Gauthier Van Malderen urges European founders to adopt American-style ambition

The high cost of cautious ambition

Building a category-defining company requires more than a clever product; it demands a psychological shift in how founders perceive scale.

, the force behind
Perlego
, reflects on the friction inherent in the European startup ecosystem. While the UK and Europe offer robust foundations and lower operational costs, they often lack the "corny" yet fuel-injected optimism found in Silicon Valley. Van Malderen admits that his Belgian roots initially favored a step-by-step approach—moving from one town to the next—but true disruption requires a global-first mindset.

This discrepancy in ambition isn't just about ego; it’s about capital and risk. American founders often pitch forty-billion-dollar visions at the seed stage, a tactic that might seem delusional to a pragmatic European ear but serves to galvanize investors and talent. By the time a European founder targets a realistic hundred-million-pound revenue goal, their US counterpart has already raised double the capital, allowing them to take more aggressive risks and compound their success faster. For Van Malderen, the lesson is clear: if you aren't thinking globally from day one, you are voluntarily ceding the market to those who are.

Cracking the publisher-platform chicken and egg problem

Every marketplace founder faces the same wall: you need content to attract users, but you need users to convince content owners to sign.

tackled this by targeting the "long-tail" publishers first—those more agile, pro-digital players in niche fields like cybersecurity and engineering. This built a foundation of legitimacy that allowed them to eventually court the industry giants. The publishing world, much like the music industry before it, was bleeding revenue to piracy and needed a sustainable digital alternative.
Perlego
positioned itself as that solution, using the subscription validation of
Spotify
and
Netflix
as a blueprint.

Data became the ultimate bargaining chip. Unlike

, which keeps consumer behavior data behind a curtain,
Perlego
offered publishers granular heat maps. For the first time, editors could see exactly which chapters students were highlighting and where they were dropping off. If 70% of a textbook remains unread, that is actionable intelligence for the next edition. By transforming a static PDF into a data-rich ecosystem, Van Malderen shifted the power balance, making the platform indispensable to the very publishers who initially dismissed the subscription model.

Why senior hires can be a fatal distraction

One of the most common traps for a venture-backed founder is the "Board-Mandated Executive." After raising a significant round, there is often intense pressure to hire senior leaders from legacy industries to provide "adult supervision." Van Malderen warns that this is frequently a mistake. Legacy executives often carry thirty years of experience in how things used to be done, which can be toxic in a startup environment that relies on first-principles thinking.

Van Malderen discovered that hiring for raw talent, energy, and a high learning rate consistently outperforms hiring for industry pedigree. A hungry 28-year-old who views a senior role as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity will outwork and out-innovate a seasoned veteran who is simply optimizing for their next career move. The pivot back to a leaner, more aggressive leadership structure allowed

to reclaim its startup velocity. Authenticity as a CEO means knowing when to ignore the traditional playbook and double down on your own strengths, rather than delegating the core soul of the business to outsiders.

Culture is set by sitting in the room

In the era of distributed work, Van Malderen takes a controversial stand: 100% remote work is a culture killer for startups. While flexibility is necessary as a company scales, the early days of a venture require the

4 min read