In this episode, we sit down with Pranav Mallampalli, founder of Assembly and a recent graduate of UC Berkeley, where he double-majored in Political Science and Data Science. Pranav takes us through his entrepreneurial journey—from initially wanting to become a lawyer to discovering his passion for building companies. Inspired by early experiences in high school entrepreneurship competitions and a study abroad program in Portugal, Pranav found himself drawn into the vibrant startup culture at Berkeley.
He discusses how Assembly began as a solution for code search for engineers but pivoted to customer success software after engaging with over 400 potential users and identifying a more pressing market need. Pranav shares valuable insights on how to approach pivoting with confidence, the importance of listening to customers, and how founder-led sales can make or break an early-stage startup.
We explore how participating in Y Combinator helped shape Assembly’s direction and how the team leverages their technical background to differentiate in a competitive space. Pranav also reflects on the challenges of fundraising as a young founder, the value of leveraging your alumni network, and why flexibility and hyper-focus on your ideal customer profile (ICP) are critical to startup success.
Whether you’re an aspiring entrepreneur, an early-stage founder, or simply curious about startup life, this conversation is packed with practical advice, candid stories, and a healthy dose of Berkeley pride.
Episode Quotes
On Building and Releasing a Product:
I think one of the hardest things was actually that moment which is building a product and releasing it. To a lot of founders out there, the most daunting thing you could do is creating something and then giving it to other people or showing it to somebody else. A lot of people will feel really self-conscious about it. You get really stressed out about what people think about your product or if they’ll use it at all. And if there’s one thing that I learned in that moment, it was literally like, it doesn’t really matter. Build the product and release it and kind of go from there. You need something to build off of in order to build a company.
On Finding Patterns and Knowing When to Pivot:
I think one of the biggest things, especially when you’re pivoting, talking to as many people as you can and hearing them say the same thing was a very, very important metric for us in order to fully commit to a new product. It’s not necessarily hearing the same thing, but it’s hearing the same problem. What great companies do is they hear or see a pattern in different verticals or even across an entire industry, like a horizontal product. And so what you’re trying to do when you’re really, really early on at a startup, and if you’re a founder is can you find this pattern a hundred times? Can you find it five hundred times? Can you find it a thousand times? And what you are trying to do is build a product that can essentially solve that pattern problem over time.
On the Power of Founder-Led Sales:
I think founder-led sales is both the most beautiful and daunting thing that any startup goes through, because, as a founder, there’s literally nobody else that can replicate your passion for what you’re building. This is your baby. You spend an enormous amount of time, maybe even too much time, building it, working on it, stressing about it. When you sell something to another company or to another person, they see that from you. They see the passion you have. If a founder can’t sell, that’s a really big problem. The founder should be able to sell the thing that they’re building because at the end of the day, it’s their passion project. It’s their child. You need to be able to put it out there and get people to want it.