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Adam Nathan
Founder & CEO of Blaze and Almanac
Adam Nathan, Cofounder & CEO of Almanac
Adam Nathan is the Cofounder and CEO of Almanac, a collaboration platform that helps remote teams work more efficiently on the internet.1246 He is passionate about elevating how people work and making that knowledge accessible to everyone.468
Prior to founding Almanac, Adam held product roles at companies like Apple, Lyft, and Varo.1 He became frustrated with the inefficient work tools and endless meetings that were hindering his productivity.12 This experience led him to start Almanac in 2019 with the goal of providing the infrastructure and tooling to support distributed work.23
Under Adam's leadership, Almanac has grown to a seven-figure ARR SaaS with over 50 employees, tens of thousands of customers, and $45 million in VC funding.2 The company has brought on remote teams from companies like Doist, Credit Karma, and the American Red Cross.2
Adam believes that the transition to remote and distributed work is an inevitable force of change that companies must embrace.3 He argues that successful remote teams need to work with more structure, transparency, and fewer meetings.5 Adam advocates for creating human connection and fostering synchronous collaboration in remote settings.5
In addition to his role at Almanac, Adam is also the Founder and CEO of Blaze, an AI marketing tool for entrepreneurs.47
Highlights
Popular opinion: AI is inevitable. Adoption will just keep climbing.
Less popular opinion: we've seen this movie before.
Clean energy. Vaccines. Electric vehicles.
All technologies that were clearly better.
All of them hit walls — political, cultural, institutional — that slowed adoption by years or decades.
AI will face the same thing.
Bans, moratoriums, backlash.
Not everywhere. Not forever. But enough to matter.
The companies building for that reality — focused on trust, outcomes, and real problems — will be the ones still standing when it clears.
83% of large enterprises have deployed AI.
Only 42% of mid-market businesses have.
The standard take: SMBs need better tools and more education.
The real reason: every AI product was built to be learned, configured, and managed.
That assumes time the owner doesn't have — and doesn't want to develop.
The gap isn't attitudinal. It's structural.



