Episodios

  • #367 – How Chris Brisson killed his first company to build a messaging platform that scales
    Jun 25 2025
    This podcast is for SaaS founders who feel stuck chasing feature parity—and anyone wondering if there's a smarter way to build something customers can't live without. Most SaaS founders won't kill a profitable company. They'll optimize it to death instead. Chris Brisson, CEO of SalesMsg, took a different path. He killed his first company while it was still making money. Then spent two years building what messaging should actually do—create conversations, not broadcasts. This inspired me to invite Chris to my podcast. We explore why choosing destruction over optimization creates breakthrough opportunities. Chris reveals his thinking about engineering backwards from outcomes, disrupting yourself before others do, and building what customers consider indispensable. You'll discover why he chose the harder path of starting over—and what happens when you stop chasing features and start solving friction. We also zoom in on two of the 10 traits that define remarkable software companies: They acknowledge they can't please everyone They master the art of curiosity Here's one of Chris's quotes that captures his contrarian philosophy: "We always take that approach, like, how are we going to disrupt ourselves before someone else does? All right, what are we going to do? How do we disrupt ourselves. Just leaning into, ‘Hey, you know what? We got to kill that product.’ The reality is that it actually doesn't solve the problem. What really solves the problem is this.” By listening to this episode, you'll learn: Why killing profitable products unlocks bigger opportunities What happens when you engineer backwards from outcomes Why saying yes to custom features can actually scale your platform Why friction removal beats feature addition every time Chris's story proves traction starts by doing what most others avoid—choosing to disrupt yourself before someone else does. Guest Info Chris Brisson, CEO and Co-Founder at SalesMsg Website: salesmessage.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    50 m
  • #366 – How Quentin de Quelen built MeiliSearch by choosing what others avoid
    Jun 18 2025
    This episode is for SaaS founders chasing feature parity with bigger competitors—and those wondering if there's a smarter way to compete with tech giants. Most SaaS companies don't fail because of bad technology. They fail because they try to be everything to everyone. Quentin de Quelen, Co-founder & CEO of MeiliSearch, took a different path. A former carpenter's son turned developer, he saw search as a fundamental problem worth solving properly. Instead of building another complex enterprise solution, he chose to make search so simple that any developer could implement it in five minutes. This inspired me to invite Quentin to my podcast. We explore how focusing on three core principles—simplicity, performance, and relevance—creates both developer love and business wins. Quentin shares insights about choosing open source as strategy, not ideology, and why saying no to features actually accelerates growth. You'll discover how one conversation with their community led to a breakthrough that took two hours to code but changed everything. We also zoom in on two of the 10 traits that define remarkable software companies: They acknowledge they can't please everyone They focus on the essence Quentin's story is proof that traction often starts by doing what most others avoid. Here's one of Quentin's quotes that captures his philosophy on building: "Open source is not, should not be by default. It should be thought as a strategy, also for your company to grow. Because everything we are doing at the end is for business wise." By listening to this episode, you'll learn: Why letting competitors copy you actually creates competitive advantage What happens when you optimize for developer joy over enterprise features Why saying no to customers actually accelerates product growth Why three simple principles beat complex competitive analysis For more information about the guest from this week: Guest: Quentin de Quelen Co-founder & CEO of MeiliSearch Website: meilisearch.com Discount code: mission (2 months for free on all plans and valid until end of August '25) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    48 m
  • #365 – How Dimitri Masin hit $1M ARR in 5 months by refusing to launch early
    Jun 11 2025
    This episode is for SaaS founders building in regulated industries—and anyone tired of chasing the next quick win. Most SaaS companies fail because they launch too early. Dimitri Masin, Co-Founder & CEO of Gradient Labs, took a different path. He spent 14 months building before serving a single customer—against every startup playbook. His AI customer support platform now guarantees better performance than human teams and hit $1M ARR in five months after launch. And this inspired me to invite Dimitri to my podcast. We explore how setting impossibly high standards creates customer trust that competitors can't match. Dimitri shares tactical insights about building for regulated industries, creating objective guarantees, and why most automation claims are misleading math. You'll discover the quality standards that created 100% POC win rates. We also zoom in on two of the 10 traits that define remarkable software companies: They focus on the essence They acknowledge they can't please everyone Dimitri's story is proof that traction often starts by doing what most others avoid. Here's one of Dimitri's quotes that captures his quality-first philosophy: "We kind of set the bar very, very high for us, because from the beginning... the bar needs to be at least as high as humans in those companies can produce, or higher, ideally." By listening to this episode, you'll learn: Why building for 14 months before launch created competitive advantage What objective guarantees do for risk-averse financial services buyers When focusing on one vertical becomes your biggest growth lever Why 50% ticket automation only delivers 20% business value For more information about the guest from this week: Guest: Dimitri Masin, Co-Founder & CEOWebsite: gradientlabs.aiLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dimitrimasin/ Want to dig deeper into the 10 traits of remarkable SaaS companies? Get my book The Remarkable Effect at valueinspiration.com/book Or sign up for Espresso with Ton at valueinspiration.com/daily - a 2-minute daily email to sharpen your thinking and strategy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    49 m
  • #364 – How 46 Labs scaled to $80M by solving the problems others ignored
    Jun 4 2025
    Most SaaS companies don’t fail because of bad tech.They fail because they try to win by copying playbooks that were never made for them. Trevor Francis, Founder and CEO of 46 Labs, took a different path. A former telecom engineer, he bootstrapped 46 Labs into an $80M infrastructure business by staying lean, solving the problems others ignored, and resisting the pressure to follow the VC script. In this episode, we explore Trevor’s approach to staying capital-constrained, solving real customer problems, and how rejecting venture capital became their biggest advantage. We also zoom in on two of the 10 traits that define remarkable software companies: – Offering something truly valuable and desirable – Aiming to be different—not just better Trevor’s story is proof that long-term traction often starts by doing what most others avoid. By listening to this episode, you’ll learn: – Why staying lean for 12 years built more leverage than funding ever could – What made billion-dollar carriers trust a small, unknown startup – How to scale through acquisition without losing your culture – The power of constraint when building long-term momentum This episode is for sales-led SaaS founders who feel pressure to chase funding, follow trends, or expand too fast—and want a smarter way to build something that lasts. You can learn more about this weeks’ guest: Trevor Francis, CEO Company: 46labs.com. If you want to dig deeper into the traits behind remarkable software companies, grab a copy of my book The Remarkable Effect at valueinspiration.com/book or sign up for my daily email Espresso with Ton at valueinspiration.com/daily. Just two minutes a day to change the way you look at your business. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    39 m
  • #363 - Sunil Patel, CEO of Tekmetric on ignoring customer wishlists to kill industry dinosaurs
    May 28 2025
    This podcast interview reveals why the best software breaks all the rules. My guest is Sunil Patel, CEO of Tekmetric. Before building software, Sunil owned and operated multiple auto repair shops, giving him a rare insider's perspective on the industry's real problems. He's a practical entrepreneur who's obsessed with simplicity and hates wasted effort. When in 2016, eight years after iPhones hit the market, shop owners still couldn't leverage that technology to run their business, Sunil decided to be the one to change that. And this inspired me to invite Sunil to my podcast. We explore how breaking industry norms and staying true to first principles creates remarkable companies. Sunil shares hard truths about why they turned down big clients, cut all marketing spending to zero, and raised the least funding in the industry - yet still became the market leader and only profitable one. You'll discover the counterintuitive decision that shocked his competitors but doubled customer loyalty overnight. Here's one of Sunil's quotes that captures his business philosophy: "We used first principles thinking. Everybody in our space wants to copy features from one another. Their sales team says 'we can't win against Tekmetric because they have these features' and they try to emulate what we've built. I don't approach development that way. I want to figure out what we're trying to solve." By listening to this podcast you'll learn: Why maintaining the right departmental hierarchy prevents overselling and product gaps What approach led Sunil to solve in one click what competitors needed 60-80 clicks for When saying "no" to customers with big wallets and long wishlists makes you more money Why hiring the right people trumps everything else in scaling a business For more information about the guest from this week: Guest: Sunil Patel Website: https://www.tekmetric.com/ Want to dig deeper into the 10 traits of remarkable SaaS companies? Get my book The Remarkable Effect at https://valueinspiration.com/book Or sign up for Espresso with Ton at https://valueinspiration.com/daily - a 2-minute daily email to sharpen your thinking and strategy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    40 m
  • #362 – How Sharat Potharaju built a 50,000-customer business by saying "no" to endless opportunities
    May 21 2025
    This podcast interview focuses on the entrepreneurial journey to discovering powerful strategic frameworks through trial and error. My guest is Sharat Potharaju, CEO of Unicode. Sharat is a serial entrepreneur with 15 years of experience. He navigated through a decade of ventures that didn't scale before founding Uniqode in 2019. His company has since grown to serve over 50,000 businesses worldwide, including Fortune 500 companies, by creating innovative technology that connects physical and digital worlds through mobile experiences. What makes Sharat's story remarkable is his methodical approach to business building, where he combines weekly deep strategic thinking with rapid experimentation frameworks, always maintaining that impact—both for employees and customers—is what drives his entrepreneurial energy. And this inspired me, and hence I invited Sharat to my podcast. We explore how an entrepreneur's decade of failures can become the foundation for remarkable success. Sharat challenges conventional wisdom by dedicating specific time each week for deep thinking about long-term strategy while handling day-to-day operations. He reveals why being selective about advice is crucial for maintaining entrepreneurial confidence, and how balancing luck with persistence creates the conditions for breakthrough success. His approach makes products dead-simple for users while sticking to strict testing methods to know what works. Here is a quote that captures one of Sharat's most striking business lessons: "It's important to love your product, but it's even more important to be obsessed about the problem that you're trying to solve. Because if you're not obsessed about the problem, eventually you'll just fall in love with your product and lose your focus on vision." By listening to this podcast you will learn: Why entrepreneurial success typically takes a decade, not overnight, and how to mentally prepare for this reality How to implement a "Wednesday deep thinking" practice that balances long-term vision with short-term execution The secret to filtering advice from well-meaning investors, mentors, and colleagues without losing your entrepreneurial confidence How to create frameworks for experimentation that prevent chaos while maximizing learning For more information about the guest from this week: Guest: Sharat Potharaju Website: uniqode.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    44 m
  • #361 - Imran Syed, CEO of Hatchproof on building companies through deep problem understanding, not solutions
    May 14 2025
    This podcast interview focuses on the entrepreneurial journey of finding purpose and transformation through failure. My guest is Imran Syed, CEO of Hatchproof. After leading a high eight-figure exit at Instapage as COO, Imran witnessed how misalignment among leadership destroyed tens of millions in enterprise value during a failed product launch. Instead of moving on, this failure became his obsession. He spent six months deeply researching why people stay at or leave organizations before founding Hatchproof, creating a company built around the belief that work should have purpose, meaning, and fulfillment. And this inspired me, and hence I invited Imran to my podcast. We explore the counterintuitive approach of obsessing over problems rather than solutions, and why most entrepreneurs get this backward. Imran challenges conventional wisdom about scaling teams, explaining why the future belongs to smaller, tightly-aligned organizations rather than sprawling enterprises. His approach turns traditional metrics upside down, focusing on revenue per employee over headcount growth, and demonstrates how creating clear value frameworks enables sustainable business decisions. Here is a quote that captures one of Imran's most striking business lessons: "You have to have an obsession with the problem, not the solution. A lot of entrepreneurs are very anchored on their solution, and they struggle when the market tells them something different. If you obsess with the problem, you'll find the solution—it may not be the first one, but you'll eventually get to it." By listening to this podcast you will learn: How to distinguish between an "itch" and a "burning desire" when evaluating startup ideas Why investing six months in problem research before building anything created Imran's foundation for success How creating a simple four-value framework dramatically improves decision-making and prevents feature bloat Why revenue per employee is becoming the critical metric for AI-era companies, replacing the traditional focus on headcount growth For more information about the guest from this week: Imran Syed Website: hatchproof.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    50 m
  • #360 - Zach Wasserman, Co-founder of Fleet on community-driven business growth
    May 7 2025
    This podcast interview focuses on the entrepreneurial journey of turning transparency into business advantage. My guest is Zach Wasserman, Cofounder and Tech Evangelist of Fleet. With over a decade of experience in open source software development, Zach helped create the widely-adopted OSquery project at Facebook in 2014, which has since become an industry standard for device visibility and is now governed by the Linux Foundation. After transitioning through a role at Kolide (later acquired by 1Password), Zach became the maintainer of a project that would eventually evolve into Fleet. Throughout his entrepreneurial journey, Zach discovered that what truly energizes him is "building software that's making someone's life better" - specifically IT administrators and security professionals who manage company devices. This human-centered approach led him to transform a personal passion project into a rapidly growing company that's challenging traditional business models in enterprise software This inspired me to invite Zach to my podcast. We explore how being open source gives Fleet a strategic edge. His approach rejects the common belief that enterprise sales requires complexity and secrecy. We discuss how community building leads to faster adoption and better results than traditional sales tactics. The formula is simple: be transparent, earn trust, and close deals faster. Here's one of his quotes: "The best way to lose a deal is to our own open source product, because those people remain prime prospective customers that we really need to continue to understand and figure out how we are going to build enough new value in that premium product for them to want to pay for it." By listening to this podcast, you will learn: How building on existing open source foundations can give startups immediate credibility with enterprise customers Why passionate early adopters can close deals remarkably easily compared to traditional prospects The entrepreneurial wisdom of identifying and connecting with actual budget holders while still maintaining engineer enthusiasm How customer-driven unexpected use cases can dramatically expand your market vision and product roadmap For more information about the guest from this week: Guest: Zach Wasserman Website: fleet.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    51 m