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Should Startups Stay in Stealth?

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Manage episode 504469005 series 2833920
Content provided by Elevano. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Elevano or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

What does it really mean to build in stealth—and when does it help or hurt? In this episode, Amir sits down with Yoni Michael, co-founder of Typedef, an AI infrastructure startup that recently came out of stealth. Yoni shares why his team chose to stay under the radar early on, how they balanced secrecy with customer discovery, and the lessons they learned about finding product-market fit in a noisy AI landscape. If you’re a founder or tech leader navigating early-stage strategy, this conversation offers practical insights you can apply right away.

Key Takeaways

• Stealth mode isn’t all or nothing—there’s a spectrum between total secrecy and open visibility

• Execution and speed of iteration matter more than protecting “the idea”

• Customer discovery should start before you even write code

• Messaging is never final—test, refine, and keep adjusting as you learn from design partners

• Investors expect shifts at the seed stage, but keeping them in the loop builds trust

Timestamped Highlights

00:38 — Why Typedef chose to launch in stealth and what they’re building in AI infrastructure

04:31 — The double-edged sword of operating in a crowded AI market

09:22 — How Yoni approaches customer discovery without giving away too much

13:55 — Shaping messaging and narrative before coming out of stealth

19:49 — Managing investor expectations when your product vision evolves

25:21 — How to connect with Yoni for advice and community in AI infra

A line that stuck with us

“Your competitive edge isn’t the idea—it’s the ability to execute and course correct fast enough to hit your runway.”

Resources mentioned

• Typedef: typedef.ai

• FENEC open-source framework: [GitHub link from Typedef site]

• Yoni Michael on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/yonimichael

Pro Tips

Yoni advises founders to test messaging as early as possible—whether through decks, demo sandboxes, or LinkedIn posts. The feedback loop is as valuable as product feedback.

Stay connected

If this episode gave you something to think about, share it with a founder or tech leader who’d benefit. And don’t forget to follow The Tech Trek on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube so you never miss future conversations.

  continue reading

528 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 504469005 series 2833920
Content provided by Elevano. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Elevano or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

What does it really mean to build in stealth—and when does it help or hurt? In this episode, Amir sits down with Yoni Michael, co-founder of Typedef, an AI infrastructure startup that recently came out of stealth. Yoni shares why his team chose to stay under the radar early on, how they balanced secrecy with customer discovery, and the lessons they learned about finding product-market fit in a noisy AI landscape. If you’re a founder or tech leader navigating early-stage strategy, this conversation offers practical insights you can apply right away.

Key Takeaways

• Stealth mode isn’t all or nothing—there’s a spectrum between total secrecy and open visibility

• Execution and speed of iteration matter more than protecting “the idea”

• Customer discovery should start before you even write code

• Messaging is never final—test, refine, and keep adjusting as you learn from design partners

• Investors expect shifts at the seed stage, but keeping them in the loop builds trust

Timestamped Highlights

00:38 — Why Typedef chose to launch in stealth and what they’re building in AI infrastructure

04:31 — The double-edged sword of operating in a crowded AI market

09:22 — How Yoni approaches customer discovery without giving away too much

13:55 — Shaping messaging and narrative before coming out of stealth

19:49 — Managing investor expectations when your product vision evolves

25:21 — How to connect with Yoni for advice and community in AI infra

A line that stuck with us

“Your competitive edge isn’t the idea—it’s the ability to execute and course correct fast enough to hit your runway.”

Resources mentioned

• Typedef: typedef.ai

• FENEC open-source framework: [GitHub link from Typedef site]

• Yoni Michael on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/yonimichael

Pro Tips

Yoni advises founders to test messaging as early as possible—whether through decks, demo sandboxes, or LinkedIn posts. The feedback loop is as valuable as product feedback.

Stay connected

If this episode gave you something to think about, share it with a founder or tech leader who’d benefit. And don’t forget to follow The Tech Trek on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube so you never miss future conversations.

  continue reading

528 episodes

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