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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.
This episode features two innovative companies building autonomous solutions for real-world challenges. First, Alex interviews Salar al Khafaji, CEO of Monumental, a Dutch startup developing autonomous construction robots that automate bricklaying to address critical housing shortages across Europe and beyond. (03:23) Their three-robot system works together to handle supply chain and construction autonomously, achieving over 850 bricks per shift while requiring minimal human oversight.
The second segment features Mike Flanigan, CEO of Seasats, which creates autonomous marine vehicles (drone boats) for dual-use applications including defense, research, and commercial operations. (33:25) Their solar and fuel cell-powered boats can operate for extended periods with minimal human intervention, requiring only two days of training to deploy.
CEO and co-founder of Monumental, a Dutch construction robotics company. Based in Amsterdam, Salar leads a team developing autonomous bricklaying robots to address Europe's severe construction labor shortage. The company operates as a subcontractor, deploying fleets of robots that work together to automate wall construction with sub-millimeter precision.
Co-founder and CEO of Seasats, an autonomous marine vehicle company based in San Diego. Mike previously worked on the Scout Transatlantic project, sending an autonomous boat from Rhode Island to Spain. He has a background in engineering consulting across consumer goods, medical, and automotive industries, and now leads efforts to build dual-use drone boats for defense, research, and commercial applications.
Host of This Week in Startups and founder of Launch. Jason answers founder questions about startup culture, equity packages, and venture capital recruiting strategies. He's known for his direct advice on startup operations and has been investing in early-stage companies for over 15 years.
Monumental's success stems from deliberately choosing established materials (bricks and mortar) rather than introducing new construction materials. (11:07) Salar explains that when building something as permanent as a home, every stakeholder from architects to developers to regulators will resist unproven materials, creating massive headwinds. By keeping materials constant and only automating the process, they eliminate adoption friction while still achieving revolutionary productivity gains.
Instead of selling robots, Monumental operates as a subcontractor, taking on actual construction projects. (13:14) This approach accesses much larger revenue streams since contractors readily spend $500K on project work but would struggle to budget $500K for robot purchases. The model also generates 50-60% gross margins today with visibility toward 80-90% margins as autonomy improves, proving that taking operational complexity can yield software-like economics.
Monumental chose the Netherlands as their primary market because of its unique combination of high construction density, homogeneous building codes, and compact geography. (15:45) This allows them to drive 30 minutes to any pilot site rather than 6 hours, dramatically accelerating iteration cycles. The lesson for hardware startups is that market density matters more than market size in early stages.
Seasats focuses on building the smallest possible platform that can accomplish each mission rather than large, expensive systems. (54:44) Mike references how Ukraine used small USVs to drive the Russian fleet out of the Black Sea, demonstrating that small autonomous systems can achieve outsized strategic effects. This principle applies beyond defense - small, proliferated systems often outperform large, centralized ones in terms of cost, stealth, and manufacturing logistics.
Many maritime robotics companies struggle with "wildly negative" ROI in commercial markets, similar to current humanoid robotics companies. (55:18) Seasats solves this by building for both commercial survey work and defense applications. The commercial work provides positive ROI and real-world testing, while defense applications justify premium pricing. This dual-use approach creates sustainable business models in capital-intensive hardware sectors.