Delightful Procurement: The CFO That Never Sleeps - Alex Yakubovich from Levelpath episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 2, 2026 · 59 MIN

Delightful Procurement: The CFO That Never Sleeps - Alex Yakubovich from Levelpath

from AI for Founders with Ryan Estes · host aiforfounders.co

Procurement Is Not Boring. It's Just Broken.There is a word that kills deals before they start. A word that makes investors yawn, makes journalists skip the story, and makes founders steer away from the category entirely. That word is procurement.Alex Yakubovich has spent his entire career proving that instinct wrong. As co-founder and CEO of Levelpath, and previously co-founder and CEO of Scout RFP (acquired by Workday for $540 million in 2019), Alex has made procurement his life's work. Not because it is glamorous. Because it is genuinely broken. And because broken things, when fixed well, are worth a fortune.This episode covers what it actually means to build an AI native company from the inside out, why delightful procurement is a real mission and not a marketing tagline, and what founders building in any category can learn from a man who took the most overlooked function in business and turned it into a $100M+ venture-backed platform.The Anchor Framework: What Doesn't ChangeAlex opened by addressing the thing that keeps most founders anxious right now: the pace of change. His answer was not to slow down or resist it. It was to find the anchors that hold steady underneath all the noise.At Levelpath, those anchors are their four values:Obsess over the customer (the north star above all others)A players only (owners, not passengers)Elevate our employees (growth that sometimes comes with pain, and is always worth it)Earn the trust of others (not just "have integrity," but actively earn it, every single day)The insight here is structural. When everything else is accelerating, values are not motivational posters. They are operating instructions. They tell every person in the company what to optimize for when no one is watching.The Experiment Framework: Run More, Not FewerCounterintuitively, Alex argued that the right response to AI-driven chaos is not more focus. It is more experimentation. The cost of experiments has collapsed. What used to take two weeks of spreadsheet warfare now takes seconds. That changes the calculus entirely.But the filter for which experiments to keep? That never changes. His rule: name the customer this experiment will serve better. If you cannot answer that question with a specific person in mind, kill it. If you can answer it clearly, run it.The Delight Framework: Predictable, Not SurprisingAlex built his case for "delightful procurement" not on feature lists or dashboards, but on a feeling. The highest compliment Levelpath receives from customers is: "This is the product I would have built if I were a product person." That is not a UX win. That is empathy at scale.His practical examples of delight in enterprise software:Label your icons. Or remove them entirely. Cognitive load kills trust.Pre-configure the AI assistant to deliver an insight the moment someone lands on a page, before they ask. (A negotiation strategy based on your company's playbook, generated automatically when you open a contract, is a delight.)The Pavlovian ping. DocuSign's signature sound. Quicken's completion tone. Small audible moments that signal: you did something right.The through line is predictability. Delight is not surprise for its own sake. It is when the product does exactly what you needed before you knew to ask for it.https://www.levelpath.comhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/alex-yakubovich/⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://kitcaster.com/application ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://ryanestes.info⁠⁠⁠

Procurement Is Not Boring. It's Just Broken.There is a word that kills deals before they start. A word that makes investors yawn, makes journalists skip the story, and makes founders steer away from the category entirely. That word is procurement.Alex Yakubovich has spent his entire career proving that instinct wrong. As co-founder and CEO of Levelpath, and previously co-founder and CEO of Scout RFP (acquired by Workday for $540 million in 2019), Alex has made procurement his life's work. Not because it is glamorous. Because it is genuinely broken. And because broken things, when fixed well, are worth a fortune.This episode covers what it actually means to build an AI native company from the inside out, why delightful procurement is a real mission and not a marketing tagline, and what founders building in any category can learn from a man who took the most overlooked function in business and turned it into a $100M+ venture-backed platform.The Anchor Framework: What Doesn't ChangeAlex opened by addressing the thing that keeps most founders anxious right now: the pace of change. His answer was not to slow down or resist it. It was to find the anchors that hold steady underneath all the noise.At Levelpath, those anchors are their four values:Obsess over the customer (the north star above all others)A players only (owners, not passengers)Elevate our employees (growth that sometimes comes with pain, and is always worth it)Earn the trust of others (not just "have integrity," but actively earn it, every single day)The insight here is structural. When everything else is accelerating, values are not motivational posters. They are operating instructions. They tell every person in the company what to optimize for when no one is watching.The Experiment Framework: Run More, Not FewerCounterintuitively, Alex argued that the right response to AI-driven chaos is not more focus. It is more experimentation. The cost of experiments has collapsed. What used to take two weeks of spreadsheet warfare now takes seconds. That changes the calculus entirely.But the filter for which experiments to keep? That never changes. His rule: name the customer this experiment will serve better. If you cannot answer that question with a specific person in mind, kill it. If you can answer it clearly, run it.The Delight Framework: Predictable, Not SurprisingAlex built his case for "delightful procurement" not on feature lists or dashboards, but on a feeling. The highest compliment Levelpath receives from customers is: "This is the product I would have built if I were a product person." That is not a UX win. That is empathy at scale.His practical examples of delight in enterprise software:Label your icons. Or remove them entirely. Cognitive load kills trust.Pre-configure the AI assistant to deliver an insight the moment someone lands on a page, before they ask. (A negotiation strategy based on your company's playbook, generated automatically when you open a contract, is a delight.)The Pavlovian ping. DocuSign's signature sound. Quicken's completion tone. Small audible moments that signal: you did something right.The through line is predictability. Delight is not surprise for its own sake. It is when the product does exactly what you needed before you knew to ask for it.https://www.levelpath.comhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/alex-yakubovich/⁠⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/⁠⁠⁠⁠https://aiforfounders.co⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://kitcaster.com/application ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://ryanestes.info⁠⁠⁠

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Delightful Procurement: The CFO That Never Sleeps - Alex Yakubovich from Levelpath

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This episode was published on April 2, 2026.

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Procurement Is Not Boring. It's Just Broken.There is a word that kills deals before they start. A word that makes investors yawn, makes journalists skip the story, and makes founders steer away from the category entirely. That word is...

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