What if one of the biggest winners in quantum is not the company building the qubits, but the one helping everyone understand what is going wrong inside them?
In this episode, I unpack the key learnings from my deep dive with Johannes Jobst, CEO of QuantaMap. The deeper I go into quantum computing, the more I think this industry will become obsessed with measurement. Most people focus on the race for better qubits, higher fidelity, and larger systems. But after this conversation, I am no longer sure that is the full story.
This episode is for investors, founders, and anyone trying to understand how the quantum value chain may evolve. One of the biggest bottlenecks may not just be building quantum chips. It may be inspection, metrology, defect detection, process supervision, and understanding the subtle material imperfections and microscopic noise sources that undermine coherence, repeatability, and yield.
That is what makes this conversation so important. In classical semiconductors, advanced manufacturing scaled because an entire ecosystem was built around measurement, validation, and process control. Quantum does not yet have that same mature inspection layer. If that becomes a core bottleneck, the companies that help the industry see, diagnose, and improve quantum systems may become just as important as the companies building the hardware itself.
💡 In this episode, we cover:
Why measurement may become one of the most important layers in quantum computing
Why quantum chip inspection is still an underbuilt part of the stack
How subtle material defects and microscopic noise sources affect performance
Why coherence, repeatability, and yield depend on better diagnostics
How the quantum industry may shift from building systems to validating and controlling them
Why inspection, metrology, and process supervision could become strategically valuable
What investors should learn from the semiconductor industry’s measurement ecosystem
Why quantum may become not just a computing revolution, but a measurement revolution
Chapters
00:00 Why investors should care about QuantaMap
01:48 Johannes Jobst’s background in physics and semiconductors
14:54 What defects really matter in quantum chips
17:58 Why measurement matters more in quantum
25:44 Where chip measurement fits in the quantum stack
33:04 Process control, defects, and root cause analysis
43:32 Yield loss and performance bottlenecks in quantum
44:56 Why volume inspection could become critical
🔗 Resources / Links 🎧 Listen to all episodes → UCibVGKTQwLCsj0hBgrgWDpA
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📌 Disclaimers: This is not investment advice. I do this under my personal name and do not represent any company.