Three Exits in 10 Years: Lessons from Serial Entrepreneur Iñaki Berenguer
Description
Iñaki Berenguer is a serial entrepreneur with three successful exits: Pixable (sold to Singtel), Clink (sold to Thinking Phones), and CoverWallet (sold to Aon for $300M). He's now a partner at Flive Ventures, a $100M fund investing at the intersection of AI and healthcare, and president and co-founder of Ipronics, an AI infrastructure company for data centers.
What you'll learn:
- How Iñaki built CoverWallet from 0 to $100M in premium revenue and 400 employees in just 4 years
- Why he'd rebuild his 250-person company with only 10 people in the AI era
- The hidden time cost of scaling teams: 40% of CEO time spent on HR, hiring, and one-on-ones
- How strategic partnerships with potential acquirers create acquisition optionality
- Why investment bankers matter: the difference between 3-month and 8-month due diligence timelines
- The critical mistake of taking common stock vs. preferred in acquisition deals
- Why "paranoid optimist" is the ideal founder mindset
- The lifestyle reality check: VC work vs. founder intensity and what actually counts as "high pressure"
- Reference check strategies that reveal integrity under pressure
- How luck and timing determine exits more than founders want to admit
In this episode, we cover:
(00:51 ) Iñaki's journey: three companies, three exits across different industries
(03:21 ) Why Pixable's "always on" consumer product was harder than enterprise
(09:04 ) The decision to sell CoverWallet despite investor pressure to keep building
(12:20 ) Product-market fit doesn't exist in AI: markets change faster than products
(19:43 ) How Iñaki would rebuild differently: from 250 employees to AI agents
(22:32 ) The real time cost of hiring: 100 employees = 1,000 interviews
(27:16 ) M&A lessons: why time kills deals and investment bankers matter
(29:03 ) Building optionality through strategic partnerships with potential acquirers
(32:37 ) The fulfillment of building vs. investing: team wins and external validation
(36:23 ) Why founders struggle to celebrate wins that took years to achieve
(40:25 ) The "paranoid optimist" mindset: assuming someone is always working harder
(42:14 ) AI in healthcare: the most underhyped opportunity
(45:20 ) Comparing entrepreneurial cultures: Silicon Valley vs. New York vs. Europe
(46:16 ) The biggest mistake: not doing enough reference checks on people
(48:44 ) What drives founders: proving doubters wrong, not money





