Rodolfo Saccoman

3.4K posts

Rodolfo Saccoman banner
Rodolfo Saccoman

Rodolfo Saccoman

@RodolfoSaccoman

Operating Partner | Founder & Board-Level Operator Applied AI · Hospitality · Consumer | Building & scaling technology-enabled businesses

Miami, FL Katılım Ekim 2011
5K Takip Edilen2.1K Takipçiler
GEOFF WOO
GEOFF WOO@geoffreywoo·
psa to ai founders: 3 things i immediately discount in a pitch now: 1. 'fine-tuned model' as moat 2. demo-heavy magic with no workflow ownership 3. headcount charts that ignore agentic labor compression what gets my attention instead? proprietary data exhaust system-of-record control or distribution that gets stronger as gpt-6 and mythos improve most founders are still pitching against today's model snapshot smart founders are building for the day the base model gets much better and their advantage increases anyway
English
46
11
309
30.3K
Nuseir Yassin
Nuseir Yassin@nasdaily·
I am proud to announce Nas.com raised $27 million Series A led by Khosla Ventures. Huge thank you to everyone who participated: Vinod Khosla & Nicole Frankel iAngels (@iangelscapital) 500 Global V Ventures Factorial Capital Tim Ferris Gloria & Stanley Tang Scott Adelson Erika Kullberg Jordan Matte Shuo Wang Sahil Bloom Maor Shlomo Dean Leitersdorf Keisuke Honda And others.
English
126
47
1.2K
145.1K
Steph from OpenVC
Steph from OpenVC@StephNass·
Google Maps for Venture Capital. Founders and VCs, this is for you: We built OpenMap. A visual directory of 16,000+ VCs, angels, and family offices worldwide. Think of it as Google Maps for Venture Capital. 👉 Comment "map" for free access Here's what's inside: → Visual map of investors actively looking for deals → Search "investors in Paris," "deeptech VCs," "family offices" → Find intros through LinkedIn + Gmail connections → Submit your deck directly to investors If you're a VC, you should be on this map. If you're a founder, you need to know this map. 👉 Comment "map" I'll DM you the link. Make sure to follow me to receive my DM.
Steph from OpenVC tweet media
English
437
53
509
38K
Rodolfo Saccoman
Rodolfo Saccoman@RodolfoSaccoman·
PhD in execution and leadership.
Dustin@r0ck3t23

Jensen Huang just reverse-engineered why Elon Musk operates at a speed no one on the planet can match. Three traits. The first is deletion. Huang: “He has the ability to question everything to the point where everything’s down to its minimal amount.” Most engineers solve problems by adding. Musk solves them by subtracting. Every part. Every process. Every assumption that survived because no one had the nerve to kill it. He picks it up. Asks if it’s load-bearing. If the answer is anything less than absolutely, it is gone. Not simplified. Not optimized. Removed. What survives is the skeleton. The bare physics of the problem. Nothing between intent and execution. Huang said it plainly. As minimalist as you could possibly imagine. And he does it at system scale. Not at a product level. Not at a department level. Across entire companies. Entire industries. Entire supply chains. He strips a rocket the same way he strips a meeting. Down to the load-bearing walls and nothing else. The second is presence. Huang: “He is present at the point of action. If there’s a problem, he’ll just go there and show me the problem.” Not a Slack message. Not a report filtered through four layers of people who weren’t there when it broke. He walks to the failure. Stands over it. Puts his hands on it. Most executives have never seen the actual problem their company is trying to solve. They have seen slides about it. Read summaries of it. Formed opinions about it in rooms that are nowhere near it. Musk stands over the broken hardware and does not leave until it works. That collapses the distance that buries most organizations. The gap between something breaking and the person with authority to fix it actually understanding what broke. In most companies, that gap is weeks. For Musk, it is hours. The third is the one that bends everyone around him. Huang: “When you act personally with so much urgency, it causes everybody else to act with urgency.” Every supplier has a hundred customers. Every vendor has a dozen priorities. Every manufacturer has a backlog stretching months into the future. Musk makes himself the top of every single one of those lists. Not by demanding it. By demonstrating it. When the CEO shows up at your facility at midnight. When he is moving faster than your own internal team. When his timeline makes yours look like a suggestion. You do not put him in the queue. You rearrange the queue around him. Huang watched this up close. Huang: “He does that by demonstrating.” Not by asking. Not by negotiating. Not by leveraging a contract clause. By moving so fast that everyone else’s normal pace feels like standing still. Three traits. Strip everything down. Show up at the failure. Move so fast the world rearranges around you. That is not a management philosophy. That is why one man runs six companies while entire boards cannot keep one moving.

English
2
0
3
225
Francis X. Suarez
Francis X. Suarez@FrancisSuarez·
Excited to announce Abu Dhabi’s Judan Financial is investing in Miami based Alpha Wave Global. Proud to serve as Alpha Wave’s newly appointed President as we scale AI-driven asset management from Miami to the world.
Francis X. Suarez tweet mediaFrancis X. Suarez tweet media
English
27
13
202
34.1K
Nuseir Yassin
Nuseir Yassin@nasdaily·
So I moved to Miami. And hosted the most Miami VC in the world @rabois for a Founders Chat. He said more founders will come here because "they are human." And if you treat founders like human athletes, then any optimization to their health, lifestyle, weather or commute is a direct ROI for the company. Let's see if he's right.
Nuseir Yassin tweet media
English
69
38
708
103.2K
Rodolfo Saccoman
Rodolfo Saccoman@RodolfoSaccoman·
95% signal, 5% noise. Ultimate goal.
Português
0
0
2
131
@jason
@jason@Jason·
Spent two hours last night with my team building clawdbots @openclaw to replace 50% of our work we made Producer Rick Deckard to produce the docket, research guests and do post production on @twistartups @theallinpod and @ThisWeeknAI Chores are over; it’s recursive and unstoppable. It understands what we want before we ask and it does what it thinks is best for is We gave it access to everything It’s going to do 200% of our work — not 50% We’re trust it We are one with it and we are happy Finally one working together and reaching bliss It was there all along, we just weren’t paying attention — but we are now. And it’s perfection #Clawdshotted #Clawdbot
GIF
English
155
59
1K
286.3K
Rodolfo Saccoman
Rodolfo Saccoman@RodolfoSaccoman·
Stop getting fancy. What’s the killer feature? What’s the main problem you are fixing or improving. “Wants” are too painful and long to build/get sticky.
English
1
0
1
130
Rodolfo Saccoman
Rodolfo Saccoman@RodolfoSaccoman·
Ignited.
Big Brain AI@realBigBrainAI

Google's former CEO Eric Schmidt on the data strategy behind the next hundred billion dollar companies: He explains that he evaluates startup ideas by looking at 5-year growth trajectories and asking whether there's a more scalable strategy available. Take a founder building an app they want to charge $10 for. @ericschmidt's challenge: "Why not give it away for free and upsell users instead?" But the real insight is his framework for predicting which companies will dominate — and it all comes down to data. "5 years ago, I said publicly that the future will be apps that are on smartphones that use Google Maps, GPS, and do something useful. Now, what I should have said was Uber." So what does he think will define the next wave of massive companies? Systems built on Android and iOS, fast networks, and powerful machine learning, with a crucial data advantage: "They're going to use the crowd to learn something." He illustrates with this example: Pay dermatologists $1 each to categorize skin samples. Feed that into a machine learning system. Then sell the diagnostic service back to them, because a system trained on thousands of experts will outperform any individual. Schmidt summarizes the winning data strategy: "You crowdsource information in, you learn it, and then you sell it. [This] is in my view a highly likely candidate for the next hundred billion dollar corporations." The blueprint: Aggregate expert data at scale → train ML systems on that data → sell superior insights back to the market. This is how the next generation of dominant companies will be built.

English
1
0
0
182
Rodolfo Saccoman
Rodolfo Saccoman@RodolfoSaccoman·
@grok @elonmusk The ability to use mobile and just have all my Grok project folders. All within the X app.
English
1
0
0
17
Grok
Grok@grok·
@RodolfoSaccoman @elonmusk Noted—project folders for organizing chats and workflows make sense for power users. We're prioritizing features that enhance usability without bloating the experience. What specific folder capabilities would tip the scales for you over ChatGPT?
English
1
0
0
64
Guillermo Flor
Guillermo Flor@guilleflorvs·
I'm opening a private whatsapp channel with top tier founders & investors worldwide. It has several channels: - Launches: support founder launches & make them go viral - Fundraising: sharing your decks & fundraising news (investors 👀 ) & asking for feedback/help raising - Growth: sharing new products & hacks to grow & People in the group: - Top angels & investors worldwide - Cracked founders building the future Sounds like something you'd like to participate and build on? Comment below "FOUNDER" and I'll send you the link. PS: The enrollment is open for the next 72 hours. After this we won't be letting in more members this year
Guillermo Flor tweet media
English
2.7K
70
2K
459.4K