BREAKING: Jack Altman Hits 100x Growth w/ Uncapped
Alt Capital | Marc Andreessen, Sam Altman, Keith Rabois, Elad Gil, Qasar Younis
Learning From The Greats
I'm SO excited to share our conversation with Jack Altman of Alt Capital (previously Founder & CEO of Lattice), unpacking Uncapped — which recently reached escape velocity in just 14 episodes. Uncapped is a podcast where Jack interviews founders & investors he genuinely admires, using those conversations to publicly explore the inner workings of venture capital & shape his investing strategy at Alt Capital.
Recent legendary Uncapped guests include: Marc Andreessen, Keith Rabois, Gary Tan, Josh Kopelman, Elad Gil, Aaron Levie, Qasar Younis, Adam Guild, & of course, his brother Sam Altman.
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In this conversation, Jack breaks down his conviction-led approach to early-stage investing, his shift from founder to VC to podcaster, & why he’s learning in public. We go deeper into his interviews with Marc Andreessen, Josh Kopelman, & Sam Altman, to parse the hotly debated venture market and all of the AI hype.
Spoiler alert: Jack is certainly all-in on the AI supercycle, betting on applications, & sees the era defined by a handful of breakout companies: OpenAI, SpaceX, Stripe, Databricks, & Anduril.
Beyond Uncapped
In addition to podcasting, Jack notably founded Alt Capital, backing 25 bold startups, predominantly AI, out of their latest $150M AUM fund III. Portfolio companies include: Antares, Owner, David AI, & Retell AI. More below.
FYI: Jack also built Lattice into a multi-billion-dollar category leader, raising hundreds of millions along the way.
Special thank you to Max Altman for helping supply hard hitting questions.
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Highlights
(00:00) Award-Winning Trailer
(00:59) Welcome Jack Altman!
(02:12) Founder to VC & now Podcaster
(05:48) Uncapped’s VC Alpha
(12:50) Learning From Marc Andreessen
(14:10) Brex’s Full-Stack Finance Platform
(18:24) How to secure allocation in hyper competitive rounds
(20:04) What is it like being a founder in today’s environment?
(24:13) Will model companies grow even bigger?
(33:50) Sam Altman & The AGI Timeline
(39:44) Are energy companies the next gold rush?
(43:13) Silicon Valley: More Talent Acquisitions Abound
(44:40) Alt Capital’s Investment Portfolio
(46:40) What’s it really like being a high performer?
(48:00) Espresso obsession & Pokémon cards
Jack Altman on Uncapped, Investing Early, & Betting on AI
Jack Altman is taking a public, first-principles approach to venture through Uncapped, his podcast featuring conversations with top investors and founders. Originally started as a side project with no formal strategy, the show quickly became a platform for learning and access. “It’s a good excuse to meet interesting people,” Altman said, noting that the format allows him to ask questions that would be harder to pose in a typical one-on-one setting and has helped accelerate his ramp into venture. “I get to ask them a bunch of questions that would be super awkward if I was seeing them for coffee… but now because the cameras are on, I get to just grill them.”
Across episodes with guests like Marc Andreessen, Josh Kopelman, Sam Altman, and Garry Tan, Altman has surprisingly found that there’s no single formula for success in venture. “These people are humongously successful, but they all think and practice the craft in wildly different ways,” he said. That insight has freed him to build his fund, Alt Capital, in a way that feels authentic and personally motivating.
But, he isn’t necessarily looking for a playbook. “I’m not looking for advice to dictate what I do,” he said. Instead, he’s building Uncapped and Alt Capital in parallel, as a way to keep learning, build conviction, and stay close to the founders shaping the future. And I am certainly along for that ride.
VC Hot Takes: Marc Andreessen vs Josh Kopelman
A Divergence In Fund Strategies
A recurring theme across episodes is structural divergence in fund strategies. Two schools of thought that have particularly stood out are Josh Kopelman’s Venture Arrogance Score and Marc Andreessen’s Barbell Effect, as both highlighted in Uncapped.
Barbell Effect
Founder of $45B AUM VC firm, a16z, Marc Andreessen recently coined the term the barbell effect — the idea is that success is increasingly concentrated at the two ends of the spectrum: very small, highly specialized funds or very large, scaled institutions with unmatched distribution, hiring, and access advantages.
However, between the two is an awkward unsolved ground in fund sizes. One that Andreessen argues is the mid-sized firms that lack both advantages: they’re not specialized enough to win on depth, nor large enough to win on scale, leaving them in a structurally disadvantaged position in today’s venture landscape. Seemingly, the middle is getting squeezed out.
“You can either be really small, you can be really big, the middle is not there,”
Has Venture Grown Too Large?
Josh Kopelman, by contrast, pushes back on the viability of mega-funds, describing the “venture arrogance score.” The idea that fund size creates unsustainable expectations for outcomes. Essentially, if a venture capitalist wants to own 10% of a company at exit and have a 3x fund, they need their big outcome to be "really big" due to the power law of outcomes. That level of outcome concentration is statistically rare, even in boom markets.
“The hot take… was basically around like the venture arrogance score and that like big fund math just like doesn’t math,” said Altman.
The “arrogance” in question refers to the belief that a firm can scale its capital base without compromising performance. Kopelman’s critique challenges the assumption that great sourcing, judgment, and access can scale linearly with dollars under management. It also reflects a growing skepticism about the sustainability of mega funds in an environment where exits are scarce, IPO markets are sluggish, and late-stage private rounds are often overvalued.
The Rise of Mega Funds
We went deep into this in our conversation with Bucky Moore of Lightspeed, where he takes the side of the mega-fund. With Lightspeed’s $30B AUM, Bucky thoroughly lays out the viability, that actually, we’re going to be experiencing more trillion-dollar outcomes, and these very large mega funds are perfectly positioned to help fund and support them, while still making a return on their investment.
Firms like Andreessen Horowitz, Lightspeed and Founders Fund, in this view, can justify their size by writing massive checks into breakout companies—not because others missed them, but because they’re willing to take bigger swings at higher prices and hold longer.
Altman’s Take
Altman finds truth in both, but doesn’t buy the argument that mid-sized firms can’t compete. He believes founders still prioritize the individual partner, brand trust, and alignment on terms—regardless of fund size. Ultimately, he sees firm structure as secondary to founder-investor fit.
“I still think that a Series A or B founder… is gonna pick a partner that they really like, a brand that they trust and respect, a team that they think can help them, and like a price that works,” he said. “I don't know if the founder cares whether that fund is 200 million, 1 billion, 3 billion, 7 billion.”
Still, I think the core, unproven, question remains: at what point does fund size become a drag on performance? And how many firms truly have the access, conviction, and discipline to escape the math?
The Founder Lens
While Uncapped features both high-profile VCs and founders, Jack Altman says it’s the founders who leave the strongest impression. “To me, talking to the founders is actually where I learn the most most of the time,” he said. “The founders who are running companies are the ones who are close to the metal… they go so much deeper in a particular area.”
In episodes with founders like Adam Guild (Owner), Aaron Levie (Box), and Qasar Younis (Applied Intuition), Altman highlights a pattern: obsession and clarity. “These great founders are just so… obsessed. They're so like, inspired about what they themselves are doing,” he observed. “There's a clarity and confidence in what they're building that I find gives me a lot of energy.”
This intensity, he believes, is often more revealing than frameworks or strategy talk, it’s about how people talk about what they’re building. “It’s less about the things they’ve said and more about observing what they’re like when they talk about their companies,” he said.
Altman draws a sharp contrast between founder and investor roles: “VCs by nature are like, you know, a mile wide and inch deep. And founders are like, you know, the inverse of that.” That’s why, when deciding what to fund, he often looks for this founder-led depth and momentum more than any specific market or trend.
Alt Capital’s Strategy
With Alt Capital's $150M AUM Fund III, Altman focuses on early-stage investments, primarily Seed and Series, with check sizes ranging from $1 million to $12 million. The fund is targeting around 25 investments.
Altman is clear-eyed about where his fund fits into the AI stack. “The model companies will be like ridiculously big, but I don't… we're not investing in them,” he said. “I know less about infrastructure… applications are just like the obvious place for me… it's also what I think is like the best place for venture in 2025.”
He believes AI will reshape labor markets across sectors. “It’s already good at programming. It’s really good at having voice conversations. It’s great at chat,” he said. “It’s gonna just keep moving down the list and become good at being a lawyer… a doctor… a structural engineer.”
Alt Capital Portfolio Companies:
David – AI voice data infrastructure
Retell – New way to build, test, deploy, and monitor
production-ready AI voice agents at scale.
Antares – Fission-based nuclear energy
Owner - Makes online growth easy for restaurants
Fillout - Forms that do it all
Rogo - Secure AI for financial professionals
Legora - Collaborative AI powering lawyers to review and research faster, draft smarter, and advise with precision
Main Uncapped Takeaway?
Through these early expert conversations Altman has learned that there is no single strategy that guarantees success in venture. But what does matter is having a clear strategy and executing it with conviction. As he puts it, “There’s a lot of ways to do it… for every great person who tells you that the right strategy is X, there’s somebody who will tell you that the right strategy is the opposite of X.” Rather than chasing consensus, Altman sees this as liberating: you don’t need the “right” strategy, you just need your strategy, and to stick with it.
Bullish on Uncapped. Bullish on Jack Altman.
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