1. EachPod

Avoiding Founder Burnout and other Early-Stage Startup Pitfalls

Author
Walter Thompson
Published
Sat 23 Aug 2025
Episode Link
https://fundbuildscale.podbean.com/e/avoiding-founder-burnout-and-other-early-stage-startup-pitfalls/

Pro tip: If you can’t see yourself getting up every morning for the next ten years and being excited about going to work, don’t launch a startup.


Ajay Prakash co-founded Rinse in 2013 to take the friction out of laundry and dry cleaning — for consumers, and for the small, family-owned businesses behind the counter.


Since then, Rinse has scaled into a national brand, and Ajay has become a lecturer at Stanford Graduate Business School’s Startup Garage, where he teaches frameworks for validating ideas, testing business models, and knowing when it’s time to take the leap into entrepreneurship.


I invited him on to share what he’s learned about developing domain expertise from scratch, building trust with co-founders, and avoiding the early mistakes that can derail a promising business.


RUNTIME 42:38
EPISODE BREAKDOWN

(2:22) Ajay talks about two trends that led him to co-found Rinse in 2013.


(4:15) Rinse co-founder James Joun was “one of my best friends from college.”


(5:29) “When we started, we spent a lot of time with James’ parents in the dry-cleaning store.”


(6:40) Before taking the leap, founders should identify their “passion, expertise, and market opportunity.”


(9:11) “As you build a company, answering the question of ‘why now’ and ‘why me’ is really important.”


(11:19) “We signed up 11 of our friends. We picked up their clothes.”


(14:17) “Every smart investor we talked to… told us we had to be on-demand.”


(17:41) Early signals led Rinse to pivot from pricing per pound to adopting a subscription model.


(20:23) His approach to crafting customer personas.


(22:05) “We always envisioned helping the local cleaners.”


(27:11) From the start, Rinse used Net Promoter Scores and surveys to glean customer insights.


(30:44) The “two general areas of lessons” Ajay teaches at Stanford’s Startup Garage.


(34:53) Why he encourages Startup Garage students to keep asking themselves, “Am I still excited?”


(37:41) How to prepare for the mental challenges of being a startup founder.


(40:01) Is Rinse’s operational model adaptable to other industries and services?


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Thanks for listening!


Walter.

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