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First Funders

First Funders

Written by: Shaherose Charania and Aamir Virani
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Learn from angel and seed investors bold enough to write the first check. How do they decide which startups to invest in? How do they gain conviction in founders and ideas? How do they add value to their companies? Shaherose Charania and Aamir Virani are operators turned investors. They chat with their friends investing in early-stage technology startups and learn about their strategies to fund the best founders and startup companies. If you are an angel investor or seed investor, you'll hear how others operate. If you are a startup entrepreneur, you'll hear how investors filter and decide on writing that first check.2024 vGenerator LLC Economics Leadership Management & Leadership Personal Finance
Episodes
  • S2E04: Resilience as a Thesis: Tahira Dosani on Building for Underserved Markets and AI in Fintech
    Sep 30 2025

    Some investors are motivated by the thought of multiplying their fund, securing a bigger slice of the cap table, or, of course, successfully filing for a coveted IPO. But for Tahira Dosani, all she has to do is remember the economic instability of her childhood and she’s immediately re-anchored to her why behind it all.

    First came the career, starting as a Bain Capital consultant and moving on to launching cellular service and mobile payment solutions in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan. Then came the first fund, Accion, a non-for-profit where Tahira cut her teeth in early stage impact investing in emerging markets.


    After Accion, Tahira didn’t set out to start her own fund, but the immigrant-to-entrepreneur pipeline was just too strong and it pulled in this Pakistani native. She co-founded ResilienceVC, a human-centric, early stage fund focused on creating fintech solutions and solving persistent financial challenges for everyday Americans.


    She writes $1 million checks out of ResilienceVC to fintech companies at the seed stage.


    Highlights:

    • Tahira’s why dates back to when she was a child who immigrated to the U.S. from Pakistan. Her family’s financial challenges stuck with her, and ever since, she’s remained focused on helping others boost their economic status through technology.

    • It might be hard to recall a time before cellphone service was ubiquitous, but Tahira was on the ground in Kabul, Afghanistan when the first towers were raised, signalling a new day for citizens’ economic opportunities. She soon after helped launch the first mobile payment solution, bringing even more power to the region.

    • Much of investing in the post-2010s is focused on iterating and refining existing products, but Tahira’s backing OS Benefits, a fintech company with a new answer to an old problem: lack of health insurance coverage for restaurant workers.

    • We often say that AI is changing the game. And now, it’s changing the way we behave. Tahira is exploring how AI can alter people’s financial habits and ultimately, make better choices on their behalf.


    • (00:00) - Resilience as a Thesis- Tahira Dosani on Building for Underserved Markets and AI in Fintech
    • (01:21) - Tahira’s path to investing
    • (11:52) - How Accion shaped Tahira’s career
    • (17:35) - What makes a resilient founder?
    • (23:35) - ResilienceVC in the U.S. and beyond
    • (28:24) - How Tahira qualifies opportunity markets
    • (30:05) - OS Benefits: Solving the under-insurance crisis
    • (35:24) - The fintech and AI crossroads
    • (43:29) - Common mistakes from fintech founders
    • (49:40) - Curiosity as the anchor
    • (51:51) - Speed round
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    58 mins
  • S2E03: Atoms over bits: Investing in hardware and innovative founders to solve climate challenges - Sundeep Ahuja, Climate Capital
    May 27 2025

    We’ve welcomed investors with unique backgrounds to First Funders before, but Sundeep Ahuja is our first operator-turned-actor-turned-investor.


    Sundeep is all in on all things climate tech. He’s backing founders leading the way in cleaning up our water, purifying our air, and keeping our planet the way it should be: livable. Today, his micro fund and syndicate platform Climate Capital, has over 400 climate-focused companies in its portfolio.


    Sundeep shares why he thinks real-world, physical tech has the edge over software, how the words we use matter when it comes to addressing climate challenges, and why he’s still optimistic about the future despite current social and political challenges to climate initiatives.


    He writes ~$150k checks out of Climate Capital into pre-seed and seed-stage startups addressing emission reductions and climate adaptation.


    Highlights:

    • Sundeep had a winding path to investing, but his passion for the climate has always been there. He talks about how his time at Kiva shaped and expanded his worldview.
    • We’re heard a lot about software, but Sundeep is firmly in the hardware camp. He’s seeing startups like Copper and Avalo make incredible strides working with physical products – or focusing on atoms over bits, as he says.
    • The way we talk about issues matters, and Sundeep is seeing the impact of language play out in the climate space. His solution is simple: No vague, moralizing language. Just plainly state what you’re doing to help the environment.
    • Sundeep has a careful eye on what’s going on regarding the climate and the current administration, but he’s not feeling deterred. He believes there’s still plenty of capital – and plenty of people who believe in the mission – to sustain the headwinds.
    • Like a true investor, Sundeep has a story about his worst investment and what he learned from it. Mainly, that the importance of due diligence can’t be overstated.

    • (00:00) - Atoms over bits: Investing in hardware and innovative founders to solve climate challenges - Sundeep Ahuja, Climate Capital
    • (01:39) - Sundeep’s journey from eBay to Acting to Impact
    • (02:44) - Finding his purpose at Kiva and focusing on climate
    • (03:52) - Establishing Silicon Climate and writing his first book
    • (09:17) - Sundeep’s work founding and scaling up Climate Capital to an 400-company portfolio
    • (13:45) - Why technical founders and defensible IP are now at the heart of their seed investments.
    • (30:34) - Rethinking the language we use to talk about the climate
    • (34:58) - Lessons from the worst investment Sundeep has made
    • (37:34) - Reasons why Sundeep is hopeful for the future of climate tech
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    42 mins
  • S2E02: Before Clay Was a Unicorn: The First Check, the Thesis, and the Long Game - Andre Charoo, Maple VC
    Apr 22 2025

    Canadians have been the lifeblood behind some of the biggest unicorn startups of the past few years (think Open AI, Uber, Slack, Instacart, Notion, Databricks, CloudFlare, Roblox, Ethereum, Moderna Health, and Clay to name a few), and yet no one talks about them, except for Andre Charoo. And he’s not just talking – he’s putting his money behind Canadian founders through his fund, Maple VC.


    Andre shares why he thinks Canadian founders are always a strong bet (and bonus points if they’re immigrants, too), what it’s like to wait over 7 years to see a pre-seed investment materialize (in this case, recent unicorn Clay), and how he thinks about moats in the AI age (and why they still matter).


    Maple VC writes $500k – $1.5 million industry-agnostic checks into pre-seed and seed stage companies with roots from Canada to Korea to Harvard.


    Highlights

    • Even long after he left Uber and Hired, Andre never lost his go-to-market spirit and he’s carried it with him as he’s moved from operator to VC.
    • Andre’s investing framework can best be described as Canadian roots with global reach. He’s been working hard to give Canadian founders their due and show their world that they are some of the most ambitious people out there.
    • Clay, a unicorn in the Maple VC portfolio, is a testament to persistence and patience. Andre urges investors to remember they’re playing the long game – waiting for results that may not materialize for nearly a decade.
    • It’s all about building durable companies, and the 7 Powers by Hamilton Helmer still holds true. Andre stresses that defensibility and success come from strategic insight, execution, and taste—not just code.
    • While AI is changing the way companies form and scale, Andre still believes in this undefeated combo for founders: inventors, builders, and operators.

    • (00:00) - Andre Charoo, Maple VC - Before Clay Was a Unicorn: The First Check, the Thesis, and the Long Game
    • (01:40) - Andre’s journey from operator to investor
    • (06:56) - Why Andre will always bet on Candian expats
    • (22:46) - Andre’s check size and how he manages Maple VC
    • (33:38) - The 7-year story of the unicorn, Clay
    • (42:14) - Where Andre thinks AI stands and where it might be going
    • (49:17) - Moats still matter in the AI era
    • (01:03:02) - Andre's take on the inventor-builder-operator trifecta

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    1 hr and 14 mins
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