Seattle VC Profile: Katelyn Donnelly, Avalanche Venture Capital

When I started Ascend in 2019, I realized even though I was o-l-d OLD, I had more in common with the folks in town who were earlier in their professional investing journeys than the venerable VC’s I’d pitched as a founder. I admire and respect the new wave of Seattle/Pacific Northwest venture capitalists, and thought it would be fun to profile some of our region’s up and coming VC talents in these pages. —KW

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Katelyn Donnelly is a terrific investor. Whenever I partner with her for diligence on a new opportunity, or to think through how to help a mutual portfolio company, I come away impressed with her clarity of thought and her intellectual honesty.

What made you decide to be a professional investor?

I’ve always been an investor. Even in high school, I invested in public equities and thought about building a portfolio. I wrote my senior thesis on time zone arbitrage trading strategies. Investing is the greatest strategic game on the planet. I started Avalanche VC because there are some trends that are obviously the future and I wanted to make bets behind those that I had a competitive advantage or unique insight. It’s a privilege to be able to work with talented founders at the earliest stages.

What did you do before becoming an investor and how does that benefit your founders?

I started my career at McKinsey and then founded the corporate venture arm of Pearson in 2012. I’ve been an investor for a long time and have a deep background in education - spanning early childhood to life long learning. I’ve also started a company (Delivery Associates) that was boot strapped, profitable, and still growing strong.

For founders, I bring a well-rounded background. I know what it’s like to be a builder, a capital allocator, and a market thinker. I can particularly help those in education because I have participated and published on those markets develop globally for over 10 years. On future of work, I’ve founded and scaled a global, remote-first company to over 100 FTEs so I intuitively understand the customer experience through first-person experience.

What are your most successful investments so far?

From my Pearson days, my most successful investments are chains of low cost, high quality school in emerging markets. Spark Schools and APEC Schools are the two big ones that I was the first significant lead investor in.

From the last couple years, a carbon negative hydrogen power company called Wabash Valley Resources.

My Avalanche investments are too early to tell.

Why should founders want you on their cap table?

I aim to be the best value per dollar. I’m honest, direct, straightforward, and always act in your best interest. I’ll bring the full force of my creativity, problem-solving, and network to every conversation.

How many new pitches (actual calls/zooms) do you take per month?

100

How many new investments do you make per year?

20+ this year

What's your sweet spot(s) in terms of check size, valuation, and vertical?

Right now I’m doing $300K, pre-seed/seed, Future of Work/EdTech/Enterprise SaaS

What one portfolio company do you want to hype for us here?

I can’t pick favorites :)

What song is currently getting the most run on your Spotify/Apple Music?

Everything Maggie Rogers

Favorite shoes?

These No Bull Trainers get the most use these days!

Favorite cooking ingredient?

Everything I eat has olive oil in it.

Seattle VC Profile: Dennis Joyce, Tacoma Venture Fund

When I started Ascend in 2019, I realized even though I was o-l-d OLD, I had more in common with the folks in town who were earlier in their professional investing journeys than the venerable VC’s I’d pitched as a founder. I admire and respect the new wave of Seattle/Pacific Northwest venture capitalists, and thought it would be fun to profile some of our region’s up and coming VC talents in these pages. —KW

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Dennis Joyce is one of the most empathetic, supportive investors a founder can have on the cap table. He’s been dedicated to backing underestimated founders since before it was cool. Dennis is now a partner with emerging managers Tacoma Venture Fund, and shares his story below.

What made you decide to be a professional investor?

I was meant to be a VC. I just never knew it.

When I was younger, I never really had a clear career path that I was looking to pursue. I did pretty well in school but not great. I was ok in sports and music and other activities but did not distinguish myself in any particular field. I was a bit of a dabbler, who could pick something up quickly but never enough to gain mastery. I was mediocre at everything.

I always liked watching sports, then movies, and music, and later business. I always had a favorite athlete (Wayne Gretzky) or actor (Eddie Murphy) or band (Megadeth) that I was “invested” in.

In the late 90s, the first wave of celebrity VCs emerged, I was fascinated by these guys who made seemingly gobs of money investing early in companies like Netscape or AOL. I would read a story about Jim Clark investing in Marc Andreesen and making millions being the person to discover Netscape. It seemed so cool to me.

I had always been entrepreneurial and innovative. I’d start a band or business here or hatch an idea but I never really had the passion to make something my work. It’s as if I wanted to see something happen, but I never really had the passion to do it myself.

Over the years it dawned on me VC was perfect for me. It allowed me to support entrepreneurs, it allowed me to dabble in dozens of ideas without having to “pick a lane”. It allowed me to passionately support multiple endeavors at a time and dream of a better world. I get to support other people pursuing their unique passions

What did you do before becoming an investor and how does that benefit your founders?

I’ve spent a little time doing pretty much anything you’d imagine. I grew up in a family business where my father managed real estate during the day while working as a security guard at night. I’m from a family of 7 and everyone took turns working at the family business. My childhood jobs were rolling coins (arcade money), painting apartments, renting apartments and stores, landscaping, and doing pretty much anything a small apartment complex.

After college I did some entrepreneurial things like a 90s version of Barstool Sports, spent a minute on Wall Street, and more time in real estate. I caught a break in business school, working at a VC firm in Japan, which is where I solidified my dream to work as a full time VC. Unfortunately, I had to take the long way around as I could not land a job after graduation. So I started back in real estate, did some rehabs and development. I later, invested in a couple entertainment products before finally returning to early stage investing – this time as an angel.

I began spending all of my time at the angel groups with the dream of one day being a real live, honest to goodness VC. After a few years volunteering my time at the angel groups I was able to connect with the guys starting Tacoma Venture Fund and we put a plan in place to start TVF. And here we are.

My career has had a million twists and turns and dead-ends before landing me at TVF. I think or all of the false-starts and frustration and realize they were all leading me to where I am now which is my dream job. In order to be successful you need the passion and commitment to make the necessary sacrifices it takes to be successful. If you are incapable or unwilling to make those sacrifices, you will not have success. You got to love it. I’ve never loved anything enough to make those sacrifices other than VC

What are your most successful investments so far?

The most successful ones are the one still operating. I am grateful to have about 20 still going strong and growing. I’ve done a few deals where I was in early that have had subsequent Series Seed or Series A raises, but I am still really early in my career and I’m still waiting for the “big one”. I am a proud investor of some great emerging companies such as Blokable, Ripl, Give InKind, Flavorcloud, Heroclip, Tribl, WeSolv, geeRemit, Cone and Steiner, and TVF’s newest investment Brightly.eco.

But no success feels as good as the disappointments feel bad. I’ll never get over the failures. It’s like losing a child.

Why should founders want you on their cap table?

Because I will have their back through thick or thin. They can text me 24 hours a day 7 days a week 365 days out of the year with good news, bad news, frustration, happiness and sadness and I will support them with every fiber of my being.

How many new pitches (actual calls/zooms) do you take per month?

Probably 30-40 if I’m counting a demo day or an angel group screening session. I hear anecdotes of VCs seeing more than that but I wouldn’t be able to be attentive to many more than that.

How many new investments do you make per year?

TVF will do between 6-12 this year including follow-ons. We are just getting going so it’s hard to say.

What's your sweet spot(s) in terms of check size, valuation, and vertical?

First institutional raise until about Series A. Check size ranges from $150K – $500K although we may allocate more for a follow-on with high conviction. We are sector agnostic and we like to get decent economics on the deal so we can have some upside. Nothing fancy.

What one portfolio company do you want to hype for us here?

If forced to pick, I’ll say our newest one – Brightly.eco. It is a platform for conscious consumers.

What do you think the next ten years looks like for Seattle/Pacific Northwest startups?

The next 10 years will be a very busy time for the PacNW ecosystem. We’ll see a lot of startups emerge with great prospects and really experienced teams. I’m optimistic that we will continue to lead the country in stimulating innovation at the early stages. Hopefully we are just getting warmed up.

I’d like to see the emergence of a few more great VC firms and emerging managers build big funds such as Ascend.vc and us at TVF so we can lead big rounds on the founders that we love. In order to do that we must attract more capital to our funds from outside of the ecosystem. There is more than just three funds in Seattle and there are a number of great investors at the earliest stages. In 10 years, I hope TVF will be on our $150M Fund III.

I’d like to see some of the cliquie-ness I see disappear and for more underserved founders get the opportunity to raise big rounds from the big firms. I’d like to see more large risks being taken on people that would not normally get a shot (female founders and minority led teams). I’d like to see more capital deployed in secondary cities like Portland and Tacoma.

What song is currently getting the most run on your Spotify/Apple Music?

I’ve been preparing for years to answer a question like this so I can come off as cool and hip, and in the know. Since everything, even my music choices, is an investment, I need come up with a banger.

SZA – Good Days

I’ve been obsessed with SZA since the CTRL album. She’s a transcendent talent and you can’t fake talent.

Favorite shoes?

I never had cool shoes. I grew up playing hockey so no one really had cool shoes. Back in the day though I liked those Bo Jackson Nikes? Have they re-issued those?

Favorite cooking ingredient?

I put a little bit of Salt and Pepper in everything I cook.

Anything else to say?

To me everything is an investment. In life we invest our time, our love, our passion. Life is too short to invest in anything for the wrong reasons. I only expect one thing from a founder – that they be impeccable with their word. I can deal with anything else, but I can’t deal with someone that is bad with their word.

VC is not an easy asset class. There is never enough capital, it is illiquid, companies take forever to grow, and there are thousands of reasons why a company will fail. In order to be successful in this asset class you need to put your heart and soul into the process of building innovative companies that are developing products that don’t exist. It’s scary and risky and filled with disappointment at every turn. To last as an early stage investor, you need to love it, otherwise you’ll be miserable.

I love investing in the early stage. I love the companies, I love the entrepreneurs, I love my co-investors (ahem Kirby Winfield ahem). There is nothing more interesting to me than talking investing with other investors. They are my “squad”. They are my tribe. I’ve never felt a sense of belonging in any other walk of life. I want to be a Pro at this, an All Star, a HOFer, the G.O.A.T.

Ascend Founder Profile: Curtis Fonger - Whalesync

This is a series of real talk blog posts meant to let founders share a bit about themselves and their companies without the marketing jargon and “killing it” puffery of most tech startup profiles.

What does your company do, for who, in plain English please!

Whalesync lets businesses automatically sync their data across no-code tools like Airtable and Webflow. This makes it easy to manage things like customer data, marketing campaigns, and blog content spread across their SaaS applications without needing to hire software engineers and build a data pipeline.

What's a typical day like for you, from wakeup ‘til bed?

I wake up at around 7:00am, after which I immediately get a cup of coffee. I'm very much a coffee addict.

My wife and I have two young boys so we spend about an hour getting them dressed and fed. At 8:30am we head out the door and I take the kids to daycare. I then work from home, starting at 9:30am and ending at 5:30pm. The whole team is a virtual space in Gather throughout the day, so I normally work through lunch at my desk.

At 5:30pm I head out and pick up the kids from daycare, head home for dinner, and play with the kids for about an hour until they get ready for bed. After we get the kids to sleep, I either relax or finish up any work I didn't quite wrap up during the day. I finally fall asleep at around 10:00pm–11:00pm.

What keeps you up at night?

On my deathbed, I don't want to think "I regret not doing XYZ." We're only given one life and I want to make sure I do what I'm meant to do.

What brings you joy?

My faith, spending time with my family, and singing in the Seattle Symphony Chorale.

What is one word you hate to hear?

Restricted

What is one word you love to hear?

Opportunity

What was your biggest failure in the past year?

It's hard to think of anything big because we've been very blessed this past year with Whalesync. If I had to choose one thing, it was that we raised a small round right before we were accepted into YC. In retrospect, we should have waited until after we knew our application result before starting a fundraise.

What was your greatest accomplishment in the past year?

I'm not sure if this counts as an accomplishment, but one thing I'm very grateful for was meeting my cofounder Matthew. Rarely have I enjoyed working with someone as much as him.

Who or what inspires you most?

Sara Blakely. She has shown tremendous grit and ingenuity bootstrapping and building her business.

What's your best tool for managing stress?

Spending quality time with my family and getting 8 hours of sleep.

What's getting the most burn on your playlist right now?

Sidewalk Prophets

Favorite shoes?

Flip-flops, because it means that I'm having fun somewhere warm.

Favorite cooking ingredient?

Garlic. Other than dessert, it makes just about anything better.

Portland VC Profile: Julie Harrelson

When I started Ascend in 2019, I realized even though I was o-l-d OLD, I had more in common with the folks in town who were earlier in their professional investing journeys than the venerable VC’s I’d pitched as a founder. I admire and respect the new wave of Seattle/Pacific Northwest venture capitalists, and thought it would be fun to profile some of our region’s up and coming VC talents in these pages. —KW

Julie Harrelson has more diverse business experience than the next 3 VCs put together. She brings it all to the table in support of founders, and after working with her on a recent company, I’ve grown to admire her candor and manner - and her business brain!

What made you decide to be a professional investor?

As a former operator who made every fundraising mistake under the sun as an early entrepreneur, I wanted to make investments with founders of seed stage companies to accelerate their success. I also wanted to activate capital in the Pacific Northwest, my lifetime home. Data show that small funds tend to outperform larger funds so we decided to build build small, seed stage funds (approximately $10M-$20M)  and create portfolios of about 25 companies.

What did you do before becoming an investor and how does that benefit your founders?

I've variously been CEO, management consultant and sales and marketing executive. I've worked nationwide with global companies and have a substantial network in the Pacific Northwest. Beyond that I've have been involved in both successful and failed companies, learning from the school of hard knocks and from some amazing colleagues over the course of my career. It benefits founders in that I know their pain from operating experience and can support strategy development and leveraging resources for successful execution.

Why should founders want you on their cap table?

We are active but not activist investors. So we are engaged when you need us but not wasting entrepreneurs time. We are available for the good stuff and the hard stuff. As former operators, we don't freak out when we hear about obstacles--we help to resource the solutions. We strive to be clear, fair and as compassionate as it is possible to be in balancing the dynamic tension of building a successful portfolio and being human. Our diligence process is well-defined and doesn't take tons of founders precious time. Our portfolio founders share best practices and resources with each other.

How many new pitches (actual calls/zooms) do you take per month?

Monthly it varies but somewhere between 200-300 calls/Zooms per year.

How many new investments do you make per year?

5-7

What's your sweet spot(s) in terms of check size, valuation, and vertical?

Check size is $100-$250K, generally, valuations ar less than $8M, 75% tech of the portfolio is tech, 25% consumer brands.

What one portfolio company do you want to hype for us here?

This is like naming your favorite child! Seriously, take a look at the Cascade portfolio.

What do you think the next ten years looks like for Seattle/Pacific Northwest startups?

Seattle/PNW will show the same ability to weather the storm and come out better on the other side as it always has. Layoffs and a massive shift in executive leadership plus dynamic industry and world changes could lead to an increased number of startups that try to solve big issues with the PNW leading the way.

What song is currently getting the most run on your Spotify/Apple Music?

Mary J. Blige and U2-One.

Favorite shoes?

Toss up between Converse Classic Chuck Taylor All Star high-tops and LaBucq loafers.

Favorite cooking ingredient?

Most used: Olive Oil
Most cooked: Fish of any kind
Most enjoyed: Cake

Seattle VC Profile: Sri Chandrasekar, Point72 Ventures

When I started Ascend in 2019, I realized even though I was o-l-d OLD, I had more in common with the folks in town who were earlier in their professional investing journeys than the venerable VC’s I’d pitched as a founder. I admire and respect the new wave of Seattle/Pacific Northwest venture capitalists, and thought it would be fun to profile some of our region’s up and coming VC talents in these pages. —KW

Sri Chandrasekar, Managing Partner at Point72 Ventures, is a builder at heart. And he’s quietly built a formidable career as a VC, having recently established a Seattle presence for multi-stage fund Point72. He’s a renaissance man and a great guy to grab a glass of wine with. Stoked to have him on the blog.

What made you decide to be a professional investor?

I stumbled into it. I always thought it was far more likely that I’d be a founder than an investor. But I had the opportunity to join In-Q-Tel (the strategic VC arm of the CIA and broader intelligence community) and that was an opportunity I couldn’t turn down. That job got me hooked – every day, I get to talk to people who quit their jobs to start something they are passionate about. There’s nothing more energizing than engaging with founders. 

What did you do before becoming an investor and how does that benefit your founders?

I was an engineer, and still somewhat consider myself one. I spent the formative part of my career building systems for the US Military and Intelligence Community. In my role at In-Q-Tel, the closest analogue to what I did was probably a Technical Product Manager. And that’s what I bring to the table with our founders. I’ve built and shipped products. I’ve had hundreds of conversations with potential customers about their needs and turned that into product features. That experience translates to helping early-stage founders who are facing the same challenges. 

Why should founders want you on their cap table?

We make every effort to support founders who want to go the distance. Because of our team, our experience, and our platform, we believe we are in a strong position to know what ‘good’ looks like from the earliest stages all the way to the public markets. We believe we have designed our fund to support scaling beyond just providing capital. We don’t want to lead your Series A and disappear. We pride ourselves on being value-additive investors. 

How many new pitches (actual calls/zooms) do you take per month?

Talking to founders is in our DNA, so we do a ton of calls. We’re always happy to be available for exciting ideas. 

How many new investments do you make per year?

Over the past three years, we have made, on average, 20-25 investments per year. Our full portfolio can be viewed at https://p72.vc/portfolio/

What's your sweet spot(s) in terms of check size, valuation, and vertical?

While we focus first on companies raising Seed and Series A capital, our capital is flexible, which gives us the ability to support our portfolio companies through subsequent rounds and find new opportunities with founders who are further along. We have teams investing in several verticals including deep tech, fintech, and enterprise software, and are always looking for bold ideas. 

What one portfolio company do you want to hype for us here?

This is too hard! It’s like asking which child is your favorite…

What do you think the next ten years looks like for Seattle/Pacific Northwest startups?

I’m very bullish about the opportunity for PNW startups. I think there’s more technical talent here than almost anywhere else in the world.  I’m particularly excited about Cloud, AI, and Space, because I see them all as areas where the Seattle ecosystem has the most expertise, and yet they’re all still in their infancy.  

What song is currently getting the most run on your Spotify/Apple Music?

Primarily EDM. My wife recently went to an Alan Walker concert in SF, so let’s go with Alan Walker.

Favorite shoes?

I love British hand-made shoes. And since I don’t dress up very often these days, I love my Crown Northampton sneakers. 

Favorite cooking ingredient?

Eggs. They’re magical and can be turned into everything from breakfast to dinner based on what you make. 

Vancouver VC Profile: Chris Neumann, Panache Ventures

When I started Ascend in 2019, I realized even though I was o-l-d OLD, I had more in common with the folks in town who were earlier in their professional investing journeys than the venerable VC’s I’d pitched as a founder. I admire and respect the new wave of Seattle/Pacific Northwest venture capitalists, and thought it would be fun to profile some of our region’s up and coming VC talents in these pages. —KW

Chris Neumann is a General Partner at Panache Ventures, Canada’s top pre-seed venture capital fund. As a founder, he’s raised venture and exited. As an investor, he’s helped many dozens of Canadian entrepreneurs connect with Silicon Valley VCs. And as a Twitter follow, he’s top notch. I’m stoked we got to spend some time here learning what makes Chris tick.

What made you decide to be a professional investor?

After my last startup was acquired in 2016, I had the opportunity to join 500 Startups as an EIR to help them launch a program focused on data, AI and ML companies (my background as a founder). At that point, I'd spent more than a decade in VC-backed startups and jumped at the opportunity to share some of my experiences with other founders. Six years later, I still wake up every morning feeling beyond privileged that I get to meet and work with incredible founders every single day.

What did you do before becoming an investor and how does that benefit your founders?

Prior to becoming an investor, I was the CEO and Cofounder of DataHero (acquired by Cloudability in 2016) and the first employee at Aster Data (acquired by Teradata in 2011). Over the years, I've been a part of five startups, including three as the CEO. Some of these companies were VC backed, while others were bootstrapped. I've done both product and services businesses. Some of those companies were "successful," others less so. I believe that those diverse experiences are what make the difference between investors who possess deep founder empathy (we've been there… we know what it feels like) and investors who took other journeys.

Why should founders want you on their cap table?

Our firm, Panache Ventures, is one of the few VCs in Canada with a team that's almost entirely ex-founders (we like to say that we have more exits than partners). We understand how difficult entrepreneurship is and that there isn't a one-size-fits-all approach to building a company. We also have deep experience building and financing successful, high-growth businesses outside of California. We operate a San Francisco-based accelerator, Panache Academy, to help our portfolio companies and others in the ecosystem learn the best practices and access the networks that are typically only available to founders based in Silicon Valley. Simply put, we believe that Panache Ventures provides the most credible path for Canadian startups to succeed on a global scale.

How many new pitches (actual calls/zooms) do you take per month?

In 2022, we met almost 3,000 founding teams across Canada (about 250/month) across four investment teams.

How many new investments do you make per year?

We target 20 new investments per year, with 60% pre-seed and 40% seed (about 12 pre-seed and eight seed investments per year).

What's your sweet spot(s) in terms of check size, valuation, and vertical?

Our initial check size is between $250K and $1M. We are a geographically specific (Canada only) and sector agnostic fund, and have invested in everything from AI to drug discovery to traditional B2B SaaS.

What one portfolio company do you want to hype for us here?

Some of our most promising companies come from British Columbia, including Certn (background checks), Audette (carbon reduction), Dooly (AI for sales/CRM hygiene) and Big Whale Labs (pseudonymity and privacy infrastructure).

What do you think the next ten years looks like for Seattle/Pacific Northwest startups?

Despite a lot of talk, for years the PNW has stubbornly remained a region of independent ecosystems, with Vancouver, Seattle/Tacoma and Portland all operating relatively independently. It feels to me like founders, investors and supporters alike are finally starting to see strength in numbers and the boundaries between our ecosystems are blurring. We see many more investors and founders from Washington and Oregon coming up to Vancouver in recent years (and vice versa), as well as angel groups and accelerators increasingly operating cross-border. To me, these are signs of a region that's growing in awareness of its collective strength, which is incredibly promising and bodes well for startups across the region.

What song is currently getting the most run on your Spotify/Apple Music?

Been listening to a lot of Tribe Called Quest lately.

Favorite shoes?

Classic Converse Chucks (hi-top). I wear lots of them.

Favorite cooking ingredient?

Anything from Meat Church.

Ascend Founder Profile: Elizabeth and Nora Sheils - Rock Paper Coin

This is a series of real talk blog posts meant to let founders share a bit about themselves and their companies without the marketing jargon and “killing it” puffery of most tech startup profiles.

What does your company do, for who, in plain English please!

Rock Paper Coin provides contracts, invoicing and document sharing for the wedding and event industry.

What's a typical day like for you, from wakeup ‘til bed?

E: I typically am awake by 6:00AM to allow myself time to work out, get my two boys to school and get ready for the day. Usually I am at my desk around 8:30AM. Most days are typically filled with back to back meetings. Since we are fundraising right now, a lot of the meetings are around this topic. I also oversee the technical and product side of our business so often working with the team on roadblocks, designs, etc. I take a break around 4:00PM to pick up my two boys (Gus & Finn) from school. We typically have a snack together, play at a park, play with cars or climb trees. My husband Tim comes home and around 5:30PM we have dinner together as a family. After dinner usually involves a neighborhood walk or scooter ride, followed by a bath and books for the boys. 6 out of 7 nights I typically am back online around 8PM and work till 10:30PM.

N: I am up and at 'em by 5:30 am to bust out some emails and get a sweaty workout in while catching up on my favorite show, podcast or pump-you-up music to start the day off right. From there, its a whirlwind getting my kids ready for school and either my husband or I will take them when the other gets to work. I like to block a solid hour off at the beginning of the workday to catch up on any time sensitive emails or Slack messages--I know myself and if I cannot see the bottom of my email inbox, it is stressful! From there, its a busy schedule of Zooms with partner pitches and demos, company 1:1's and marketing meetings. I oversee the Member Success, PR/Marketing and HR for our team so there is a lot of brainstorming, follow up, and compliance that needs to be managed on a regular basis. With some time padded in at the end of the day to flush out the inbox again, I am typically home by 5:30. Family dinner is a priority for us, so most nights we all hang out or finish homework while dinner is prepped and enjoy a meal together sharing our wins and losses. After baths/showers and reading, the boys are in bed by 8:30 and I have time to tidy the kitchen if my husband hasn't beat me to it. I will hop back on my laptop for a few hours (sometimes less, sometimes more!), read and then start the grind all over again!

What keeps you up at night?

E: Fundraising, managing our company goals vs investor goals, worrying about team or personal issues that occasionally arise.

N: This is a loaded question! I do some of my best brainstorming and troubleshooting as I'm trying to fall asleep. What keeps me up most is meeting our goals and new creative ways we are going to make that happen.

What brings you joy?

E: Being on the water, swimming with my boys, a date night out at a good restaurant and a delicious meal with my college girlfriends are all what truly fill my cup.

N: Nothing brings me more joy than spending time with my kids. As cliche as it is, they make me laugh until I cry and are genuinely so fun to be around. I love a good extended family style meal with my husband and our close friends or family, celebrating team member wins, dessert of any kind (except lemon) and an amazing glass of champagne.

What is one word you hate to hear?

E: No. I understand that this is a common answer, but with problem solving at my core (and Nora's) - I like to brainstorm deeply before coming to a no answer.

N: I'm with Elizabeth..."no" is not a word in our vocabulary. There is always a creative way to make something happen, maybe not as originally intended but maybe better. Getting creative and problem solving is something we excel at together!

What is one word you love to hear?

E: Helpful. I love when our team comes together to be helpful to one another. Or when someone offers to be helpful to myself or Nora. Team mentality over me mentality is essential.

N: Thank you. Ok...that's two words but being a company founder is a thankless job. There are so many early mornings and late nights, so much stress that you would never know having never done it. We put our team before ourselves time and time again. A simple thank you goes a long way.

What was your biggest failure in the past year?

E: Not keeping one of our employees ego in check. It was a slow burn of an ego getting out of control and it wasn't until the well was poisoned that I looked back and saw how I did keep things in check and ultimately negatively affected our team for months to follow.

N: I think our biggest failure has been trusting the wrong people and not getting second opinions. We were naive to think that everyone had our best interest at heart when giving advice.

What was your greatest accomplishment in the past year?

E: Having our first $1M transaction month.

N: We've had so many great accomplishments but I think the most exciting is our month-over-month growth. We've shown proof of concept and the fact that we've turned on subscriptions and our members are willing to pay is very exciting to me. While it seems obvious and minor, the continuation and increase of monthly subscriptions has felt very validating.

Who or what inspires you most?

E: All female entrepreneurs. The juggling act of pregnancy, kids, family, household things, etc. is not for the faint of heart. Anyone who starts a business with the cards stacked against them before they even start is incredibly inspiring. The easy thing is to not start a company, the hard thing is being so determined you do it anyways.

N: A big surprise when we came into the tech world was the number of entrepreneurs that have gone out of their way to help us, encourage us and cheer us on. It's inspiring to see so much support in this industry, especially to two non-technical founders. I'm inspired by the kindness and will absolutely pay it forward.

What's your best tool for managing stress?

E: Working out and time to work through the situation.

N: Exercise is my stress relief. I turn my brain off if stress is overwhelming and come out with a clear mind. Or, if I'm struggling to find a solution to a problem, a long run helps me work through it and come up with creative ideas. I feel it when I skip workouts and even though it means early mornings to fit them in, it's 1000% worth it and I make it a priority.

What's getting the most burn on your playlist right now?

E: n/a - when working I do not listen to music as my brain doesn't work that way.

N: I'm easily distracted when I listen to music while I work and find it difficult to focus. Mostly I listen to music in my car with the kids, so on their playlist there is a lot of DJ Marshmello!

Favorite shoes?

E: Nike running shoes

N: My wedding Monolos, saved for special occasions!

Favorite cooking ingredient?

E: Jennifer Fisher Spicy Salt

N: Za'atar!

Ascend Founder Profile: Brad Van Vugt - Battlesnake

This is a series of real talk blog posts meant to let founders share a bit about themselves and their companies without the marketing jargon and “killing it” puffery of most tech startup profiles.

What does your company do, for who, in plain English please!

We build competitive games for experienced web developers!

Our flagship game, Battlesnake, helps senior and intermediate developers deeply explore new tech in a way that is self-directed, challenging, and fun for their friends and their families.

What's a typical day like for you, from wakeup ‘til bed?

My day begins at 5:30 am when I get up with the kids and get them through their morning routine. I usually start working around 8 am.

Our team is distributed across North America, so our daily standup is earlier than most to accommodate all time zones. We try to schedule any synchronous meetings in the hours following, usually up until my lunchtime.

My afternoons are reserved for deep work like writing, brainstorming, or —if I’m lucky— coding 😊

At 4 pm I’ll break for kids’ dinner, the bedtime routine, and then spend a few hours working most evenings.

It took me some time to become comfortable creating protected family time in my schedule, but it’s become very important to me. I also encourage our team to do the same.

What keeps you up at night?

Not much these days, I’ll take whatever sleeping hours I can get! 😴

What brings you joy?

Seeing an idea come to life! This can be a new project, feature, or even a new team or growth initiative. I love building, and I like seeing the results of what I’ve built.

What is one word you hate to hear?

Haha, I really hate the term “no-code” 😅 It’s used to describe an arbitrarily specific class of software tools and abstractions that aren't particularly novel, just hard to describe.

What is one word you love to hear?

Not a single word exactly, but I love the moment when a developer first understands what Battlesnake is and their brain starts firing on all cylinders. Every instance of this is unique, and immediately recognizable. I live for that moment.

What was your biggest failure in the past year?

Probably holding onto control of smaller decisions for too long. Battlesnake is a small yet mighty team, with incredibly capable people in every role. It’s irrationally difficult to hand over the reins to something you’ve worked and fought so hard to build, but that is often required to reach the next stage.

What was your greatest accomplishment in the past year?

As a person? I taught my daughter how to blow her nose, which is astoundingly difficult to explain to someone who’s never done it before.

As a founder? It’s cliché but I’m very proud of the team we’ve built around Battlesnake. The jump from 3 to 8 team members is a critical one, and I’m constantly humbled by the talented folks that chose to join us in the past year 😊

Who or what inspires you most?

Definitely our community of Battlesnake players and developers. Without them, we’d be lost, and since they’re all accomplished developers, the amount of empathy, support, and feedback we receive daily is one of our greatest advantages.

What's your best tool for managing stress?

Music is a great outlet for me. The right song hitting at the right moment can instantly change my mood, and I’ll often be playing something in the background during meetings and zoom calls.

What's getting the most burn on your playlist right now?

90s Electronica. Underworld, Sneaker Pimps, Massive Attack. I’m a 90s kid at heart.

Favorite shoes?

Big ol’ doc martens. See above 😉

Favorite cooking ingredient?

Coriander and cumin, particularly in stewed or braised dishes. I love cooking Indian and Mexican food — if it’s on rice or in a tortilla, I’m in.