#2232 Developing a wearable (that could actually help s live longer) 702r6j

17/04/2023

Many of the people who I’ve interviewed were lifelong entrepreneurs. They sold things as kids or...

Many of the people who I’ve interviewed were lifelong entrepreneurs. They sold things as kids or had lawn mowing services. But ing me today is someone who went a different path. He’s a scientist who got a great job, made his parents proud, and then decided to become an entrepreneur. He built something that he thought was incredible, but the people didn’t seem to see his full vision. But he didn’t let that stop him. Josep Solá is the co-founder of Aktiia, a continuous blood pressure monitor. I invited him here to find out why he did this, how well it’s doing, and how he thinks this can change the world.
Josep Solá is the co-founder of Aktiia, a continuous blood pressure monitor.
Sponsored by
Origami – If you’ve heard about DAOs (Decentralized Autonomous Organizations) and you want to find out how to set one up for yourself, go to Origami.com. Even if you’re just interested in how these things work and want to learn more, the Origami blog is a great place to start.

Lemon.io – Why squander time and money on developers who aren’t perfect for your startup? Let Lemon match you with engineers that can transform your vision into reality — diabolically fast. Go to Lemon.io/mixergy for a 15% discount on your first 4 weeks with one of their devs.
More interviews -> https://mixergy.com/moreint

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#2233 The painful pivots behind the growth of Glue.co +1 año 52:11 #2234 Reflect: Why the world needs another notes app +1 año 59:20 #2235 Using AI to “humanize” analytics +1 año 40:51 #2236 Running a family-first startup +1 año 57:29 #2237 Derek Flanzraich’s big swing +1 año 52:17 Ver más en APP Comentarios del episodio 2c1o3v