In this episode of TheMilVet Podcast, host Beau Higgins sits down with Clark Yuan, Founder and CEO of Stitch3D, United States Army Veteran, and West Point graduate. Clark shares his journey from growing up in a Taiwanese military family to serving as a Military Intelligence officer in the U.S. Army, and ultimately transitioning into entrepreneurship and defense tech innovation.
Clark discusses how his experiences in the military, particularly working with geospatial intelligence and fragmented data-sharing systems, inspired him to build Stitch3D, a platform designed to make spatial and geospatial data easier to access, visualize, and collaborate on. He explains how the company evolved from an Air Force-funded research initiative into a venture-backed commercial SaaS platform serving enterprise customers.
The conversation dives deep into the realities of military transition, the challenges of building a startup in the defense ecosystem, and the lessons learned navigating SBIR funding, venture capital, and dual-use technology markets. Clark offers an honest perspective on the gap between government R&D funding and long-term acquisition success, why many startups struggle in the defense space, and how founders can position themselves for sustainable growth.
Beau and Clark also discuss resilience, leadership, mentorship, and the importance of faith and personal grounding while navigating the pressures of entrepreneurship. Clark shares how finding his faith during the startup journey helped redefine success beyond business metrics and gave him perspective through the uncertainty of building a company.
Listeners will gain insight into:
- How military operational problems can become startup opportunities
- Lessons learned transitioning from the Army into entrepreneurship
- The realities of SBIR/STTR funding and defense innovation programs
- Why many defense startups struggle to move from R&D to acquisition
- How venture capital and government funding can complement each other
- The importance of customer discovery and product-market fit
- Why commercial traction can be critical before pursuing government scale
- The value of veteran networks, mentorship, and community
- How faith, resilience, and purpose influence leadership and entrepreneurship
- What veterans should know before entering the startup or defense tech ecosystem
Clark also shares candid advice for veterans considering entrepreneurship, including the importance of humility, adaptability, and building relationships with founders, investors, and operators who have already navigated the path.
Whether you’re transitioning out of the military, interested in defense technology, exploring venture-backed startups, or considering founding your own company, this episode delivers practical insights and real-world lessons from someone building at the intersection of national security and innovation.
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