There's a place in Denver, inside a buzzing AI builder clubhouse, where the future gets stress-tested out loud every Wednesday night. That's where this conversation happened, and it did not go the direction you'd expect.
Carson Vest is an investment associate at Denver Ventures, a generalist fund covering pre-seed all the way to Series B. She sees everything. Hundreds of founders, hundreds of pitches, hundreds of ideas competing for the same finite pool of attention and capital. And yet the most radical thing she said had nothing to do with a hot deal. It was this: you might not need us.
That single idea runs like a thread through this entire conversation, pulling at the assumptions most founders carry into every investor meeting without even realizing it.
The Frameworks You Need to Steal
The Founder DNA Thesis: Why the person always comes before the product
- Denver Ventures bets on founders first, especially at pre-seed and seed
- Prior company experience, big tech background, or deep channel relationships signal real distribution potential
- If you can't sell the vision to an investor in a casual conversation, how will you sell it to a team, a customer, or a market?
The Distribution Co-Founder Gap: The missing piece on most cap tables
- Most founders plan to hire for distribution after raising, but bringing that person in as a co-founder from day one dramatically increases investability
- The strongest founding teams Carson sees came up together, school friends, former colleagues, people who already trust each other under pressure
- Distribution is not a marketing problem. It is a survival problem.
The Moat Has Moved: Why code is no longer defensible
- An MVP that cost $320,000 and 18 months in 2022 now costs $20 and a week
- If your only edge is the technology, someone with a Claude account can clone you by Friday
- The new moats: proprietary data, founder network, channel relationships, and obsessive domain expertise
The VC Gut Check: The question every founder should answer honestly
- Carson asks founders point blank: why do you actually want VC money?
- Many founders admit they just assumed it was the next step
- Bootstrapping to $500k or even $1M ARR may give you more leverage, more equity, and more freedom than a seed round ever could
The Retention Signal VCs Actually Watch
- High AI margins look great on paper, but paradoxically can signal low usage
- Investors want to see high inference costs because that means users are actually on your platform
- Retention is the metric that separates a product people want from a product people try once and forget
The Agentic Shift: Where the smart money is moving post-ChatGPT
- The infrastructure layer, models, GPUs, wrappers, is maturing
- The next wave is workflow automation and vertical AI that disappears into the background
- The winner is not the best chatbot. It is the tool that makes the task vanish entirely.
https://denverventures.co/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/carson-janae-vest/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/
https://aiforfounders.co
https://kitcaster.com/application
https://ryanestes.info