“It’s been one of the good things in my life to cross paths with Jensen and Nvidia,” Mohajer told Fortune, recalling that the two became acquainted because Huang “had a passion for what’s the next big thing, and he became very interested in our field.”
That “thing,” was SoundHound AI—an AI voice communication company that first began in 2004 in his Stanford University dorm room.
On a Sunday morning, specifically, Huang would send Mohajer research papers with notes. “I had to read it and give my feedback,” Mohajer recalled.
In the end, their exchanges impressed Huang and even contributed to the company’s success.
“He’s an amazing person, engineer and leader,” Mohajer said warmly about Huang. “Our relationship with him has been great.”
In fact, Mohajer starts his day before the crack of dawn, usually before 5 a.m., a time that he called his “golden hours” when no one else is awake to reply to his messages.
“Work-life balance is not a problem because I really enjoy it,” he said. “If you work to live, then work-life balance is a big question… but in my case, I really enjoy my work, so it’s not a problem.”
“I do spend a lot of hours working. And even sometimes I go wash dishes and I’m still thinking about my work,” Mohajer said. “That can be therapeutic, and it can give you really good ideas. Sometimes I go exercise, and when I’m on a run, I come up with great ideas or solve new problems.”
“What really inspired me was that Charlie Chaplin, he directed it, he produced it, he was the main actor, he wrote the story, and he made the music,” Mohajer said to Fortune. “And it’s just an example of something being so hands on—and they’re all amazing. The music is amazing, the storyline is amazing, the acting is amazing.”
Mohajer said he wanted to emulate Chaplin in his own company: understanding technology, business, fundraising, recruitment, and more.
“When it’s for the first time I’m doing it, I know that I’m not experienced, and then I learn, and I become good at it, and I expand my horizon,” Mohajer said. “And I just saw that in him, and he was just so fluent at it and that was an inspiration.”