• Purposeful Connection with Matt Zilli, CEO at Planview
    Feb 20 2026

    In this episode of Austin Tech Connect, Thom Singer sits down with Matt Zilli, the new CEO of Planview, for a grounded conversation about leadership, career growth, and why real relationships still matter in a tech world chasing speed. Matt shares his unusual path through SaaS, from computer science at Santa Clara, to Marketo, to leading private equity backed software companies, and how a strong network of people willing to "take a bet" on you can unlock unexpected opportunities.

    Matt also unpacks Planview's approach to hybrid work through what the company calls "purposeful connections," which is less about counting office days and more about bringing people together for a reason, to build relationships, solve real problems, and strengthen mentorship. The conversation closes with an optimistic look at Austin's tech ecosystem, what makes it special, and what the community needs to protect as the city keeps growing. If you care about innovation and community, this one hits the sweet spot.

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    Thank you to the sponsor of Austin Tech Connect - Calavista Software... Software development without the drama. Since 2001 Calavista software has been trusted by startups and fortune 100 companies for their custom software needs.

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    33 Min.
  • Phoenix Semiconductor: Solving the "End-of-Life" Chip Crisis
    Feb 13 2026

    What happens when a single, outdated $5 semiconductor can stall an aircraft program, delay medical equipment, or freeze production lines? In this episode of Austin Tech Connect, Thom Singer sits down with Ryan Hatcher, CEO and founder of Phoenix Semiconductor, to unpack a supply chain problem that quietly cripples industries: "end-of-life" chips that are no longer manufactured, but are still essential to the systems we depend on. Ryan shares how his career path from physics to defense electronics to tech scouting put him front-row during the COVID-era shortages, where the real bottlenecks weren't always the cutting-edge chips… but the small components no one could replace.

    Ryan explains how Phoenix Semiconductor is building drop-in replacement chips that perform indistinguishably from the originals... and why that matters for defense, aerospace, medical devices, energy, and heavy industry. Along the way, you'll hear a smart, honest look at entrepreneurship (starting with "zero momentum"), the power of mentorship, and why Austin's tech ecosystem still has a rare advantage: the ability to reach the right people through real relationships. If you care about semiconductors, supply chain resilience, or how founders build meaningful companies in Austin, this one is worth your time.

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    Thank you to Calavista Software for being the annual sponsors of this podcast for 2026.

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    35 Min.
  • Senseloaf AI, Making Recruiting Less Miserable - CEO Prakhar Arawal
    Feb 4 2026

    In this episode of Austin Tech Connect, Thom Singer talks with Prakhar Agrawal, CEO of Senseloaf AI, an Austin based startup using AI agents to make recruiting faster, more human, and less frustrating for both candidates and hiring teams.

    Prakhar shares his path from mechanical engineering to entrepreneurship, and how a broken job search experience in 2017–2018 pushed him to build an "automated matching" approach long before AI became a buzzword. He explains how he reunited with his cofounder, an early NLP practitioner, and tells the origin story behind the name Senseloaf, "making sense of data" with recruiting as the first "slice" of a bigger vision.

    The conversation dives into what Senseloaf actually does, from intelligent candidate matching beyond keywords, to a 24/7 conversational agent that engages applicants, to AI powered screening and interview workflows that scale without removing humans from decision making.

    Prakhar also discusses the realities of building an AI company in a market filled with hype and mistrust, how the business survived COVID by evolving its model, and why the team is moving toward a value first approach by opening the platform so companies can test it before committing. The episode wraps with a candid look at why Austin attracted him from Boston, what the city does well (and where it can improve) for founders, plus a bigger discussion about the rise of "engineer entrepreneurs" as risk and barriers to building have dropped.

    To learn more, visit senseloaf.ai or connect with Prakhar on LinkedIn.

    Thank you to the sponsor of the Austin Tech Connect Podcast.... Calavista Software.

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    28 Min.
  • Job Machine CEO Brandon Tigges
    Jan 29 2026

    In this episode of Austin Tech Connect, ATC's Thom Singer sits down with Brandon Tigges, co-founder and CEO of Austin based Job Machine. Brandon grew up a military kid, was homeschooled, moved eight times before age 18, and learned early how to adapt, learn fast, and build relationships. That path took him from finance to tech sales, then into entrepreneurship, fueled by mentors, books, and an obsession with solving real problems.

    Brandon shares how Job Machine helps workforce organizations, schools, and outplacement providers place people into jobs faster, and why their big, hairy, audacious goal is simple, any American who wants a job should be able to get one. Along the way, he talks about work ethic, paying it forward, and what Austin needs to keep doing right if we want the tech ecosystem to stay strong.

    Austin Tech Connect is sponsored by Calavista Software

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    34 Min.
  • Women Founders, AI, and Austin with Jan Ryan
    Jan 6 2026

    Austin did not become a tech city by accident, and it will not stay an innovation center on autopilot. In the first Austin Tech Connect episode of 2026, Thom Singer sits down with Jan Ryan, CEO of Three Hills, a longtime operator in venture backed startups, a builder of community, and a force behind expanding opportunity for women founders in Austin.

    Jan takes us back to the mid 90s when Austin was still "a lovable, slightly disorganized teenager," then connects the lessons of the dot com era to what is happening now with AI and frontier tech.

    This is a conversation about leadership, not hype. Jan lays out why innovation is moving faster than the institutions that are supposed to support it, talent pipelines, capital networks, and policy frameworks, and why inclusion is not a tagline, it is a growth strategy. Thom and Jan dig into what it will take for Austin to lead the next decade, how leaders can show up without burning out, and why it is not just networking, it is equipping. If you care about the next chapter of Austin tech, this one is your seat at the table.

    Thank you to the 2026 sponsor of Austin Tech Connect.... Calavista Software. It is companies that are true "Community Champions" that sponsor organizations like the Austin Technology Council.

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    50 Min.
  • How Trust Scales, A Founder's Playbook... with Scott Kenyon from Applaudo
    Dec 19 2025

    Austin Tech Connect closes out 2025 with a milestone episode celebrating the podcast's three year anniversary and ending the year with a high energy conversation about entrepreneurship, custom software, and what it takes to keep building in Austin. Thom welcomes Scott Kenyon, founding partner at Applaudo, a firm that helps companies go from early stage ideas to real products, covering strategy, MVPs, design and development, cloud platforms, AI, DevOps, and cybersecurity.

    Scott shares his entrepreneurial path, including leaving college to start a business, then returning later to finish after a first venture gave him real world experience and momentum. From there, he explains how Applaudo grew from a focused service offering into a broader set of capabilities by staying close to client needs and expanding carefully in a trust driven industry. A key theme throughout the episode is that software services still run on reputation, relationships, and accountability, especially when companies are betting real dollars on complex builds.

    The conversation includes a memorable story about helping a pro sports organization modernize an outdated workflow, plus a look at the different industries Applaudo serves and why focus matters even when you work across multiple verticals. Thom and Scott also dig into AI, not as hype, but as a practical tool that is changing how work gets done, along with a candid discussion about the infrastructure demands behind AI and what that could mean over the next several years.

    The episode wraps with thoughts on what makes Austin's tech community strong, where the ecosystem needs to stay scrappy, and a look ahead to 2026, including Austin Tech Hall of Fame nominations opening in January.

    Thanks to the sponsor of the podcast, Calavista Software.

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    32 Min.
  • 2025 Austin State of Tech Breakfast Keynote
    Dec 12 2025

    This week on Austin Tech Connect, we are sharing the keynote from the 2025 State of Tech breakfast, hosted by the Austin Technology Council and the Austin Chamber of Commerce. Tyson Tuttle, CEO of Circuit and former CEO of Silicon Labs, unpacks how AI is accelerating into the physical world, why energy and compute infrastructure matter more than ever, and what the convergence of AI, semiconductors, and industry means for the next decade of innovation in Austin and beyond.

    "Texas gives us scale, Austin gives us soul" - Tyson Tuttle

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    25 Min.
  • Are We Ready for AI? with Ronnie Sheth
    Dec 4 2025

    Austin Tech Connect welcomes back data and AI expert (and ATC board member) Ronnie Sheth for a very real conversation about what is actually happening inside companies trying to adopt AI. Ronnie helps organizations design human first experiences with data and AI, and she brings both a strategic lens and a deep sense of responsibility to how this technology shows up in our businesses and our community. She also cares deeply about Austin as a global tech hub and about the Austin Technology Council's role as a connector across the ecosystem.

    In this episode Ronnie explains why AI adoption numbers are slipping and why that is not a sign that AI has lost its shine. Drawing on recent reports from the U.S. Census Bureau and MIT, she points out that many generative AI pilots are failing not because the tools are weak, but because companies never built the foundation. They jumped to "doing AI" without a clear data strategy, without thinking through adoption and scale, and without asking the basic question, "Is our data ready for this?"

    Ronnie makes a compelling case that data excellence is the real starting point. Companies need high quality, trusted data and a clear vision for how it supports decisions, innovation, risk management, and AI models. She shares how her clients move from vague "data governance" conversations to concrete strategy, and why data must be treated as an asset that can quickly turn into a liability if handled poorly.

    We also dig into regulation, ethics, and the human side of AI. Ronnie describes AI as a "collection of humanity" and reminds leaders that AI is not yet a prescriptive oracle. It is a thought partner that can amplify human intelligence, not a fix for broken processes or culture.

    The Austin Tech Connect Podcast is presented by Calavista Software, software development without the drama.

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    36 Min.