Moats & Multiples in Hardtech with Venture Declassified

What actually changes when you raise money for a hardware company instead of a software one? This is a Hardtech Podcast crossover with Venture Declassified, where Grant plays the founder and three active investors say what they're really thinking. Jacob Schpok (Elevate Ventures), Mike Kelly (Start Something Ventures), and Ben Pidgeon (VisionTech) join Grant Chapman to unpack how hard tech is underwritten differently from software at pre-seed, seed, and Series A: the metrics, the moats, the multiples, and why the traits that make hardware slow and expensive early are exactly what make it defensible later. Expect plenty of detours: why your fridge is designed to die, whether subscription hardware is a fad, and a real worked example of a hard tech company that sold to John Deere. There's a companion episode on the Venture Declassified feed too. What we get into: Hard tech vs deep tech vs product companies (and where quantum fits) Subscriptions, LTV, and the macroeconomics behind hardware-as-a-service Why modern hardware is "designed to fail," and the uncanny valley of quality How investors underwrite a technical founder, and what 3D printing changed Power law, the hardware moat, and why hardware gets acquired for the tech Multiples, returns, and the Smart Apply / John Deere worked example Chapters 0:00 Intro: a Hardtech x Venture Declassified crossover 0:52 Today's question: how hard tech differs from software early 1:10 Meet the Venture Declassified crew: Jacob, Mike & Ben 5:30 Why hard tech is a different game than SaaS 6:23 Hard tech vs deep tech vs product companies 7:45 What "deep tech" really means (and where quantum fits) 9:46 Settling on a working definition of hard tech 10:36 The business-model twist: subscriptions come to hardware 11:39 The kitchen subscription & financing the margin gap 13:31 Durable or a fad? Gen Z, cash & subscription fatigue 15:35 Speed of innovation and the death of resale value 19:15 "Stuff isn't made like it used to be": designed to fail 22:54 Engineering "closer to the sun," and designing for delight 25:05 The uncanny valley of quality: cheap, mid & expensive 27:04 The opposite world: med device, the FDA & oil-and-gas failures 29:28 Investor misconceptions: underwriting the technical founder 30:49 Software is just as diverse as hardware 33:18 Banger prototypes vs scaling, and the 3D-printing leapfrog 35:50 The new question: what do you know about scaling? 36:33 Why hardware costs more early, software more later 37:14 Cheap customer discovery: shoeboxes, Wizard of Oz & a U-Haul 39:21 The real chasm: from validation to selling for money 40:18 Power law: why software "looks better" early 41:09 The hardware moat vs software's supplanting risk 42:17 Why hardware gets acquired for the technology 43:18 Copying Uber: software's near-zero technical risk 48:12 Multiples: 7x SaaS vs 2-3x for product companies 50:10 The angel's case for hard tech in a portfolio 51:53 Why hardware looks a lot like life science 53:13 The Smart Apply story: selling to John Deere 56:26 First principles: founder, problem, solution 59:00 How to find hard-tech investors 1:00:14 The quiet part: maybe you're the problem 1:01:37 What coachability actually means 1:02:48 The danger zone of conflicting advice 1:04:08 Wrap-up: to be continued Featuring Grant Chapman (The Hardtech Podcast / Glassboard) with Jacob Schpok, Mike Kelly, and Ben Pidgeon from Venture Declassified. Glassboard is a hardware product development company. Subscribe for more conversations with the people building hard tech, and check out the companion episode on Venture Declassified. #HardTech #VentureCapital #AngelInvesting #Startups #DeepTech #Hardware #ProductDevelopment #Fundraising #SeedFunding #Investing