Before founding Vercel, Guillermo Rauch, was a self-taught teenager in Argentina earning his first dollars online to help his family.
From early open-source work to remote freelancing, this episode traces how his drive to figure things out led to solving web performance at scale.
We also get into:
• how his dad instilled a mindset of pushing tech boundaries
• what growing up during Argentina’s economic swings taught him
• why he sees Minecraft as a healthy game for his kids
• why he believes speed without direction is meaningless
ABOUT US:
We’re proudly sponsored by Brex—a brand I co-founded, now supporting over 30,000 businesses like Anthropic, DoorDash, and Scale AI, helping them make every dollar count.
I’m grateful for their continued support as I bring you all conversations with some of the most exceptional founders of our generation. For more information, please go to: https://www.brex.com/?ref_code=bmk_audio_HDinHD
Connect with us here:
1. Guillermo Rauch- https://www.linkedin.com/in/rauchg/
2. Brex- https://x.com/brexHQ
3. Henrique Dubugras- https://x.com/hdubugras
This episode was produced and distributed by our friends at Atomik Growth: https://atomikgrowth.com/
00:00 Intro
02:00 Early Years
04:50 Parenting, First Experiences with Computers
07:40 Screen Time Rules
11:40 Video Games & Developing Programming Skills
15:30 Freelance Coding & Earning in U.S. Dollars
19:40 High School
24:10 Startup Offer
30:30 Silicon Valley & First Acquisition
41:45 Founding Vercel
54:40 AI Wave: v0, Agents & “Token Factories”
01:14:28 Vercel's Success and Client Impact
01:20:58 The Role of AI in Development
01:40:49 Iterating Towards Greatness
01:52:27 Balancing Luck and Skill