Henrik Werdelin is on an AI-fueled mission to launch thousands of startups a year. He is the founder of BARK, which went public, and prehype, a studio that has incubated several unicorns. With Audos, Henrik is building AI agents that can coach founders how he would â if he had infinite time to do so. And Audos is not just for the cliche founder looking to launch a unicorn⊠Itâs for entrepreneurs of all stripes. With AI making things easier, Henrik expects to see lots more âDonkeyCorns,â i.e. highly profitable businesses operated by just one or two people. âDonkeyCorns party like unicorns, but they grind like mules.âCheck out this episode for lots of practical tips for how you can get more out of AI. Plus, weâll peer into the weird future weâre building. Takeaways from this episode: AI enables new businesses to be created, launched, and tested very quickly. Henrik shares how Audos uses AI to help founders focus on their customers, launch, and get customersHenrik talks to his AI agents like theyâre people: He gives them names and backstories. By doing so, he finds he has a better partner than a bot or Google search would be. The more creative you are with prompts, the better the AI will be. e.g., Ask for âten ideas that will definitely get me firedââCustomer-founder fitâ is the most important ingredient to Henrik Use âsignal miningâ to prove there is real demand for your productâThe swipeâ proves there is real intent for your product, i.e. get people to pay for it, even if you havenât built it yet.BARK succeeded (itâs gone public) by following its mission (be âDisney for dogsâ) not by following its utility (boxes of stuff for pets)âRelationship capitalâ and âhumanityâ will be more important, as AI continues to excel at technical jobs. Take AI seriously right now. And Henrik says senior leaders need to be using it themselvesItâs weird out there: We discuss the uncanny valley of talking to AI agents (including those that impersonate your dead spouse) Rock and roll â Henrik tells the story of his career break: As an intern, he pulled an on-air stunt at MTV that he was sure would get him fired, but instead got him a huge promotion.Henrik is the author of The Acorn Method: How Companies Get Growing Again. And heâs writing a new book, Me, My Customer, and AI. He also co-hosts the podcast Beyond the Prompt, which features the interesting, weird, and uncanny-valley ways people are using AI in their day-to-day lives, as well as practical tips for how you can go beyond âbeginner modeâ in your own use of AI. CRAFTED. is brought to you in partnership with Docker, which helps developers build, share, run and verify applications anywhere â without environment confirmation or management. More than 20 million developers worldwide use Docker's suite of development tools, services and automations to accelerate the delivery of secure applications. CRAFTED. is produced by Modern Product Minds, where CRAFTED. host Dan Blumberg and team can help you take a new product from zero to one... and beyond. We specialize in early-stage product discovery, growth, and experimentation. Subscribe to CRAFTED., follow the show, and sign up for the newsletter đ crafted.fmKey Moments (00:00) - Intro (02:56) - Henrikâs method for launching startups (04:08) - Why âcustomer-founder fitâ is the first thing he looks for and how it manifested at BARK (06:43) - How to use âsignal miningâ to prove there is real demand for your product (08:42) - Launching BARK Air, âa totally real airline for dogsâ (12:28) - Launching Audos and using AI to launch thousands of startups a year (17:05) - âDonkeyCorns!â Why we will see more highly profitable companies run by just one or two people (21:30) - How Henrik uses AI, why he personifies his agents, and the creative prompts he uses (27:50) - The stunt that nearly got Henrik fired at MTV, but instead was his career break (31:00) - Why big companies need to take AI seriously right now (34:27) - How Henrik advises entrepreneurs looking for their next play (37:12) - âPursue interestingnessâ (38:24) - The uncanny valley of AI embodying people (39:50) - Outro