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This week, Qasar Younis shares all the personal and professional moves he made to found Applied Intuition. For Qasar Younis, the path to product-market fit dates back to childhood. He grew up in a Detroit suburb, where the auto industry was the backdrop to his whole life: His father was an auto worker whose job security wavered as production moved to China. Younis studied engineering at the General Motors Institute. He worked part-time on the factory floor. Younis always knew he wanted to be a founder, inspired by watching his dad reclaim his autonomy. “He started his own small business, which he still runs today. That’s been hugely informative to me. I saw him get his dignity that way. He really became a master of his own destiny,” he says. So he designed his career to optimize his own founder training: engineering jobs at General Motors and Bosch, business school, a stint at a holding company to “learn finance,” investing at Y Combinator. He tried his hand at starting two companies, the second of which he sold to Google. At Google he’d meet Peter Ludwig, a PM and fellow Detroit kid who was also interested in starting a company. Their shared experiences, from growing up in Motor City to building sensors for a Google Street View car, materialized in a startup idea that only they could pursue: software for automakers developing self-driving cars, which would become Applied Intuition.
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