PODCAST · business
Keycodes
by Dana Guthrie
Success isn’t luck—it’s coded. "Keycodes" unlocks the stories behind success. Each episode features conversations with figures from business, entertainment, sports, and beyond—diving into the personal journeys, defining moments, and pivotal deals that shaped their paths.
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Amanda Daering of Newance on Talent, Pace, and How "Perfect" Can Kill Great Hires
Host Dana Guthrie sits down with Amanda Daering, CEO of global recruitment and HR advisory firm Newance, to unpack how to think about talent, pace, and capital in early-stage companies. Amanda shares how she fell into recruiting from finance, why “pace” is the most underrated element of fit, and how starting from outcomes (12–24 months out) leads to better hiring decisions. Dana and Amanda also dig into capital as a constraint, founder-investor alignment, busywork vs. progress, and why great founders should act like scientists and lawyers when testing assumptions at the earliest stages. Extended show notes: 00:00 – Systems, engineers, entrepreneurs, and why pace is the most underrated element of fit01:05 – Amanda’s path: leaving finance, falling into recruiting, and learning on the fly03:01 – Becoming a dissatisfied agency customer and deciding to build something better (Newance)03:31 – First Newance clients, why the firm gravitated to startups, and Amanda’s early hopes04:17 – When the “ideal” candidate profile doesn’t exist and how to reset expectations05:08 – Designing roles from outcomes: “In 12–18 months, how will we know we hired the right person?”06:03 – Capital as a constraint and as a risk: too little vs. too much, and how both hurt execution07:57 – Reading financial projections as a story: what headcount and revenue assumptions really say10:15 – Talent evaluation as investing: what Dana looks for in founders (insight and numbers)11:27 – The “quantifiable value prop” question and why early founders struggle to answer it14:02 – How Amanda evaluates candidates: competencies, culture, company context, and pace14:58 – Pace matching: methodical vs. hyper-speed teams and avoiding fit mismatches
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Sonia Nagar of SNAK Venture Partners Shares Her Journey from Operator to Investor, Small-Fund vs. Mega-Fund VC Math, and How She Continues to Build Her "Mafia"
Managing Partner, Sonia Nagar of SNAK Venture Partners joins host Dana Guthrie to walk through her path from engineering at GM and launching categories at Amazon to founding and selling a startup, then becoming a VC - joining Pritzker Group before co-founding SNAK. They break down how small funds must “play a different game” than mega-funds, why many founders are better off with earlier mid-nine-figure exits, and how domain expertise beats generic AI in today’s market. The conversation also covers imposter syndrome, leadership evolution, building a “mafia” of great people, and why the Midwest is uniquely positioned for industrial marketplaces and vertical AI.Extended show notes: 01:48 – Sonia’s journey: engineer, founder, operator, Pritzker GP, and now emerging manager04:48 – Harvard Business School, discovering finance, and a painful summer at Goldman Sachs07:11 – Launching Amazon’s clothing category and why it was a pivotal career decision09:29 – Founding a mobile shopping startup, raising venture capital, and the early roller coaster13:09 – Building a “little black book” of talent that she still taps as an investor17:07 – Returning to the Midwest, planning a new startup, and falling into venture at Pritzker18:21 – Becoming Pritzker’s first female investor and wanting more direct impact through capital21:39 – Why Sonia left Pritzker to co-found SNAK Venture Partners with Adam24:11 – Global bifurcation: $10B+ mega-funds vs. sub-$50M regional funds and the games they play28:34 – The Midwest narrative gap and how coastal ecosystems still win the story war32:26 – VC fund math: check size, ownership targets, and returning the fund38:46 – Advice for founders and emerging managers: build your “mafia” of good people39:57 – The “PayPal mafia” concept and how to recreate that effect over a career
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Success isn’t luck—it’s coded. "Keycodes" unlocks the stories behind success. Each episode features conversations with figures from business, entertainment, sports, and beyond—diving into the personal journeys, defining moments, and pivotal deals that shaped their paths.
HOSTED BY
Dana Guthrie
CATEGORIES
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