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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this episode, hosts Jason Calacanis and Alex Wilhelm dive deep into the INVEST Act's passage through the House, which dramatically expands access to venture capital formation for everyday Americans. (01:47) The bipartisan legislation increases the cap for qualifying venture capital funds from $10 million to $50 million and raises participant limits from 250 to 500 people. The hosts explore how this democratizes startup investing and discuss current market dynamics including LightSpeed's massive $9 billion fundraise, iRobot's bankruptcy after regulatory blockade, and emerging trends in open-source robotics.
Jason is a serial entrepreneur, angel investor, and host of This Week in Startups. He's made early investments in companies like Uber, Robinhood, and Thumbtack, and runs Launch Accelerator. Jason also teaches Angel University, a course on angel investing where all proceeds go to charity, having donated over $250,000 in ticket sales.
Alex is a technology analyst and co-host of This Week in Startups. He's a former journalist who has made selective angel investments while transitioning from pure journalism to analysis and commentary on startup markets and venture capital trends.
The INVEST Act creates unprecedented opportunities for non-accredited investors to participate in venture capital through a new test system and expanded fund limits. (04:31) This means professionals earning $75,000 annually can now form investment syndicates with their peers. Jason specifically recommends that laid-off HR professionals band together to create $3-5 million micro-funds targeting their industry expertise. Practical Application: Form a 100-person syndicate where each member contributes $30,000-50,000 to create a focused industry investment vehicle leveraging your professional network and domain knowledge.
Jason advocates allocating 10% of your disposable income—money typically spent on entertainment, vacations, or gambling—toward startup investments instead. (10:09) He frames this as one-third entertainment (the thrill of discovery), one-third education (learning about emerging technologies), and one-third investing (potential returns). This approach makes angel investing accessible while maintaining appropriate risk management for your overall financial portfolio.
Jason warns that "no one is coming to help you with your job loss" as AI systematically replaces human roles across industries. (00:00) Over 50% of startup pitches they receive involve AI replacing specific job functions, often making one person 50 times more effective, which means 49 people lose their jobs. The solution isn't to resist change but to participate in creating the future by investing in and understanding the companies driving this transformation.
Companies that become overly dependent on single customers, partnerships, or revenue streams face existential risks when those relationships change. (38:12) Using Uber's success during COVID as an example—when ride revenue dropped, food delivery surged—Jason emphasizes the importance of multiple revenue streams. For startups, having any single customer represent more than one-third of revenue creates dangerous vulnerability that boards and founders must actively address.
Hugging Face's success with open-source robotics demonstrates how open systems prevent monopolistic pricing and accelerate innovation. (48:42) When proprietary systems like Tesla's Optimus or Figure's robots potentially charge high hourly rates, open-source alternatives provide market pressure and accessibility. This principle applies across technology sectors—open source projects act as competitive safeguards that keep incumbents honest on pricing and innovation.