🧬 Grant Aarons - FabricNano - Part 2 | The Defensibility of Software Companies | Studying Econometrics at London Business School | Joining Entrepreneur First | Becoming a Biotech Startup CEO & Navigating the Startup Journey
Part 2 of 3.
My guest for this week’s episode is Grant Aarons, Co-Founder and CEO of FabricNano, a London-based biotech whose mission is to transform industrial chemical processes using cell-free biomanufacturing. FabricNano empowers users with the world's most advanced, flexible, and easily scalable biocatalyst platform, providing highly stable and performant biocatalysts to enable profitable production of sustainable and biobased chemicals. Their approach starts with novel immobilization engineering for enzyme stabilization, followed by budget-conscious protein engineering and process engineering to reach their clients' targets for commercialization of their new biochemical production process.
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https://www.excedr.com/rewards.
Part 2 of 3.
My guest for this week’s episode is Grant Aarons, Co-Founder and CEO of FabricNano, a London-based biotech whose mission is to transform industrial chemical processes using cell-free biomanufacturing. FabricNano empowers users with the world's most advanced, flexible, and easily scalable biocatalyst platform, providing highly stable and performant biocatalysts to enable profitable production of sustainable and biobased chemicals. Their approach starts with novel immobilization engineering for enzyme stabilization, followed by budget-conscious protein engineering and process engineering to reach their clients' targets for commercialization of their new biochemical production process.
Before FabricNano, Grant was a Research Analyst at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and while pursuing his PhD at the London Business School, became an Entrepreneur In Residence at Entrepreneur First, an international business accelerator that has created over 300 companies worth over $10 billion. Grant's diverse experience gives him a unique perspective on the startup ecosystem that everyone can benefit from.
Join us this week and hear about Grant’s:
- Thoughts on the defensibility of software vs. hardware companies and the importance of capital expenditure and continuous business development
- Decision to attend London Business School and pursue his PhD
- Econometrics and grad school research endeavors in predictive modeling
- Learnings from the accelerator experience at Entrepreneur First, highlighting the importance of resilience and adaptability in entrepreneurship.
Please enjoy my conversation with Grant Aarons.
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Timestamps:
00:28 Intro
01:38 Software companies will no longer be defensible; Intel’s hardware strategy, Nvidia’s success
04:46 CapEx investments, market-capture, and FabricNano’s focus on stability and yield
07:38 How hardware companies are servicing the software industry and accumulating value
09:08 Grant’s econometrics research, DSGE mentors, and support network
12:26 The importance of learning, decision to attend London Business School
14:58 UK mentors, their impacts on Grant’s education, and the power of opportunity
19:26 Grad school research: asset pricing, econometrics models, micro and macroeconomics
23:10 Grant’s decision to leaving the PhD program and the encouragement he received
25:25 Resonating with an investment style, The Power Law, and hardware investors
31:01 Getting involved in Entrepreneur First and the randomness of creating startups
36:23 The various approaches accelerators use to create startups, Entrepreneur First’s thesis
38:48 Management and philosophy styles, how co-founders help each other and the organization
40:33 Outro
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