In this episode, Julia Gottfriedsen, Head of Data Science & AI at OroraTech, shares how space and artificial intelligence come together to address one of the most pressing challenges of our time. We follow Julia’s journey and explore how technology, leadership, and vision can shape the future. She reflects on how seeing Earth from orbit, with its atmosphere and absence of borders, influences her perspective on responsibility, innovation, and collaboration.
Julia also discusses how OroraTech is building the world’s first thermal-infrared satellite constellation to detect and monitor wildfires in real time, providing critical insights for climate resilience and communities across the globe. She explains how running AI models directly on satellites enhances data quality and why vertical integration is essential for success in space technology. Beyond innovation, Julia emphasizes the importance of leadership, diversity, and inclusion, sharing how she builds high-performing teams in a fast-scaling deep-tech environment, why vulnerability and trust are central to her approach, and how she works to create more opportunities for women in tech and space.
In this special guest episode, Judith Dada (General Partner at La Famiglia) and Hanno Renner (Co-founder & CEO of Personio) join us to reflect on their time at CDTM and how it shaped their journeys over the past decade.
They talk about what made CDTM so formative, how it created a culture of ambition and trust, and why it continues to be a launchpad for some of Europe’s most impactful founders and investors. Judith shares how CDTM influenced her approach to backing early-stage companies, while Hanno reflects on how the program supported the earliest days of building Personio.
This episode is a celebration of community, curiosity, and what happens when driven people are given the space to think big - together.
Erik Muttersbach, co-founder of Forto and now Zauber AI, joins us to talk about what it takes to build globally competitive tech companies from Europe. A CDTM Spring 2013 alumnus, Erik reflects on his journey from being the first employee at DailyDeal, to launching and scaling Forto into one of Europe’s leading digital freight forwarders, and now starting over with Zauber AI.
We dive into why most startups scale too early, how product-market fit is often misunderstood, and why AI agents are finally making it possible to automate the chaotic workflows behind global logistics. Erik shares what he’s doing differently this time around — from hiring and fundraising to focusing relentlessly on building something indispensable.
He also opens up about life after Forto, the decision to return to zero-to-one, and how becoming a parent reshaped his relationship to time, focus, and ambition. If you're building in logistics, AI, or Europe, or just want an honest look at the highs and lows of company-building, this episode is for you.
Verena Pausder joins us to talk about what Germany needs to truly scale innovation. We dive into how the next generation of founders is redefining work, what’s broken in the startup ecosystem, and how AI can bridge the gap in digital education.
She shares lessons from leading the German Startup Association, building companies, and investing in women’s football. This episode is about mindset shifts, modern leadership, and why we need to stop underestimating young builders.
🎧 Topics include:
The risk-aversion problem in German entrepreneurship
How AI can transform classrooms and tutoring
Why Verena is optimistic about the new generation
#Startups #AI #Germany #Education #Leadership #VerenaPausder #Podcast #CDTM
In this episode, we sit down with Gustaf Alströmer, YC Partner and former Head of Growth at Airbnb, to explore how AI is rewriting the playbook for early-stage startups. From why output matters more than effort, to what truly defines exceptional founders today, Gustaf shares lessons from working with hundreds of companies. We also dive into the European startup ecosystem, building ambition at scale, and why immigrant founders consistently outperform. If you’re building in the AI era - or just want to understand what’s changed in startup land over the last two decades.
Insights from Marc Klingen CEO and co-founder of Langfuse, the open-source LLM observability platform.
In this episode, we dive Marc shares his journey of moving back to Europe post-YC and establishing a high-agency, high-trust team culture. We delve into the complexities of building an open-source community, the hurdles in exciting developers about your product, and strategies for monetization. Marc also shares observations on the current state of AI applications, highlighting common use cases like customer support, market research, and software development.
00:36 - The "WHY" of decisions
02:27 - The Langfuse Story
04:18 - Pivoting
05:09 - The "YC" effect
08:14 - Building high trust and high talent team
10:02 - Team Motivation
11:01 - Reasons not to start a company
12:21 - Building a Company in Europe
14:01 - Speed and Progress in AI
15:50 - Why open source?
19:49 - Creating a developer community
22:51 - Patterns in AI teams
26:58 - What do teams get wrong?
28:43 - Moats in AI applications
30:56 - Missing in Stack
34:08 - Afraid of and optimistic about....
35:01 - Running from and running towards
In conversation with Clemens Meyer, Technical Director @ Google DeepMind.
This time we first dive into Clemens’ journey from startups to joining DeepMind and making an impact in interdisciplinary teams. Then how to balance exploitation and exploration in research, with a focus on measurable progress tracking and finally Google’s early role in the AI race, and reflections on the exponential nature of AI progress. Clemens also shares behind-the-scenes insights into AlphaFold’s success—how it began and how ongoing team efforts helped shape its impact.
00:30 Clemens's responsibilities @ DeepMind
01:53 The shift from startups to managing research teams
07:17 Teams @DeepMind
09:55 How to make sure that teams are making progress
11:28 Exploration vs Exploitation
12:48 Communication is key
14:11 The DeepMind team structure
15:29 The AlphaFold story
24:55 The Gemini story
27:07 Google joining the transformer race
29:11 What to look for in people when making a team?
30:29 The AI hype and what people are missing
32:31 Advice to create impact
35:05 Final thoughts on what should be changed or encouraged @ CDTM
Insights from Viet Le, an Early-Stage VC and Partner @ General Catalyst: Betting on Young, Naive Founders and Navigating the AI Hype In this episode, we dive into a conversation with Viet who shares his unique investment philosophy focused on young, naive first-time founders. The discussion covers controversial opinions on the current AI hype and the importance of building and selling efficiently in the early stages. Viet also provides personal background on transitioning from a founder to a VC and offers insights on making independent investment decisions. Various topics such as defensibility in AI software, opportunities in the application layer of AI, and the importance of a bias for action in building startups are explored, along with the potential for AI-native companies to disrupt traditional industries. 00:00 Diving Right In: No Introductions Needed 00:30 Controversial Opinions in AI and VC 01:48 Founder Preferences: Young vs. Experienced 02:56 The Importance of Building and Selling 03:22 From Founder to VC: A Personal Journey 04:33 Making Independent Decisions in a FOMO Market 04:59 Investing in Gen AI: Insights and Examples 07:10 Defensibility in AI Software 09:23 The Future of AI in Coding and Applications 15:52 Consumer AI: Opportunities and Challenges 16:51 Essential Skills for Founders 22:37 Startup Advice: Action Over Whiteboards 25:56 Rapid Fire Questions and Final Thoughts