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Josh brings a unique lens to deal sourcing that most founders simply don't understand. Rather than chasing hot sectors or famous brands, he actively looks for what others are missing, reasoning that the majority of early-stage venture capital lives in the Bay Area, and whatever that community can't or won't think about is exactly where the overlooked opportunities hide. His investment themes, ranging from population decline to human enhancement to "portal fatigue," are not random. They're the product of a systematic effort to ask where smart capital is underrepresented and where a truly zero-to-one founder could build something monopolistic. For founders, the lesson is that if your idea sounds boring or strange to Bay Area investors, that might be a feature, not a bug. On the tactical side of getting a meeting, Josh is refreshingly direct: build a curated list of 20 to 30 VCs from your own research rather than relying on generic investor databases, pursue warm intros almost exclusively, and stay completely away from multi-stage firms for your first round. He explains that with large multi-stage firms, you only get one shot, and you want that shot to be for a $10 to $20 million check, not a $3 million seed. Meanwhile, cold outreach is not dead, but it needs to feel like a real human wrote it. Any email that reads like a mail-merge will get ignored, and novelty plus founder-market fit will always outperform revenue metrics in Josh's inbox. One of the most practically useful threads of the episode is Josh's thinking on cap table dynamics after you close. He warns that the enthusiasm of your investors at the time of the initial wire is typically the highest it will ever be, which means founders need to do the work to build a genuine ongoing relationship through regular updates and honest communication. Going quiet after the raise is a red flag for everyone involved. And for founders lucky enough to be oversubscribed, Josh's advice is to prioritize investors who have strong relationships with the firms you plan to target in your next one to two rounds, treating the current cap table as a strategic lever for future fundraising rather than just a source of cash.