<description>&lt;p&gt;This week, we're bringing back one of our most loved episodes on Founders in Arms. Ryan Gariépy is the co-founder and former CTO of Clearpath Robotics and Otto Motors, acquired by Rockwell Automation for $600M+ in 2023. He bootstrapped the company for five years with only $300K in funding, reached profitability in 18 months, and spent 14 years building mobile robotics platforms that became the industry standard for research and industrial automation. &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;What you'll learn: &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Why robotics is a systems discipline where progress stacks rather than explodes &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;How to bootstrap a hardware company to $10M revenue before raising venture capital &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Why robotics follows 20-50% sustained growth for decades vs. software's boom-bust cycles &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The "promise problem" with humanoid robots and why form factor shapes user expectations &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;How manufacturing in Canada (not China) became a strategic advantage for Clearpath &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Why founders overestimate 2-year progress but underestimate 10-year impact in robotics &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The real economics of humanoid robots: $20K cost becomes $80K landed price &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;How robotics investment differs from software: less competitive, more defensible &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Why experience compounds in hardware but expires in software careers Investment criteria for robotics: engineering risk vs. technical risk and go-to-market strategy &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;In this episode, we cover: &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;(00:00) Introduction and live event announcement (03:29) Ryan's background: Clearpath Robotics and Otto Motors (04:06) Building two brands under one company (06:29) The 14-year journey: challenges and non-linear growth (07:11) Bootstrapping robotics when "nobody thought you could make money" (08:17) Reaching profitability in 18 months with research customers (10:28) Building robotics platforms for MIT, universities, and research labs (11:03) Manufacturing in Canada vs. outsourcing to Asia (15:05) Reconnecting after 20 years: the Waterloo entrepreneurship connection (16:17) Working at Kiva Systems (now Amazon Robotics) (18:10) Why robotics is more exciting now than ever in history (19:21) Robotics as systems discipline: no single breakthrough technology (21:22) The overhype cycle and realistic expectations (22:14) Software explodes then crashes; robotics compounds for decades (23:36) Why hardware is harder but more mission-driven (25:27) The talent pool advantage: people irrationally love hardware (27:30) Physical AI and real-world impact beyond software optimization (28:07) Humanoid robots: incredible tech, miscalibrated expectations (32:41) The "promise problem": form factors make promises to users (34:35) Consumer robotics examples: Matic cleaning robot (35:59) Asia leading in restaurant and airport robotics deployment (38:37) Training challenges and precursor technologies needed (39:20) China's role in robotics and humanoid development (41:08) Venture capital structures forcing "ridiculous things" in robotics (42:36) Robotics for entertainment vs. utility as consumer use case (43:52) Imad's robotics investments: Embark, Gecko Robotics, vertical AVs (45:23) Why robotics is less competitive than software (47:21) Operational design domain and technology risk assessment (48:19) The AV journey: Waymo, Zoox, and the importance of experience (49:39) Experience compounds in hardware, expires in software (50:31) Rapid fire: biggest mistake, following gut over charisma (51:47) Founder inspiration: Rodney Brooks (52:20) Uncomfortable feedback at Honda co-op job (53:17) Investment criteria: engineering risk, go-to-market, team understanding&lt;/p&gt;</description>

Founders in Arms

Immad Akhund and Rajat Suri

The State of Robotics in 2026: Ryan Gariépy on Hype, Reality, and Long-Term Thinking

MAR 13, 202655 MIN
Founders in Arms

The State of Robotics in 2026: Ryan Gariépy on Hype, Reality, and Long-Term Thinking

MAR 13, 202655 MIN

Description

This week, we're bringing back one of our most loved episodes on Founders in Arms. Ryan Gariépy is the co-founder and former CTO of Clearpath Robotics and Otto Motors, acquired by Rockwell Automation for $600M+ in 2023. He bootstrapped the company for five years with only $300K in funding, reached profitability in 18 months, and spent 14 years building mobile robotics platforms that became the industry standard for research and industrial automation. What you'll learn: Why robotics is a systems discipline where progress stacks rather than explodes How to bootstrap a hardware company to $10M revenue before raising venture capital Why robotics follows 20-50% sustained growth for decades vs. software's boom-bust cycles The "promise problem" with humanoid robots and why form factor shapes user expectations How manufacturing in Canada (not China) became a strategic advantage for Clearpath Why founders overestimate 2-year progress but underestimate 10-year impact in robotics The real economics of humanoid robots: $20K cost becomes $80K landed price How robotics investment differs from software: less competitive, more defensible Why experience compounds in hardware but expires in software careers Investment criteria for robotics: engineering risk vs. technical risk and go-to-market strategy In this episode, we cover: (00:00) Introduction and live event announcement (03:29) Ryan's background: Clearpath Robotics and Otto Motors (04:06) Building two brands under one company (06:29) The 14-year journey: challenges and non-linear growth (07:11) Bootstrapping robotics when "nobody thought you could make money" (08:17) Reaching profitability in 18 months with research customers (10:28) Building robotics platforms for MIT, universities, and research labs (11:03) Manufacturing in Canada vs. outsourcing to Asia (15:05) Reconnecting after 20 years: the Waterloo entrepreneurship connection (16:17) Working at Kiva Systems (now Amazon Robotics) (18:10) Why robotics is more exciting now than ever in history (19:21) Robotics as systems discipline: no single breakthrough technology (21:22) The overhype cycle and realistic expectations (22:14) Software explodes then crashes; robotics compounds for decades (23:36) Why hardware is harder but more mission-driven (25:27) The talent pool advantage: people irrationally love hardware (27:30) Physical AI and real-world impact beyond software optimization (28:07) Humanoid robots: incredible tech, miscalibrated expectations (32:41) The "promise problem": form factors make promises to users (34:35) Consumer robotics examples: Matic cleaning robot (35:59) Asia leading in restaurant and airport robotics deployment (38:37) Training challenges and precursor technologies needed (39:20) China's role in robotics and humanoid development (41:08) Venture capital structures forcing "ridiculous things" in robotics (42:36) Robotics for entertainment vs. utility as consumer use case (43:52) Imad's robotics investments: Embark, Gecko Robotics, vertical AVs (45:23) Why robotics is less competitive than software (47:21) Operational design domain and technology risk assessment (48:19) The AV journey: Waymo, Zoox, and the importance of experience (49:39) Experience compounds in hardware, expires in software (50:31) Rapid fire: biggest mistake, following gut over charisma (51:47) Founder inspiration: Rodney Brooks (52:20) Uncomfortable feedback at Honda co-op job (53:17) Investment criteria: engineering risk, go-to-market, team understanding