom line for restaurants. They're bringing their reten
    --------  
    37:24
  • Fungu'it: Cyrille Viossat shares how to get funded in 2025
    Fungu'it: Cyrille Viossat shares how to get funded in 2025Investment Climate Podcast: Fundraising Playbooks From Food Tech CEOs and VCs In this podcast series, Alex Shandrovsky interviews investors about benchmarks for funding Alt Proteins in 2025 and uncovers the investment playbooks of successful Climate Tech CEOs and Leading VCs.Podcast Host Alex Shandrovksy is a strategic advisor to numerous global food tech accelerators and companies, including alternative proteins and cellular agriculture leaders. His focus is on investor relations and post-raise scale for agrifood tech companies. This podcast is syndicated through our media partners, Foodtech Weekly and Vegconomist.Episode 46: Fungu'it: Cyrille Viossat shares how to get funded in 2025This episode features Cyrille Viossat, COO and CTO of Fungu'it, a pioneering French startup dedicated to creating sustainable, natural aromatic ingredients through circular economy practices using filamentous fungi. Cyrille discusses their recent €1.5M seed funding, strategic focus on market validation with early paying customers, and the importance of aligning with impact-driven investors like Asterion Ventures. He shares insights into building a strong team, navigating the fundraising process over 12 months, leveraging government grants and debt, and exploring exit strategies, including potential acquisitions. Cyrille emphasizes the value of balancing personal life with entrepreneurial ambition and highlights how community support and market traction are now more critical than patents in this fast-moving space.Key Facts Fungu'it:Goal: To make meat that's better for the planet, animals, and public health.Recently raised €4 million led by Asterion Ventures, with participation from Evolem and UI Investissement via Oser BFC.Alex’s Top Findings:France Advantage: Non-dilutive funding, public infrastructure, and leverage. Significant grants, BPI debt, public hosting (equipment/expertise), plus a European grant with a Spanish partner. “France has government schemes, and we had won some scheme. It is a competitive application, and we came up with a research program that enabled us to fund our company. BPI… has provided some government debt… and grants. We got a European grant because we are going to launch a project with a Spanish company that engages in different kinds of solid, safe fermentation."Traction over Patents (for this stage). Patents are in process, but investors prioritized market validation and paying customers. " We have started the process of getting our first patents, but we haven’t yet. It did seem that from the feedback we were getting, they weren't that bothered with the patient, and we were clear that we don't have it yet. The fact that we had a paying customer at the time. We now have two, but we just had one at the time. By presenting an example of a product that was used, it made it so much more tangible.”Valuation Approach: Needs-based + market benchmarks; lead helped align syndicate. They triangulated from capital needed to hit milestones and peer benchmarks; lead investors advocated for their target valuation. " It was impossible for us to claim how much the company is worth. So we tried to come up with proxies, one of which, maybe the scariest, would be how much it would take a huge company or how much investment they would need in order to get to where we are. You can also look at a business plan, and you know how much money you're gonna make if you invest this, and you put a discount for the risk. The second is compared to what happens on the market, if you look at we are ahead or trailing companies that would raise that amount of money, that would be valued at this amount or that amount. The thing is, our market traction was probably what made us feel confident that we could get a particular valuatio
    --------  
    38:46
  • The Better Meat Co.: Paul Shapiro shares how to get funded in 2025
    The Better Meat Co.: Paul Shapiro shares how to get funded in 2025Investment Climate Podcast: Fundraising Playbooks From Food Tech CEOs and VCs In this podcast series, Alex Shandrovsky interviews investors about benchmarks for funding Alt Proteins in 2025 and uncovers the investment playbooks of successful Climate Tech CEOs and Leading VCs.Podcast Host Alex Shandrovksy is a strategic advisor to numerous global food tech accelerators and companies, including alternative proteins and cellular agriculture leaders. His focus is on investor relations and post-raise scale for agrifood tech companies. This podcast is syndicated through our media partners, Foodtech Weekly and Vegconomist.Episode 45: The Better Meat Co.: Paul Shapiro shares how to get funded in 2025This episode features Paul Shapiro, CEO of The Better Meat Co., who just closed a new funding round in one of the toughest markets alternative protein has ever seen. Paul shares how the company weathered years of IP litigation, kept advancing with patents and regulatory wins, and built long-term trust with investors like Steve Jurvetson (Future Ventures) and Rob Reid (Resilience Reserve) — relationships nurtured since 2021 that finally culminated in a Series A lead in 2025. He breaks down The Better Meat Co.’s pragmatic strategy: positioning as an ingredient supplier to the $1T meat industry rather than a branded CPG, focusing on hybrid meat products that reduce animal use at scale, and pioneering cost-competitive mycoprotein through continuous fermentation. The conversation dives into investor management, transparency in board meetings, the importance of educating backers on biotech realities, and the values-driven yet pragmatic mission of building a truly scalable sustainability solution.Key Facts The Better Meat Co.:Goal: To make meat that's better for the planet, animals, and public health.Recently  raised $31 million in Series A, co-led by Future Ventures and Resilience Reserve.Alex’s Top Findings:Long-Term Investor Relationships Pay Off. The Better Meat Co. co-leads (Future Ventures & Resilience Reserve) were cultivated for years, with initial support via a convertible note. “Bruce Friedrich  from The Good Food Institute, many years ago, probably around 2021, introduced me to Rob Reid … he then introduced me to Steve Jurvetson.  They did do a convertible note, which was smaller than what we just did, but they did a convertible note at the end of 2021, and then they made their series A investment in 2025."Transparency and Education Are Critical in Board Meetings. The Better Meat Co. uses board time to expose challenges and teach investors technical fundamentals..  " We're highly transparent. We do not mask any bad things. We never wanted to be a board meeting where we're just merely informing the board of what we're doing, and that's it.  It's not our duty merely to inform them. We want to solicit their ideas, like they are there not just to govern the company, they're there to help. Guide what we are doing."Balancing Mission and Pragmatism. As a long-time vegan, Paul faced criticism for pursuing hybrid meat but stresses pragmatic impact.  " I had people criticizing me in podcasts and blogs, unfriending me on Facebook over this.   I've been a vegan for about 32 years, and I'd be thrilled if more people wanted to eat that way. But I'm also a pragmatist, and I recognize again that meat demand is going up, not down. People like to live in a bubble and think that the world is going the way that they want it to. In reality, it is going in the opposite way. Meat demand is up; it's at an all-time high."
    --------  
    29:01
  • Prefer: Jake Berber shares how to get funded in 2025
    Prefer: Jake Berber shares how to get funded in 2025Investment Climate Podcast: Fundraising Playbooks From Food Tech CEOs and VCs In this podcast series, Alex Shandrovsky interviews investors about benchmarks for funding Alt Proteins in 2025 and uncovers the investment playbooks of successful Climate Tech CEOs and Leading VCs.Podcast Host Alex Shandrovksy is a strategic advisor to numerous global food tech accelerators and companies, including alternative proteins and cellular agriculture leaders. His focus is on investor relations and post-raise scale for agrifood tech companies. This podcast is syndicated through our media partners, Foodtech Weekly and Vegconomist.Episode 44: Prefer: Jake Berber shares how to get funded in 2025This episode of the Investor Climate Podcast features a return conversation with Jake Berber, co-founder and CEO of Prefer, who just closed an oversubscribed $4.2M pre-A round to future-proof climate-threatened crops starting with coffee and cocoa. Jake walks through the full fundraising playbook—from building a transparent non-NDA data room and leveraging warm intros, to overcoming MOU skepticism with conservative revenue modeling and positioning IP licensing as a capital-light growth driver. He shares candid lessons from six months of 20+ investor calls per week, a 1.5% conversion rate, and how the round came together with co-leads At One Ventures and Chancery Hill Capital. The discussion blends tactical fundraising insights with founder resilience, showing what it takes to raise in today’s tougher climate tech market.Key Facts Prefer:Goal: To future-proof food & beverage, starting with coffee and chocolate.Recently closed an oversubscribed $4.2M pre-A round co-led by At One Ventures and Chancery Hill Capital.Alex’s Top Findings:Funnel Management: Brutal Conversion Rates. Out of 500+ reachouts, only three checks closed (~1.5%). Jake emphasizes grit and volume. "We had 200 venture capital funds, CVCs, EVCS, government agencies, and family offices in our CRM that we had spoken with. So we had over 200 different entities that we spoke with that were interested in raising money and took a call with us. In terms of people who reached out, I'm guessing 500 plus. I would say 50% of them opted into a non NDA data room and 20 20% opted into the full NDA data room. "Warm Intros Are Non-Negotiable. Fundraising = sales. Investors judge founders by their ability to secure warm introductions. " I think that investors want to see that you are a good enough salesperson to get a warm introduction to them. I bring it back to sales because what we've learned in our industry, being a B2B food tech company, is that a warm introduction to a customer is infinitely more effective than a cold reach out to a customer. And so good investors know that if you're able to get a warm introduction to me, the investor, that means that you can get a warm introduction to the customer. If you can get warm introductions to customers, you are a better salesperson, and in turn, you have a chance of having better revenue as a company. So I bring it back to just showing a skillset of being able to get connected with people. I'm sure there's data around a higher rate of first call via warm introduction versus cold. I'm sure that's out there, but I don't have exact numbers on it."Data Room Strategy: Radical Transparency. Jake used a non-NDA data room with nearly everything except customer names and IP details to accelerate diligence. "The only difference in our NDA data room versus non-NDA data room is customer names and IP information. We keep our forward-looking financial model in there. We keep in MOU amounts, but we redact all contracts of names or anything. So you can still see the structure of the MOUs, that there's a signature on there that they're legitimate
    --------  
    33:36
  • Loopworm: Ankit Bagaria shares how to get funded in 2025
    Loopworm: Ankit Bagaria shares how to get funded in 2025Investment Climate Podcast: Fundraising Playbooks From Food Tech CEOs and VCs In this podcast series, Alex Shandrovsky interviews investors about benchmarks for funding Alt Proteins in 2025 and uncovers the investment playbooks of successful Climate Tech CEOs and Leading VCs.Podcast Host Alex Shandrovksy is a strategic advisor to numerous global food tech accelerators and companies, including alternative proteins and cellular agriculture leaders. His focus is on investor relations and post-raise scale for agrifood tech companies. This podcast is syndicated through our media partners, Foodtech Weekly and Vegconomist.Episode 43: Loopworm: Ankit Bagaria shares how to get funded in 2025In this episode, I talk with Ankit Alok Bagaria, co-founder and CEO of Loopworm, a Bangalore-based biotech startup using insect-based systems to produce high-value proteins for nutrition, diagnostics, and biopharma. Ankit shares how Loopworm raised a $3.25M pre-Series A round led by WaterBridge Ventures and Japan’s Enrission India Capital, and how they built investor conviction around a new recombinant protein platform—while continuing to scale a profitable animal nutrition business. We dive into using silkworms as living bioreactors, building hyper-prepared data rooms, navigating biotech objections in India’s VC landscape, and why Loopworm is designed as a long-term insect biotech platform—not just an insect protein startup.Key Facts Loopworm:Goal: To redefine how industries approach nutrition, health, and wellness by maximising the value of insects across various applications.Recently raised $3.4M in seed funding led by WaterBridge Ventures and Enrission India Capital.Alex’s Top Findings:Existing Investors Can Be the Best Lead Investors. Loopworm’s pre-Series A was led by WaterBridge Ventures, an existing investor who doubled down because of strong business performance and a promising new vertical. ” So we already knew Water Bridge Ventures from before. We have been in touch with them for the last three years. They also participated and invested in our seed round. So they have doubled down in this round with us, which shows a lot of confidence from existing investors. Obviously, they were much more aware in terms of the progress at Loopworm in terms of what we were trying to achieve, the major breakthrough that we got with our recombinant protein platform. That is where I think that confidence came in, where they straightaway gave us a commitment like when we started raising our funds in this round, and then we got a hold of new investors coming in as well.”Cold Outreach Can Land Strategic Investors. Japanese investor was sourced via a short LinkedIn message emphasizing traction and capital already committed. "I saw news… fund is actively looking at investments in India… reached out on LinkedIn. Japan can be a great market for us, since we work with silkworms. I essentially reached out to them on LinkedIn, stating, ‘I am raising a $3 million round with $1.5 million in commitments. Happy to connect,’ they replied, ‘Glad to get connected. Let's get on a call. Looks interesting.’”Data Room & Preparedness Shortened Due Diligence. Ankit prepared questions, hyperlinked Q&A in Google Drive, plus factory and process videos, and accelerated the close. “ From our last seed round of investment, what I learned was that it's better to be prepared with all the data rooms, FAQs, etc. So I can essentially predict the hundred questions that an investor would ask me and create supporting documents for them. From a financial due diligence and a legal due diligence perspective, even from an ESG due diligence perspective, we had already created data rooms. We even prepared five videos.” 
    --------  
    39:08

Más podcasts de Arte

Acerca de Investment Climate

We are uncovering the investment playbooks of successful Climate Tech CEOs and Leading VCs.
Sitio web del podcast

Escucha Investment Climate, El Arte de la Guerra de Sun Tzu y muchos más podcasts de todo el mundo con la aplicación de radio.net

Descarga la app gratuita: radio.net

  • Añadir radios y podcasts a favoritos
  • Transmisión por Wi-Fi y Bluetooth
  • Carplay & Android Auto compatible
  • Muchas otras funciones de la app

Investment Climate: Podcasts del grupo

Aplicaciones
Redes sociales
v7.23.9 | © 2007-2025 radio.de GmbH
Generated: 9/17/2025 - 10:12:45 AM