Jake Saper is a General Partner at Emergence Capital, one of the most iconic venture firms in enterprise software, with a portfolio that includes Zoom, Gusto, Veeva, and Together AI. Emergence has backed some of the most category-defining B2B companies of the last two decades, and Jake has spent nearly 12 years at the center of that deal flow.
What sets Jake apart is a life lived on both sides of the creativity question: he backs the companies building AI but also performs across genres from blues to metal as a working musician.
In this episode, Jake brings that rare combination of investor rigor and artist instinct to one of the hardest questions AI is forcing us to face, and whether you leave reassured or unsettled may depend entirely on how much of your identity is wrapped up in the work you create.
In this conversation, we discuss:
Explore this conversation:
00:00 Why AI Makes It Easier to Build a Demo and Harder to Build a Moat
05:25 From Cell Towers to Venture Capital: Jake Saper's Path to Emergence
08:53 How AI Is Compressing Startup Growth: From 18 Months to 4 Months to $1M ARR
18:05 What Art Actually Is: Compressed Human Experience and the Act of Making Meaning Shareable
23:30 How AI Can Unlock Latent Creativity in People Who Don't Think of Themselves as Creators
26:55 Why Disclosure Matters When Trust and Authenticity Are at Stake
30:19 Navigating a Post-Truth Era: When Everything Looks Synthetic, What Do We Believe?
32:14 Why the Value of Live Performance Is About to Skyrocket
35:58 As Soulless Entities Multiply, Soul-to-Soul Human Connection Becomes More Valuable
40:38 What Geoffrey Hinton Said About Building AI "Like a Mother" and Why It Was Unsatisfying
43:04 Why the Most Enduring Art Has Always Been About Transfer, Not Authorship
Resources: