『CEO Pajama Time』のカバーアート

CEO Pajama Time

CEO Pajama Time

著者: Sari Kaganoff
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概要

CEO Pajama Time takes you inside the after-hour decisions and toughest strategic choices made by founders as they scale. Hosted by Sari Kaganoff, CEO and Founder of Aytza, these conversations are grounded in real-world experience, navigating the key inflection points every CEO faces.

Sari Kaganoff
マネジメント マネジメント・リーダーシップ リーダーシップ 経済学
エピソード
  • The Midnight Pivot That Became Validic
    2026/05/13

    Episode Description

    Most digital health companies of Validic's vintage have raised $100 million or more. Drew Schiller raised $35 million over 12 years, on purpose.

    Validic connects data from over 700 wearables, in-home medical devices, and health apps into the healthcare system. Drew started the company in 2010 with his college best friend Ryan, pivoted from corporate wellness into a data infrastructure play, then later expanded into health systems and acquired a logistics business to own the full stack.

    Drew talks about the midnight conversation with Ryan where they realized they couldn't out-build Fitbit or MyFitnessPal and decided to solve a different burning market need of integrating data into them instead. He also talks about why he devotes a full day every month with his leadership team to talk about nothing but strategy, and how the Validic team rewrote the company's core values in 2018 without him in the room.

    This one is for founders building infrastructure businesses, navigating pivots, or trying to figure out when slower growth is the right call.

    About Drew Schiller

    Drew Schiller is the CEO and co-founder of Validic, the platform that connects data from wearables, in-home medical devices, and health apps into the healthcare system. He started the company in 2010 with his college best friend Ryan, and launched Validic in 2013 after a midnight pivot away from corporate wellness software. Today the platform normalizes data from over 700 sources into a single API used by health systems, health plans, and digital health companies.

    Presented by Aytza

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    55 分
  • Killing Growth to Build a Lasting Company: with Michelle Davey, CEO of Wheel
    2026/04/23

    Michelle Davey built Wheel from a bootstrapped clinician-matching service into the infrastructure behind virtual-first care for some of the largest healthcare enterprises in the country like Amazon Clinic.

    In this conversation, she gets honest about what that evolution actually looked like. She talks about walking into a board meeting with the investor hockey stick chart and telling them they needed to change course despite it. About pivoting from SMBs to enterprise when every instinct said keep the revenue coming. About acquiring GoodRx's care platform and integrating it in only nine months. About over-hiring in 2021 and the dark days that followed when she had to unwind it. She also talks about her actual pajama time: blocking mornings for reading, then picking back up after the kids go to bed to catch up on what's happening in the market.

    As Michelle puts it: "A lot of people get into being a founder because it seems glamorous. It is not."

    In this episode:

    • From Enzyme to Wheel: the three horizons of building virtual-first care infrastructure
    • The board meeting where she stopped chasing SMB growth
    • Acquiring GoodRx's care platform and building an EMR she said she'd never build
    • Horizon 3: An AI-native platform powering programs like weight management, menopause, and longevity
    • Her biggest mistake: over-hiring in 2021 and the layoffs that followed
    • Hot take: "GLP-1s are going to be more disruptive to healthcare than AI"
    • The signal she's watching: stagnation in large payer market values

    About Michelle Davey

    Michelle Davey is the CEO and founder of Wheel, the infrastructure platform powering virtual-first care for enterprise healthcare companies. She started the company in 2018 after spending 15 years undiagnosed with an autoimmune condition in rural Texas. That experience drove her into healthcare, but the perverse incentives drove her out and into tech, where she built her career across startups and gig economy marketplaces before finding her way back to telehealth in 2016. Today, Wheel’s AI-native Horizon platform is on track to power 3 to 4 million patient visits this year for enterprises including retailers, pharmaceutical companies, and digital health brands.

    Presented by Aytza

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    46 分
  • Two Acquisitions in 60 Days: What Scaling That Fast Actually Looks Like with Taylor Justice
    2026/04/13

    Taylor Justice spent 13 years building Unite Us from a veteran services startup into the infrastructure connecting healthcare, government, and community organizations across the country. In this conversation, he gets honest about what that actually looked like.

    He talks about the first thing they built being wrong. The investor who told him healthcare was a mistake, then wrote back a year later to say he was wrong.

    He also talks about the reality of scaling fast. Tripling headcount. Two acquisitions in 60 days. And what it took to stay the course when everything is moving at once.

    As Justice puts it: “This sh*t is hard. And you definitely cry sometimes."

    In this episode:

    • Building for veterans, then pivoting into healthcare before knowing the landscape
    • The first product they built (and why it was wrong)
    • Realities of scaling fast: 300 to 900 people, two acquisitions, and trying to stay focused
    • 12 years with a co-founder, and what it's like now that he's gone
    • Myth bust: "Stealth mode is the biggest waste of time"

    Taylor Justice

    Taylor Justice is the CEO and co-founder of Unite Us, a software company connecting healthcare, government, and community organizations to coordinate care around health-related non-medical needs like food, housing, and transportation. A former U.S. Army infantry officer, Taylor was medically discharged and built Unite Us out of his own experience navigating the VA system and the gaps he saw for veterans without a network. Thirteen years later, Unite Us operates throughout the United States and has raised over $250 million to transform how human services are delivered.

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    49 分
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