5 Key Takeaways
- Kintan Brahmbhatt was already starting companies as a teenager, including a healthcare venture at 17, which gave him founder reps before most people finish their first internship.
- He describes that first startup as a soft landing rather than a total wipeout and emphasizes how much the experience taught him about building, pitching, and recovering from imperfect outcomes.
- After that, he deliberately went to Microsoft to go deeper on computer science fundamentals and learn how to build inside a world-class engineering environment.
- A later jump into Amazon and IMDb brought him into consumer media, where he worked across movies, music, and podcasts and kept chasing products that added useful context to how people consume information.
- The broader thread in the episode is range: Kintan has moved between startups, big tech, investing, and new products, but the constant is a bias toward building things that sit close to real user behavior.
Episode Summary
In this episode, Kevin Davis talks with Kintan Brahmbhatt about entrepreneurship that started unusually early and never really stopped. Kintan shares the story of launching a healthcare company at 17, what he learned when that effort softened instead of exploding, and why he then chose to sharpen his technical depth at Microsoft rather than pretend early founder experience was enough.
The conversation also covers his time at Amazon and IMDb, including work across media and podcasts, and the way he thinks about product opportunities that live close to context and user intent. It is a conversation about technical depth, founder instincts, and the value of moving between very different operating environments without losing your center.