Jason Boehmig, founder of Ironclad, never planned to start a company.
He was a lawyer at Fenwick, hacking together automation scripts to make his own job easier. One of those hacks was a simple email bot. It lived at admin@ironclad.ai.
That experiment became v0.
Today, Ironclad is a category defining contract lifecycle platform used by L’Oréal, Mastercard, Heineken, and hundreds of other enterprises. The company is valued north of $3 billion.
In this week’s episode of The Library of Minds, Jason shares the real story behind Ironclad’s rise and what it actually takes to build trust in a market where failure is not an option.
What’s Inside the Episode
How a hacked together email bot became Ironclad’s first product
The cold inbound that changed the company’s trajectory
The early taste and hiring philosophy that shaped the culture
How to build trust when your customers cannot afford software that breaks
The poem Jason reads to the team every year and why it matters
This is not a story about chasing trends.
It is a story about curiosity, craftsmanship, and deep respect for the customer.
The Core Lesson
Jason believes enduring companies are built on three things.
Taste.
Trust.
Relentless customer empathy.
Especially in markets people dismiss as boring.
When your users are lawyers, contracts cannot fail. Speed matters, but reliability matters more. Ironclad grew because it treated trust as a product requirement, not a marketing promise.
Step Inside Jason’s Mind
Jason has created a Digital Mind on Delphi where you can ask him questions directly and hear his answers in his own voice.
Watch the Episode and Talk to Jason’s Delphi
Try asking:
How do you build trust with enterprise customers early?
What interview signals matter most when hiring for taste?
How do you know when a side project is becoming a company?
Delphi
Open your mind.





