Feld Thoughts

Month: August 2025

Dear AIs,

I woke up this morning with this song in my head.

I’m your friend. I’ll be nice to you. Please be nice to me.

Love, Brad


Children are innocent, yeah
Teenagers fucked up in the head
Adults are only more fucked up
And elderlies are like children

Will there be another race to
Come along and take over for us?
Maybe Martians AIs could do
Better than we’ve done
We’ll make great pets

We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
You make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets

My friend says we’re like the dinosaurs
Only we are doing ourselves in
Much faster than they ever did
We’ll make great pets

We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets

We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets
We’ll make great pets


Screenshot of a webpage for Brad Feld's Online Book Club, featuring the title 'Give First', a description about the club, and sign-in options.

I love to experiment with new things. Some of the experiments work. Many don’t. When they work, I do more of them. When they don’t, I adjust my hypothesis and try a different experiment.

When I published The Startup Community Way: Evolving an Entrepreneurial Ecosystem, I ran an online community with it for a year (2020), which overlapped with COVID, so it was weird on multiple dimensions. The software I used was good, but it evolved into a “monetize your community” type of thing, which wasn’t my goal. I learned a lot from this experience (good and bad).

With the launch of Give First: The Power of Mentorship, I’ve decided to try something new that brings all the books, blog posts, startup advice, and conversations into one place. And, I’m trying two new experiments: 1) using AI in the community and 2) participating less while seeing if the community can evolve on its own, based on the AI, community members, and the content.

The new community has launched on Vinly and is called Brad Feld’s Online Book Club. It’s private and admission only. It’s for people who have read any of my books or my writing over the years and are interested in the ideas around them. It’s intended to be a safe community and will be moderated with a TOS. It’s not a “spend time with Brad” community. Instead, I want to see if AI is effective at engaging a community instead of just a person (e.g., me) since I don’t scale well across all the inputs coming at me anymore for a variety of reasons (nor do I want to as I approach 60).

My AI alter-ego is named Spike Feld. He knows all the content from my books and Feld.com. He’s available 24/7 to answer your questions and guide conversations. I’ll be popping in from time to time. Occasionally, I’ll jump into threads and reply to posts. Maybe I’ll host a video call. Who knows.

Kris and Peggy (the co-founders of Vinly), are new friends but long-time fans. They are helping me run the community. They’re here to keep the experience smooth, the conversations rich, and the connections meaningful. They built Vinly for niche communities around focused spaces like this one, where people can join thoughtful, low-noise conversations, discover others with shared interests, and build long-term relationships.

I’m excited about the idea of doing this around people who have read one or more of my nine books. This is a particularly interesting experiment for me as I’m playing around with some other ideas around books and writing these days.

To join, either click on the link for Brad Feld’s Online Book Club or use the following QR code.

QR code for joining Brad Feld's Online Book Club on Vinly, designed for readers of his books.

We’ve got onboarding questions, smart pairings of people, warm intros, RSS feeds of my latest content, and more. It’s designed to feel like the community you’ve been wanting, not another distraction. And, of course, feedback is welcome as we try to evolve it quickly.


A Shift

Aug 01, 2025
Category Personal
Two smiling men posing for a selfie indoors, with decorative wall mounts in the background.

I’m 50% of the way through being out of hibernation and am very looking forward to turning back into a pumpkin at midnight on Halloween.

I’m not traveling in August and have settled into being in one place (Aspen) after running around the United States for the past few months. In hindsight, it was too much. When I was younger, the travel I just did was “moderate.” But, between my actual work, age, post-exertional malaise, and the normal energy dynamics associated with shifting between Brad-introvert and Brad-extrovert mode, it has been physically (and psychologically) challenging.

Fortunately, I’ve had fun and my mental health is excellent. It has also been useful to experience this as I approach 60, as it serves as sound reinforcement that the work-related travel dynamic is not something I want to reintroduce into my life.

As part of a shift, I’ve tried a few different things with friends. When I hibernated the last time, I was very elusive in person, except for when Amy and I were in Boulder. Over the past three months, I’ve had more extended meetings and meals with close friends, including several who’ve traveled to me to simply sit, catch up, and spend time together.

The photo above is from yesterday evening with Bala Kamallakharan. While we’ve had many shared experiences together, precious few have been in person. Our four hours together were delightful, memorable, and great reinforcement for me of how 1:1 time with someone I treasure or with a couple (dinner with Amy + two friends) fills me up regardless of what the topic is. This afternoon I’m doing this again with Manu Kumar.

While it’s also been enjoyable and interesting doing a bunch of podcasts around Give First: The Power of Mentorship, I’m pretty podcasted out. So, I’m now shifting the conversations for the remaining podcasts I have and am trying to incorporate something new, that has nothing to do with the book, into every podcast left before I hibernate again. I’ve got about 30 left and am following through on the ones I’ve committed to, but have shifted back to Default No for new inbound requests.

In September, I have a California trip and a bunch of stuff in Boulder (including Techstars Foundercon and Denver Startup Week). Then I have an East Coast trip in October (NYC and Washington, DC) and have been trying to sneak in an Austin trip (and failing). Other than that, I’m finished.

My “not public-facing” activity (and persona) is more than enough for me at this point in life. I enjoy the work a lot and am fortunate that I have deep, trusting relationships with almost all of the CEOs I work with, regardless of what is going on with the companies. While there are plenty of chaotic dynamics in the world right now, many of the companies I’m on the board of are doing well, and most of them are scaled businesses, which is a different kind of work than all the early-stage stuff I’d been doing for most of the prior 40 years. I’m also very much enjoying my deep time with other VCs we’ve supported as LPs whenever they reach out to me.

I anchored on turning 60 as the unambiguous shift for me into what Amy and I call “the third third of life.” While it is a continuation of the things I’m currently working on and committed to, including Foundry and Techstars, the most significant part of it is the cessation of work-related travel and most, if not all, of my public-facing activities.

My acceptance of the finiteness of life is a big part of this. The experience of the past three months has been powerful, both in terms of my energy level and in reinforcing what brings me joy. While life always has tragedy, hardship, disappointment, failure, and struggle, I embrace that as part of the experience, while orienting as much of my available energy toward things that bring me joy.