Do you guys have a starting point with the jetting???
Hard to guess exactly when you say you're running a straight exhaust and pod brand is unknown. You may also already have jetting that isn't stock.
See what you have now. There are basic changes that can at least get you going the right direction if not right the first try.
A minimum 5 full sizes up (25) on the main jet. If your main is a 95 I'd probably start even richer at a 125, 127.5, or 130. Test the main at full throttle position.
Jet needle e-clip must be at least 1 position richer and that's usually not enough. The stock jet needles should have 5 positions and I believe your factory e-clip position is #3. Most of the time I'd suggest the bottom position. Hard to say because your exhaust isn't tuned. Trying to guess right the first time, I'd suggest position "4 1/2". That means you need to get some jetting spacers. A jetting spacer for your carbs is approx' .022" thick. The spacer is used to make 1/2 position changes. Place the jet needle e-clip in the bottom position and then place the jetting spacer directly on top the e-clip. Install factory plastic spacers in factory order. In your case, the thicker plastic spacer goes above the jetting spacer and e-clip and the thinner one goes under the clip.
Test the needle circuit at 1/3 to 1/2 throttle position. Do what the plugs/performance say. If you have issues at this throttle position, then you may have to go with a different jet needle such as the DJ.
Pilot jet may need changing to a 17.5 but you can try to make the stock 15 work by richening the pilot fuel screws underneath. If up to approx' 3 full turns from lightly seated dosn't work then return the screws to about 3/4 turn and replace the jet with a 17.5. Test the pilot circuit at minimal throttle positions (1/5 throttle to full closed). There is some overlap effect when transitioning from the pilot to the jet needle and some issues may require, again, the DJ jet needle. The DJ needle is actually designed to work with the stock 15 pilot jet so that tells you how it can effect lesser throttle position jetting.
Keep in mind the bike must be otherwise tuned before you an accurately re-jet. Valve clearances, ignition timing, etc, must be spot on first. Otherwise, you may blame the jetting for what is actually another problem.
Also, after jet installation, the carbs must be bench synched carefully. Then, initially set the side air screws to 1 3/4 turns out. Also, your VM carbs will perform better if you remove the two floatbowl vent lines and leave the ports open to breath. This is recommended by Dynojet in their stage 3 jet kits for your carbs.
After full warm up, fine tune the side air screws using the highest rpm method. Adjust idle with the idle knob adjuster to 1,000 rpm's. Starting at any carb, slowly turn the screw in either direction until you hear the motor reach maximum rpm. If the base idle changed enough, return the idle to 1,000 using the idle knob. Repeat to all carbs.
Now you need to vacuum synch with a vacuum tool. After all this, you can go out and accurately test each jetting circuit at the correct throttle position. Testing on level or uphill is fine but not down hill.