
Pick your battles, even if there’s no opponent (yet)
Building a legaltech company for a market that didn’t yet exist was a challenge worth taking on, according to Nnamdi Emelifeonwu, CEO of Definely. The first-mover advantage is real and “the companies that matter are the ones that picked a fight five years before anyone else thought it was worth having”. The Standard
Oil chaos continues
US President Donald Trump declared an end to 106 days of war with Iran, but oil markets remain unsettled despite prices falling sharply. Mike Rosenberg, Professor at IESE Business School, warns, “it will be at least 12 to 18 months before people start to trust” any real return to normality. FT
The rise of the “Apocaloptimists”
According to Calum Chace, Co-founder of Conscium, attitudes towards AI fall into three main groups: Doomers who fear catastrophe, Zoomers who embrace rapid progress, and Apocaloptimists who sit somewhere in between. The latter takes a cautiously optimistic approach and prepares for AI risks without losing sight of its opportunities. AI Journal
Project Ambition to reignite lost UK startup culture
Pippa Lamb, a VC investor, and Hamish Shephard, Co-founder of HelloFresh, launched Project Ambition to inspire more young Britons to start companies. Unveiled at Number 10, the campaign aims to rebuild a culture that celebrates risk-taking and entrepreneurial ambition. Pathfounders
Caution is costly
SpaceX’s success is cited as proof that bold, “crazy” bets are more often right than reckless. The UK must avoid becoming risk-averse in both business and government, which would hold back innovation and growth, according to entrepreneur and investor Brent Hoberman. He urges a shift toward backing founders, tolerating failure, and taking bigger institutional risks. Times |