We sat down with Kevin Siskar to trace the experiences that shaped how he leads. He grew up in Buffalo, started working young, and learned through real jobs. He mowed lawns, washed dishes, scrubbed toilets, and bartended. Those roles showed him different sides of society early. They also built the work ethic he still values today.
He also spent years as a volunteer fireman and EMT. That service gave him a direct way to help people. However, it also pushed him to ask a bigger question. How could he create impact beyond one call at a time? That question later became the foundation of his view on founder support.
What shaped Kevin Siskar’s view of trust
Kevin talked openly about loss, family, and the shift that came after his father died in college. That moment changed how he saw time, ambition, and responsibility. As a result, he started thinking more seriously about meaning and scale. He wanted his work to matter, and he wanted to help people in a larger way.
That thinking led him toward startups and venture capital. He became fascinated by founders who build products for thousands or millions of users. So instead of solving one problem alone, he focused on founder support as a way to help more people indirectly. He also shared how empathy, trust, and strong relationships shaped his decisions. Those values appear throughout his story, from childhood through company building.
Lessons we took from Siskar’s founder playbook
One of the strongest lessons in this episode is that founders need deep contact with the problem. Kevin Siskar believes founder market fit comes before product market fit. In other words, the founder needs firsthand knowledge before handing work off. He argues that early sales, feedback loops, and customer conversations can’t be outsourced too soon.
We also explored his path through Founder Institute, startup operations, investing, and building his current company. Along the way, he kept returning to the same idea. Great work starts with curiosity, resilience, and founder support. He explained why fundraising is often a network problem, not only a pitch problem. That insight shaped the product he builds now.
Practical lessons on failure and persistence
This conversation also stands out because it stays practical. Kevin Siskar shares what failure teaches, why other founders matter, and how to stay grounded when the pressure builds. He talks about balancing work with family, making time for dinner, and teaching his kids simple business lessons. Because of that, this episode isn’t only about startups. It’s about character, perspective, and the habits that make founder support meaningful over time.
By the end, we came away with a clear message. Build with purpose, learn from hard moments, and understand the systems around you. Then use that knowledge to serve people well. That’s the version of founder support Kevin keeps chasing, and it’s the thread that ties this whole conversation together.
More from Kevin Siskar
https://www.Siskar.co
https://www.linkedin.com/in/kevinsiskar
Chapters
- 00:00 Why Kevin chose startups to create wider impact
- 01:16 Growing up in Buffalo and starting work young
- 08:52 Catholic school trust empathy and character
- 12:25 Sports teamwork and lessons from competition
- 18:49 Firefighting EMT work and helping people
- 27:27 College loss and the search for bigger impact
- 29:34 Discovering venture capital and startup media
- 39:10 Founder Institute startup investing and scale
- 43:29 Building a fundraising platform through warm intros
- 55:00 Advice on founders community family and time