Acquired - Superhuman (with CEO Rahul Vohra)
Episode Date: June 27, 2019We wrap up Season 4 with a very special (and accidental!) episode, a conversation with the CEO of Superhuman, the red hot email productivity app which just announced their $33m Series B led b...y Andreessen Horowitz. While originally intended as a limited release episode, we felt Superhuman would provide the perfect bookend to our “modern enterprise productivity trilogy” following our Zoom and Slack episodes. We hope you enjoy the conversation with Rahul as much as we did, and we’ll see you later this summer for Season 5!Sponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!LinksNew York Times article announcing the fundraise: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/27/technology/superhuman-email.html Rahul’s Medium post on acquisitions: https://medium.com/swlh/rip-mailbox-or-founders-how-to-stop-worrying-and-love-being-acquired-261da4f6d566Rahul on finding product-market fit on First Round Review: https://firstround.com/review/how-superhuman-built-an-engine-to-find-product-market-fit/
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Great. One take feels good.
Welcome to season four, episode 10, the finale of Acquired, the podcast about technology
acquisitions and IPOs. I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rosenthal.
And we are your hosts. Today, we are covering Superhuman, the fastest email experience ever
made. This show was originally going to be a limited partner bonus show with Superhuman CEO
Rahul Vora on understanding his algorithmic approach to find product market fit. But we
realized that Superhuman was a perfect way
to round out our trilogy on the modern productivity stack
on the heels of our Zoom and Slack IPO episodes.
And we learned that the timing would be perfect
with some big news that just dropped for Superhuman.
Indeed.
Well, they just raised their $33 million Series B funding
led by Andreessen Horowitz
on the heels of some very rapid growth,
as you'll hear. If you want to read more about the company after this episode,
you can click the link in the show notes for the New York Times article that broke the news.
Okay, listeners, now is a great time to tell you about longtime friend of the show, ServiceNow.
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notes or going to servicenow.com slash AI dash agents.
Now, without further ado, here is our conversation with Superhuman CEO, Rahul Vora.
So welcome, Acquired LPs, to a very special episode of the LP Show. David and I are sitting
here in Superhuman World HQ on California Street in San Francisco.
And we have with us an awesome guest, Rahul Vora, CEO of Superhuman.
Welcome to the show.
Absolutely.
Thank you both for having me.
Yeah, you bet.
To give a little brief bio, so Rahul is the founder and CEO of Superhuman, the wildly
popular, blazingly fast email app that is changing the way a lot of us think about our
relationship with our
inbox. And before Superhuman, Rahul was the CEO and co-founder of Reportive, selling that to
LinkedIn in 2012. So if you're noticing a pattern there, I think I definitely am. Rahul is also an
active angel investor and advisor to several startups, and we are lucky to have him with us
today. So I already said welcome to the show show so i don't need to say that again but
welcome to the show thank you are we right that this is your second office this technically is
our fourth office fourth office yes and you're about 30 people now here it looks like we are
yes it's uh nice and decked out and in superhuman colors it's like yeah we we do like our pinks
and our purples and our blues although we're sort of trying to keep the we just moved in vibe we
don't want to go too crazy here yeah because what we found is we grow so fast that by the time we've
made a place nice it's like okay time to move on to the next office it's awesome the problem with
early stage startup offices good problem to have yeah good problem to have let's talk for a minute
before we get to superhuman which we're going to spend most of
the episode on. Can you tell us quickly on Reportive? How did you start it? And it was a
very quick turnaround. So Reportive was basically started to satisfy my own need. It was a classic
case of scratching my own itch. I was at the University of Cambridge at the time,
and I in fact had just dropped out of the PhD program. I'd started a PhD there in
machine learning and computer vision. This was way before either of those things were cool or even
feasible. In any case, I dropped out because I realized that what I wanted to be was an entrepreneur,
but I didn't have an idea at the time that I wanted to pursue.
So I networked my way into the part of the university that helps staff and students create
companies called Cambridge University Entrepreneurs. And essentially what I would do is I would
actually come to folks like yourself, VCs, angels, big tech companies, and I would say,
hey, can I please have some money? And they'd be like, why? And I'd say,
well, I want to give that money to staff and students at the University of Cambridge who
are making companies. It's going to be awesome, trust me. And these folks would sort of rub their
hands together and go, cool, how much equity do we get? And I would say, none whatsoever.
This is a charity that we're running here uh we're trying to help people learn
how to build businesses and by the way we're going to make some amazing businesses as well
and as we've covered multiple times on the show cambridge is actually a really great entrepreneurial
hub i mean arm came out of cambridge as did many other companies it's i mean it's crazy um
cambridge silicon radio let's see who else There was that company that Qualcomm acquired.
I forgot the name.
And more than companies too.
My partner, Riley at Wave, was a grad student at Cambridge.
As was our friend, Nelson at Eventbrite.
Plenty of Silicon Valley has come from Cambridge and the UK.
Yeah, these VCs should have given you money.
They did.
They did actually give me money in the end. But the point of the story is I was thrust into this not-for-profit fundraising at a very young age with no training in this field whatsoever.
And having grown up learning how to program and being a very competent programmer at the time, I was just wondering to myself, well, what tools would help me do this fundraising better? And I imagined if in my email, I could see what people look like,
where they were based, links to their recent tweets, links to their social profiles,
then I would be able to authentically connect with that person and establish rapport so much better.
Hence the idea behind Reportive. I couldn't find that product in the
market. So in about six weeks, I just sat down and built that first version.
And that was totally magical. I remember the first time I installed the plugin,
was it first for Gmail and then Chrome? Or what was the implementation of that?
It was, in fact, always a Chrome extension. Although before it was a Chrome extension,
technically it was a Firefox extension. This was in 2010 where people, it's kind of hard
to remember now, but people were still skeptical that Chrome was a great thing. The tastemakers at
the time, we were all sitting in Firefox. So it started as a Firefox add-on and later on it was
a Chrome extension. I do definitively remember that eye-opening experience of you can type someone's email
and then like a second or two goes by and then boom, there's all this enrichment about
them.
And it's like now it's taken for granted because this idea has permeated into sort of other
products throughout the years.
But there's something really magical to it.
How did the connection with LinkedIn happen?
I mean, we've also talked a bunch of on the show about the importance of email to LinkedIn and LinkedIn's growth and onboarding. So I imagine you popped up
on the radar screen pretty quickly. What was the relationship like? We had a great relationship.
Ultimately, it ended up in, I guess, a technical consummation. They acquired us.
Initially, like many acquisitions, it started with a business development relationship.
And the way that that transpired was we were consumers of an API at the time provided by,
I don't know if you guys remember, a company called Rappleaf.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Totally.
So Rappleaf was one of those first companies to whom-
Salesforce acquired them, I think?
No.
So Rappleaf ended up transmogrifying to some degree.
They became LiveRamp.
And then they were acquired by Axiom
and have recently spun out as a large public company.
I think they're now worth $3 billion or more.
So they're doing really well.
But back in the day,
it was a relatively small startup called Rappleaf.
Yet, despite their small size,
they were the only company and remember
this was back in 2010 to whom you could supply an email address and they would give you the full
social context about that email and so today that's full contact clear bit those are the sort
of providers that would be the comps today correct yeah now it's sort of and there are others as well
now it's sort of a almost a commodity marketplace for that data but back then now it's sort of, and there are others as well, and now it's sort of a, almost a commodity marketplace for that data. But back then it was this sort of edgy, crazy new thing that you were able to do. And so me being an opportunistic entrepreneur, I was like, cool, let's take this API, let's package it up, which actually wasn't a crazy amount of work, and let's jam it into Gmail via the use of a browser extension. So that's where the data came from.
Now, you can imagine that LinkedIn were non too pleased about an upstart selling their data.
Totally. And LinkedIn famously has always made it really hard to get mass quantities of data
out of their API because they have a network effect. Indeed. And we definitely didn't want
or need mass quantities. And everything, by the way, that we were doing was for the benefit of LinkedIn's hardest core members, which is ultimately why it was such a
good relationship with them. But they approached us at one point and were like, hey, listen,
we really would prefer it if you were not buying our data off third parties. And I was like, cool,
I would really prefer it if I had access to the API. That appears to be only internal right now.
We both stated our preferences for a while until I think a few months later we realized that maybe
an actual business development relationship would be the best thing, which was truly remarkable
because I think at that point, in fact, it never grew beyond us. There were only ever about 20
companies that had access to this secret LinkedIn API.
That's awesome.
And that was probably right around the time of their IPO, right?
This would have been halfway through 2011.
I don't recall exactly when they IPO'd.
It would have been around that time.
It was either end of 2011 or beginning of 2012, I believe.
The chap I was dealing
with is Adam Nash, who went on to be the CEO of Wealthfront and who's now at Dropbox. And he was
super nice about it. So I went in and he was like, can you demo what you would do with the LinkedIn
API? And I showed him the workflows and he was looking for things like, is the copy helpful?
Are we trying to deceive users? Clearly, no. Are we stealing data?
Absolutely not. Is it for the value of the LinkedIn member? Yes, it is. He was like,
okay, great. You should be a partner. I personally wanted to dive into that to
sort of give context on how we got to where we are today. What I'd love to start to steer the
conversation to is the founding of Superhuman. And David and I have previously talked a couple
times on the LP show about things that companies do pre and post product market fit and definitions of it. But Rahul, you at Superhuman have now, but where we got eventually is to a company that waited over two years to launch and really built
something sort of amazing in a very sort of both art and data driven way. And then we're going to
sort of dive in and tell that whole story. But talk to me about the initial idea for Superhuman,
where it came from, and how you convinced yourself that there's a business to be started selling a new email platform. Right. It isn't necessarily obvious from the outside. I do agree
with that. At LinkedIn, I ran all of our email integrations. It was my responsibility, rather,
to get LinkedIn data, LinkedIn profiles into other email clients. And so I became very familiar with how professionals do their email.
And the TLDR is badly. So I took a year off after I left. And during that time, I was looking for
what I wanted to start next. Due in parts to the IPO and to the acquisition, I was very fortunate
to be in a position where I didn't really have to work. And so I focused on impact. You know, what was the biggest thing that I could
possibly do? And my mind kept going back to a 2012 McKinsey study where they showed that the
average professional, and there are 1 billion professionals in the world, the average professional
spends three hours a day reading and writing email. Yeah. It's not hard at all to believe. A hundred percent, right?
Like that's crazy.
I mean, it's just mind blowing.
And so during my year off,
every single day I was doing the very simple math,
1 billion professionals times three hours a day
is 3 billion hours a day that go into email.
And I couldn't find,
I couldn't think of anything bigger than that
to do a market that big and nobody had built a real business in it correct because people were
scared because microsoft and google between them had systematically almost prevented startups
entering this area exactly and so it was during that time when I looked very closely at how people
were feeling about Gmail. And bizarrely, I saw this product get worse every single year. I think
because I was building on the Gmail, it's not really a platform because I was building a Gmail
browser extension, I could had a front row seat to what was happening here. So I saw the products
becoming more cluttered, using more
memory, consuming more CPU, slowing down your machine, still not working properly offline.
And then on top of that, people were installing plugins like ours, Reportive, but also Boomerang,
you'll remember, Mixmax, Clearbit, you name it, they had it.
Yes, all sorts of.
You know, Streak and what have you.
Right. It's kind of guilt inducing for me because
reportive was the first to get to millions of users and i'm like i am sorry guys i did not
intend to be this way i know it's it actually makes me sad well and like one of the you know
rules i think we've talked about at various points on the show before like all rules and startups
and venture is meant to be broken but you can't build a big company on the back of somebody else's platform. Like there are
very, very few examples. And as long as Gmail and Microsoft are the platforms, and you're just
building plugins, reported being the most successful among them, you're just going to be a
plugin. I think that's true. Although I would like to see, for example, Grammarly be the exception to that rule.
I think at this point, they're probably the highest valued, most successful plugin business.
And fingers crossed, they actually break the barrier and break out into their own thing.
But you're right.
There's a lot of existential crises around there.
Yeah.
Can I ask, when you were thinking about what to start and you were fully impact-driven on that, was your mind able to go to places that weren't email? Is it that you knew it so well that you felt that you were uniquely positioned and owed it to the world to fix that problem? Or was it more like, I tried to think of other stuff and email is where my head was. So I did absolutely go to other ideas. I spent time in the summer of 2014
researching any number of things I could do. And I got quite deep into what you would now call
concierge health. So an on-demand doctor who might turn up and sort you out with whatever
ailment you might be feeling. Again, I saw the potential for a very large amount of impact
there. But it's interesting that you mentioned this idea of owing it to the world. I very much
felt like I did and still do. I do believe that there is the perfect startup for every founder.
The one where if you do it, you have an outsized chance of success the story arc is just
perfect and it's it's kind of the startup where if you do everybody will cheer you on because they
want you to succeed because it feels like it's you know it should be destiny that this thing works
yeah and that startup exists for most founders and for for me, I believed that it was superhuman. It was the natural, logical, progressive evolution from reportive.
It is the thing that we always wanted to build anyway, and was actually the solution to all
the problems that we created whilst we were messing around at reportive.
Well, you just said it resonates so much because at the seed stage that we invest in a wave and that the PSL works out,
like I have some version of that conversation like every week, you know, like how, so I'm just,
I'm just curious, were there people who helped you through that phase or was it like a journey you had to go on on yourself on your, by yourself to realize like, okay, like the destiny is super
human. There were definitely lots of people who helped me through that phase. We just mentioned Adam Nash earlier. And I remember when I left LinkedIn,
he was CEO of Wealthfront at that time. And I went to him and I said, Hey, I have this idea
for a new email experience. It's called superhuman. Here's what it's going to do.
It's amazing. I want to go and start it. And he was like, whoa, whoa, whoa, slow down.
Are you going to take any time off? And I said, yeah, I'm planning to take some time off. And he
said, well, how much time do you think you need? And I said about three months. And he was like,
wrong. However much time you think you need, it's actually more like three times that you probably
need nine months off. And in retrospect, he was completely right. I ended up taking about nine months off before just felt myself always coming back to this,
this one idea, because I, it's hard to explain. I just, I couldn't stay away from it. I think
that's a good sign when you can't stay away from an idea. It's, it's a strong indication that you
should probably go and do it. Yeah, totally. No matter how bad the idea resonates so much for,
you know, certainly for me and starting wave, I assume for you in PSL, for Kimberly and Glow, like everything acquired.
Like, yeah, totally.
So cool to hear.
Okay, so Superhuman.
So Superhuman is the fastest email experience of all time.
Our users get through their inbox about twice as fast compared to in Gmail.
They respond more quickly to the emails that matter.
And many of them see inbox zero for the first time in years.
So you can imagine that's pretty life-changing.
Tell me more.
It's really beautiful.
You've never said that before, I'm sure.
No, I just wake up saying that every day.
Not to overly fanboy here, but I can absolutely vouch for all of that.
And it's, especially on a day like today where I'm down in San Francisco and traveling,
literally feel like I have superpowers plowing through my email at the
end of the day. And, um, you guys have built something amazing. So thank you during those,
either during the nine months or at the end of it, when you first started working on it and then
into the two year process, we'll get to you before you launched. There are a couple of value props
in there, but like one of them is like fast, right? Did you land on that? Like how quick did you get to that or whatever like in your mind is like the most specific
value prop you needed to nail?
Speed was a value prop from very early on.
And I think as I introspect this, it came out of some of the frustrations developing
Reportive on Gmail.
Obviously, Gmail at the time was my primary
email interface. I was the founder and CEO of that startup and I was doing a lot of email-based work
and so I was intimately familiar with how slow Gmail was and how slow it was getting and I had
therefore this hunch, this inkling that
speed was going to be a very big deal, but like with any hunch or inkling, one does have to
validate it. So in the first year of superhuman, as we were primarily building, we threw up a
landing page. It was a terrible landing page, just like a basic square space thing that took us all
of two hours to put together. And all you could do on this page was throw in your email address. And when you threw in your
email address, you got an automatic email from me. And in that email, there were two questions.
Number one was, what do you use for email today? And number two was, what were your pet peeves
about it? And I had two hypotheses going in. going in hypothesis number one was that for gmail
people were upset about how slow it had got and how it wasn't working properly offline and how
they had to use gmail plugins to make it do the things that they wanted to do and then for third
party email clients people were upset about how buggy they were how unstable they were and how
they don't sync
properly. All of which is still true today. So much head bobbing on this side of the table.
You're talking to an Apple mail convert.
Oh boy. Yeah, I feel for you. So we had to validate that. In that first year of Superhuman,
I think that we had maybe in the region of 5,000 signups on that landing page,
5,000 emails that went out, 1,000 conversations that actually happened, of 5,000 signups on that landing page, 5,000 emails that went out,
1,000 conversations that actually happened, therefore 1,000 interviews that I did
with early users, probably way more than most founders would actually do.
And resoundingly, those two hypotheses were confirmed. People disliked Gmail for the speed
and the lack of offline and the clutter and the plugins, and people disliked gmail for the speed and the lack of offline and the clutter and the plugins and
people disliked third-party email apps because of the stability and the sync and the bugginess
how did you drive traffic like how did you get top of funnel to get all of those responses on
your landing page in the early days of a startup i think and this is what we did the best way to do
it is to pick one or two events per year where you can insert
yourself into the cultural zeitgeist so for us one such event was when mailbox was being shut down
and rip yeah sadness right but it was the perfect narrative to say, hey, I'm over here, come look at our company.
And the trick when doing these
is to think of interesting evergreen content.
So you guys are the perfect people to talk to about this.
You know more than anyone else
just how hard acquisitions are.
I currently have one of the most widely read articles
on how to survive an acquisition,
and it was written in response to the mailbox shutdown.
I think it's your only Medium post, right?
It's probably my only Medium post, correct, because I usually end up,
I mean, the sort of second part to your question,
I usually actually end up syndicating posts.
You get far more reach that way.
And so that post ended up on Medium, also was syndicated to QZ.com.
And yes, it was about how do you survive an acquisition and we were able to insert it into the zeitgeist because relevant to
our company some news event was happening and i think if we as founders think hard enough there's
probably one or two things a year where that's true and you only need one or two things a year
now it's a pretty intense period. I think
to write that article probably took me about three days of not doing anything else. And then another
day of shopping it around. So four days all in, but those four days bought, I don't know,
north of 5,000 signups. And then those are the signups that you need to validate your initial
idea. Yeah. When you saw the news, the mailbox was being sent, like, how quickly did your mind go to opportunity? Like, I'm going to, I'm now going to go take
four days to do this. Like practically immediately, immediately I said to the team,
this is something that we need to capitalize on and take advantage of. We have to make ourselves
relevant. We didn't actually do anything. And this is just often how startups go until there was about a week to go. So the last week was an extreme scramble.
I was like, remember that idea that we had a few months ago? We're like, we need to do it right now.
Amazing.
Yep. Startups. Before we get into kind of our discussion, I want to talk about a kind of a
provocative question. Have we reached
the end of the era of the MVP or ship a crappy version? But before we get there, for the listeners
who don't know, superhuman costs $30 a month for an email client. Like talk about a narrative
violation. This is, I think the last browser that tried to charge for you to use was like OmniWeb
in, you know, the early 2000s. And I think it would
be absolute heresy today to say, oh, it's not even a mail service. It's backed by Gmail. It's
an application through which to interface with Gmail. But boy, is it great. And oh my gosh,
I pay $30 for it. How did you come to a revenue model of we're just going to ask people to pay? How did
you pick a price point and how did you validate it? I think overall with pricing strategy, you
have to analyze what you're going up against. And we were going up against free or nearly free.
Gmail and Microsoft are practically free if you are a consumer. And if you're in the enterprise it's being paid for you anyway so you
don't see or feel the cost the only way to win and i think it's reid hoffman who popularized the
following statement is to be contrarian and right i don't necessarily know how to be right but i do
know how to be contrarian and there's nothing more contrarian against a free product than to charge as as much as seems
reasonable or maybe even more than seems reasonable yeah but then to back it up with the goods that
actually make it worthwhile so before we tried to address pricing we actually first addressed our
positioning and we ran through a series of questions i'm'm a car guy, so a lot of my analogies
have to do with cars.
And so, for example, we asked ourselves,
are we the Ford of email?
No, not really.
Are we the Mercedes of email?
Not quite, but maybe we're getting there.
Are we the Tesla of email?
Okay, this is beginning to feel about right.
And there's a classic positioning game
that you can do.
It's a little bit of a mad
libs exercise where you say for a target customer who has a need or an opportunity, my product is
in this category and this key benefits, unlike some other competitive product, will create this primary differentiation
from Crossing the Chasm.
Is it?
Yeah, yeah.
I believe Jeffrey Moore in Crossing the Chasm
came up with that framework
and then it's been used many times.
Gotcha.
So I'm clearly not as widely read as you are.
Dave is a frameworks guy.
Well, when you go to business school,
you learn a lot of useless trivia.
So I actually found this piece of wisdom, as I find much of my wisdom,
off the first round review journal, which is incredible.
And it was written by Arielle Jackson, who listeners may not know,
but she was the product marketing manager at Google who launched Gmail.
And I was like, wow.
Okay, here we go.
I have to meet her. And fortunately, we were a first round or are a first round investment. And I was like, wow, okay, here we go. I have to meet her.
Unfortunately, we were a first round or are a first round investment. And so that was very easy.
And so I got to spend a lot of time with her working on our positioning.
And I have it right here. So we came up with for founders, CEOs, and managers of high growth
technology companies who feel like their work is mostly email superhuman is the fastest email
experience ever made it's what gmail could be if it were made today instead of 12 years ago
unlike gmail superhuman is meticulously crafted so that everything happens in 100 milliseconds or
less and we've since expanded beyond that very very narrow yeah that's so great that's what you have
to do you have to start with something that narrow yeah is there a risk in starting with
something that narrow that you're not going to be able to expand outside of it or do you feel like
if you can nail it for that core group then you're always going to be able to find more room around
the edges very much the latter so yeah i think we should come back to that point because
i have a yeah i have a thing that i should probably share with the listeners but just to tie
the positioning back into the pricing because this is a very methodical exercise that we ran through
so so step one is understand the lay of the competitive environment in our case we were
going up against two incumbents whose products are free or practically free.
Step two is come up with the positioning like I just described.
And when you read our positioning, it's clear that superhuman is a premium tool for a premium market.
And step three is develop your pricing.
Now, there are many, many ways to develop pricing.
But one of the easiest ways, this will appeal to the business school guy in you,
is the Van Westendorp pricing sensitivity meter. I see head nods going on over here.
That sounds like a fancy name.
Yeah, it's just some dude's name, I think.
He was probably very smart, very clever, did a lot of pricing. Anyway, so he said,
ask your target users four questions.
Number one, at what price would you consider superhuman to be so expensive that you would not consider buying it?
Number two, at what price would you consider superhuman to be priced so low that you would
feel the quality couldn't be very good?
Number three, at what price would you consider superhuman to be starting to get expensive
so that it isn't out of the question but you would
have to give some thought to buying it and number four at what price would you consider superhuman
to be a bargain a great buy for the money now most startups actually orient around the fourth
question the bargain for the money because there's some kind of network effect or a greenfield effect
or they're trying to take advantage of a first mover effect or so on.
So there's a land grab.
They want to go get all the users, so we may as well price as low as we can to get them all.
Exactly.
Which is why most founders I know have the experience of a board meeting where your board members are like, hey, you know what?
Maybe you should half the price.
Maybe we should just make this free and give this away from you.
Oh, God.
You're giving me the heebie-jeebies here.
Wait. Have you done this to founders? done this yeah yeah my point is i did this last week it's actually entirely the correct thing to do if you're
building in a new market or there is a land grab or a first mover advantage that you're trying to
chase however definitely not the case with email not the case with email where there's a big incumbent and the competitive products are
great. Startups like superhuman should orient around the third question. When does it feel
expensive, but you'd still buy it anyway. And that makes sense if you're building a premium product. Now for us, the median answer to that third question
was $30 per month.
And that's how we picked the price.
So we very methodically went through competitive landscape,
positioning, and then pricing
using this very simple pricing methodology.
And were you using people who had engaged
with the survey that you were driving traffic to?
This was actually well before we started doing the service. So this is when we were onboarding
our first 100 customers. I did all of these manually in the onboarding. And these onboardings
used to be much longer. They were one hour or one and a half hours. I'd give them a demo of
the product and then I'd look them in the eye and I'd be like hey this is the thing that you have to pay for now they didn't know going into
the demo i mean they kind of knew but like i was reminding them you can't see rahul right now but
like it's it's almost like this like uh terse dad look that he's giving you it's like now son i have
some news for you and i would actually very sternly look them in the eye and
say hey this is a thing you have to pay for can i ask you a few questions about how you feel on
pricing and they'd be like yes and then i just i'd go into it and i'd write down the numbers
and after we'd done a hundred of these the answers were pretty clear that's awesome that's amazing
and you haven't changed the pricing since?
Well, actually, the initial pricing was $29 per user per month. We didn't think too hard about
that. That was just like, well, you know, it seems to be the right price at roughly the right order
of magnitude. And then I had a few conversations with some pricing experts who pointed out that
if we are truly owning the premium experience in our category, then ending your price with a nine probably isn't the best thing to do.
So we pretty quickly rounded it up to $30 a month.
Interesting.
That's fascinating.
I never thought about that before.
Especially because Apple does $12.99 for your iPhone.
I think it's $12.99. I know Walmart undercuts at like $12.95.
Interesting. That's super interesting psychology. Wow. Super cool. You said you wanted to circle
back on the positioning. Oh, yeah. So let's dive in now to this analysis section. So for listeners,
I want to set the stage on sort of a timeline for this whole thing, because I do think it's
kind of crazy how long it waited before seeing the light of day. When did you break ground on designing Superhuman? When was
the first line of code? And when did you start rolling out to these first hundred users?
I first started sketching out the concept and the business model for Superhuman in February of 2014.
That's five years ago now.
Wow.
Or more, rather. And then it wasn't until nearly a year later
in january of 2015 when i started designing the product that's when i first put pen to paper
i wrote the landing page before i did anything else all of the copy that you see on superhuman.com
is actually copy that was written in january 2015. And I created hundreds of detailed wireframes.
And the first line of code was not written
until May the 4th in 2015.
And just to get nerdy,
like how are you doing the wireframes?
Is this in sketch?
Are you literally sketching it out?
What's your preferred methodology here?
It depends on how clearly I can see it in my head.
It will often start with a extremely
sketchy sketch on paper and then once i can begin to see it uh my my tool of choice is still
balsamic i'm kind of old school about this i can use it extremely fast way faster than i am in
sketch so that's what i did it in huh that's your superhuman of uh of prototyping technologies
pretty much okay so started sketching for a year then did a year of design after that in the week
after i left linkedin in in my gusto to get something done i actually went out and pitched
a bunch of vcs that same week this was the the uh the february of 2014 before adam nash's advice to yeah he was
like yo yo chill out bro which was great advice and so i had term sheets at that point i could
have raised money but he suggested as did many others who knew me they were like listen you're
really burned out maybe you don't see it yet uh And I did go through this rollercoaster of emotions in the
following months as I was processing the burnout from the last four years. So let's say that there
was like a few weeks in early 2014. And then most of 2014 was time off. And then I really got going
again around Q4 of 2014. And my advice to any listener who's going through the same thing or who shortly
will be is don't try and just jump straight into it. You can't go from being a professional party
animal like I was into, okay, I'm now going to do 12 hour days again. It just doesn't work.
I went from not working to four hours a day to five hours a day to six hours a day. And I slowly
built that muscle memory backup. And I slowly built
that muscle memory backup. And the first few things were things like let's buy superhuman.com.
Let's investigate trademarks. Let's raise some seed capital.
Were you pulling together a team at this point too?
I was trying to, but you know, that, that is a longer term thing. And there are things you can
do even when you, you don't have a team. What I did in
Q4 was I bought superhuman.com and I raised about $750,000 of seed capital. And then in January,
I did the wireframes. Then in February, I engaged with a design agency to make those wireframes into
really beautiful mockups, high fidelity mockups. I think that's a little bit of a contrarian thing to bring in a design agency sort of that early
in a startup rather than hiring a designer or doing it in-house.
It is. And it's turned out to be super expensive compared to hiring a designer. I think I spent
$45,000 on turning these wireframes into high fidelity mock-ups. I do, speaking of frameworks,
I do have a framework on this, which explains why I think it was the rational thing to do
in my case, if you want to hear. Okay, cool. So I think the fundamental job of a founder
is to create momentum. And in my mind, I like to imagine this gigantic flywheel, and it's made up
of the most dense material in the universe. And the job is to get this thing moving. Now,
most founders, the first time, are probably technical. And the way that you get this flywheel
moving is you make a thing, you launch a thing, and hopefully people like your thing, and it starts
moving by sheer force of user numbers.
This was certainly how Reportive worked.
It took me about six weeks to build the first version,
tens of thousands of users in 24 hours,
and it just kept on growing dramatically thereafter,
which is cool.
So the flywheel just started moving by itself,
and at that point it's like,
okay, can I now hold on to this thing?
When you are a second time founder and you're coming back at it again you get to do things in weird strange orders but it's still moving the flywheel so for example the money that initial
750 000 that was raised in 2014 for superhuman was raised on the basis of primarily one slide
where i took a screenshot of gmail and i just red lined out everything i didn't like and i said i'm
going to make this pretty and fast amazing and you'll believe me because of what i did previously
because you built report right so there is no execution risk here i know how to build a thing
i know how to hire the team i know how to build a thing. I know how to hire the team.
I know how to market the thing. This is what I'm going to do. Yep. And that's $750,000 starts this
flywheel moving. So now I'm like, cool, the single founder, I've got this money in the bank. I'm not
paying myself. Obviously I don't need to do that. What else can I do to get this flywheel moving?
Well, that domain name looks pretty juicy. let's see if i can make that happen
and and the guy who sold it to me wasn't the most pleasant of individuals uh they like never are no
never fun he took a perverse sense of enjoyment uh out of sending me abusive and insulting emails
but fortunately i didn't have to deal with this myself. I hired an expert broker to go after the domain. Oh, man.
And we ended up getting a very good deal.
But that's another example of how you can get this flywheel moving.
Now, you might think, as many people said at the time,
whoa, so you just raised 750k and you're going to spend what was like,
I don't know, 20% of it or something on buying a domain name?
Yeah, right.
That's crazy. I don't know how you% of it or something on buying a domain name. Yeah, right. That's crazy.
I don't know how you would feel about that as a seed investor. Yeah, I would be like,
we need to have a conversation. How about the.co?
So I think I did buy the.co and then I let it lapse. So someone else probably has it now.
In any case, I thought about it long and hard. And i realized that in the grand scheme of things this
is going to turn out to be no money whatsoever most importantly this is a sign to the world
that this flywheel is moving we're serious about this i'm super serious about this and the people
i'm really signaling to at this point are potential co-founders number one yeah and potential investors
number two yeah and well
also it comes back to the market too like if you were trying to create a new market it would be
wholly irrelevant right but you're trying to compete with established entrenched competitors
and back to your positioning like you are the you know the tesla not the what was uh
tesla before it was tesla what was the name of the company? Oh, the E1 or something like that?
Yeah, the...
EV1?
EV1, yep, not the EV1.
Which, of course, Rahul's staring at us like we're crazy.
Of course you wouldn't know because it wasn't the Tesla.
Right, right, right.
Before the Roadster, before Elon Musk joined Tesla, it was the EV1.
Yeah, that is a pretty terrible name.
Actually, it was the T0.
The T0, that's it.
That's because it was a mathematician, so it was like at time, T0. that's kind of cool although it just reminds me of of a terminator yeah right sort of
murderous connotation that you probably don't want in the self-driving car yeah so in any case the
flywheel uh the the domain was another piece uh then the landing page like a really well-crafted
landing page where every single sentence had
been iterated hundreds of times over. I'm not even exaggerating, by the way. I spent four to
six weeks writing the copy for the landing page, and then another six weeks doing the wireframes,
and then $50,000 to the design agency to create these beautiful designs. These are all examples
of how a single founder who once upon a
time was technical, I wouldn't claim to be particularly technical nowadays, can create-
You did drop out.
I did drop out. And then I instantly forgot everything I did. Exactly. It's an example of
how a single human being can start the flywheel spinning. And that helps both with recruiting
co-founders
as well as with raising investment.
Yeah.
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I'm going to catch us up on the timeline. So it's summer 2017. So
we started in February 2015. So we're two and a half years in. It's a 14-person team,
still haven't shipped. This is freaking heresy for startups that are supposed to, you know,
be embarrassed of your first version. So Reid Hoffman, there's this famous sort of Reid Hoffman
mindset. If you're not embarrassed by the first version of your product, you've launched too late. So could Superhuman have done this and sort of put your, maybe your worst foot forward
to get some signal and then sort of iterated, iterated, iterated? Or did it have to be done
in this way where you and a team went away for two and a half years and sort of created the magic
internally? I think it had to be done this way way i noticed with almost every single other email app
every single other productivity app they went through the following motion they would raise
some seed money they would make a thing it wouldn't be a very good thing not because the
teams weren't talented or well-intentioned most people here are but you're competing with microsoft
and google that and and the domain is so inherently complex it is a very very difficult thing to build an email client that people actually want to use
and it does take more than two years i challenge anybody to do that faster i don't think it's
possible and the same is true by the way of a web browser or of a database or of a compiler
any sufficiently hard productivity tool will take
many, many years to build. But back to the Reid Hoffman quote, you know, I'm still embarrassed
today by many aspects of superhuman and I probably always will be. So I think Reid is actually still
correct. The nuance here though, and I think this is the question that you might be asking, is how applicable is the advice to superhuman? And I think his advice applies most to startups that are creating new markets,
and especially to startups that have network effects. So for startups that are creating new
markets, the alternative is usually a terrible experience. And you guys will talk about this
on Friday, but remember trying to hail a cab
in San Francisco before Uber existed.
Well, you could have used
cabulous or taxi magic,
but yes.
I remember
standing in the rain, which of course made everything
worse, on the Embarcadero for like
30 to 40 minutes, waiting
for a taxi to arrive, and they keep on
whizzing by you it was the worst
but exactly to your point there was a moment in time after after ios was open to third-party
developers where the time had come and there were there were probably seven companies legit companies
that all got started and like then it was like you need to move you need to ship yesterday you
need to move as soon as fast as possible lock up all the supply and all the demand.
Exactly.
Because at that moment in time,
anything you release,
even if, as Reid says, it's embarrassing to you,
is going to be worth it for a critical mass of users.
And that gives you a small advantage.
And when you have a network effect,
as all of these companies did,
that small advantage is going to start
compounding on itself great for that kind of company yeah but for a startup like superhuman
in an existing market exactly where the alternative product is gmail and without an explicit network
effect built into it right now the bar is very different i want to double click a little bit
on the network effect piece obviously reportive had network effect, or at least you were building on other people's network effects.
Maybe it would be a more accurate way to put it. Were you intentional about at least this first,
you know, act of superhuman not being a network effect business? I don't actually think that
Reportive had a network effect. We may be using the term in a different way. So by a network
effect, I mean where the value of the
product becomes more valuable the more people are using it right right different for example
as i caught myself they're like you didn't really you were building on the fact that like linkedin
had that uh and then you were using their data yes i think it's always great if you can build in
a network effect we believe that with superhuman, there are underlying
network effects that will become apparent over time. And in the meantime, we don't need one.
And the reason why we don't need one is that we can solve the marketing and the retention
challenges in a different way, which we've been able to by making the product very desirable,
very viral, and very sticky once
you actually start using it. So you mentioned competing in an existing market where the bar
is already very high versus a land grab opportunity as a framework for can you sort of take your time
and be very intentional and methodical and frankly spend a good amount of money developing your first
version of your product. Are there other sort of vectors on which to sort of decide whether you need to launch
yesterday or you can take your time other than that market timing? Yes. So I have another framework
for you. Excellent. David would be very excited. Yeah, I can see him running from here as we speak.
I'm not going to claim credit for this one because it's not mine but it is
oh boy it's right so this one came to me from shishir mahotra he is the founder and ceo of
coda another great productivity tool and we were talking about our respective attitudes to launch
and you know sort of as you've been alluding to, Superhuman has at this point sort of famously held back from a public launch.
So too has Coda.
And he was able to put into words what I'd been feeling for a very long time.
And he said, a startup should only launch for one of three reasons.
Number one, either you need more users or customers to sell to.
Number two, you need more users or customers to sell to. Number two, you need
more capital to spend. Or number three, you need more candidates to hire. If you're benchmarking
well across all three, if you're attracting all the users you need to, if you have all the capital
you could spend, and if you have no trouble hiring, then why would you launch?
It's a relatively expensive, distracting one-time event that's going to bring an influx of people
into your product. They'll find a myriad of bugs because of course we're all startups. We don't
have perfect products and you won't be able to fix them on a responsible timeframe. So you'll
just end up with thousands, if not tens of thousands of disappointed people.
And I was like, yes, that's exactly the problem.
What he said.
True.
This is the problem that happens in productivity.
And so we just decided that we wouldn't.
And who knows?
Maybe we never will launch.
Yeah, you're pre-launched today, right?
I mean, at this point, it's like we have a lot of users,
we have a lot of revenue, we're growing very quickly.
Are we pre-launched? Who knows?
I think we're just doing it in a very different fashion.
And the way that we actually model the company
is from my favorite Paul Graham essay,
Startup Equals Growth.
Yeah, you know the one.
Oh yeah.
This is such a good essay, probably his best. For listeners who don't know, he basically says
the most important thing a startup needs to do is to grow. And especially if you're a technology
startup, you probably like to optimize things and you like to optimize things on a short-term basis so let's
optimize short-term growth rate pick a weekly growth rate that you like it might be two percent
it might be three percent it might be four percent per week and just do it do it every single week
and you will be shocked at how fast you grow every month and every year and we've been running
superhuman that way for the last two years.
Every single week, we just pick a number of users that we will onboard the following week.
And that's how we grow. You have the like, finest control knobs on that of any company I've ever heard of. Well, I mean, you have a waitlist of 180,000 people who are dying to use the product
and can't. So you just choose every week
how many of those people we're going to let in. Is that about capture it? That's more or less
correct. Although I would say that the wait list is a relatively small funnel into the product.
The fastest way in, and one of the reasons why superhuman is so exciting is that each week
70 of our new users are virally referred within products from the previous week
fascinating so do you put a governor on how many referrals can start the next week or if you're
referred is it we will grant you in you know access no matter what there's still a
qualification process we were pretty clear on who superhuman is good for and who it's not going to
be good for i got qualified out six months ago because i'm a primary ipad user well there you
go this was before we had ipad shortcuts and now we do yeah i'm very excited to be now qualified
back in it's gonna be good so i'm to blatantly steal from your essay on first round review, which if you're listening
to this and you're finding this interesting, you are just going to be beside yourself reading this
awesome piece that Rahul wrote on the first round review. But you basically at Superhuman
developed a way to measure product market fit and a four-step process to get there.
Can you sort of talk about what that process is? Sure. The context for this or the motivation was we had to spend
a number of years to get the product to the point where people would actually pay for it.
That's not something that most teams want to go through. Most teams want to build a thing, launch the thing, make money, go, go, go. But it was very obvious to me as a member
of our target market that we didn't have products market fit. I didn't need to do the big splashy
launch in order to convince myself to my own level of satisfaction that our products wasn't
good enough. It was just obvious. And it was obvious because I couldn't personally switch
away from Gmail to superhuman. And if I couldn't, then why would anybody else? Do you feel like you were uniquely equipped to
be able to hold yourself to that bar because you were a second time founder?
Yes, but only because founders were a core target market for who we were going after,
because I had experienced the pain that we were trying to solve when I was running my last
company. I very clearly could see,
oh, we haven't solved that pain. Not yet. And I could feel ourselves getting closer every single
day. But I had to find a way to explain this to the team. You know, these are hyper ambitious,
super intelligent engineers and designers and people of all disciplines who'd poured their
hearts and souls into the product. They needed a way to understand not only that we weren't ready,
but how not ready we were or how close we were and the precise steps that we could do in order
to get there. So I went out and about, I read everything I could find and I started searching
for definitions of product
market fit. And there's quite a few out there. So for example, Paul Graham would say it's when
you made something people want. And I think that's a pretty good definition, but I wanted
something more actionable. And I think Sam Altman had a slightly different take, which is it's when
users love your product so much that they spontaneously tell
other people to start using it without you even asking them to do that. And that's a different
take on it. So PG's take is around desire. Sam's take is around distribution or sort of net
promotion. But perhaps the best definition I found, or the most interesting at least,
was Marc Andreessen's. And he had the most vivid definition. So he would say, and I have it right
here because it's quite lengthy and detailed. Number one, you can always feel it when products
market fit is not happening. Customers aren't quite getting value. Users are not growing quite
that fast. Word of mouth is not spreading.
Press of views are kind of blah. And the sales cycle takes too damn long. But you can always
feel it when products market fit is happening. Customers are buying as fast as you can add
servers. You're hiring sales and support as fast as you can. Reporters are constantly calling you
about your hot new thing. Money is
piling up in your checking accounts. Investors are staking out your house and you start winning
company of the year awards from Harvard Business School. My favorite is the part about staking out
the house. Does actually happen. Can confirm. Wild. So I can tell just by your reaction, whilst this is a vivid and accurate definition,
there is a challenge to using this in running the business, which is that it is a post hoc
definition. By the time investors are staking out your house or blowing up your phone,
you probably already have your last one is achieving product market fit at that point
you're no longer interested in quantifying it yeah right so i remember staring at this definition
through tears in the summer of 2017 thinking oh no oh boy we don't have this and we are so
so far away yeah from having this but how do i that? Did you have a board at this point?
Did we have a board at this point? David, why is that relevant?
Well, you know, when you're a hammer, everything looks like a nail, but you obviously had investors.
Was there a group of people to whom you felt beholden to explain this current state of the business to? That's a good question. So as I
cast my mind back, the answer is yes, of course, we did have a board. We never did any board meetings,
which is why I had to think about it. So our board formally at the time was Bill Trenchard
from First Round, who's been incredible to us. and informally i would speak basically every two or
three days uh with ed sim from bold start uh there are new york based funds that does really great
enterprise investments uh and they led your seed round right they yes they actually wrote the first
check in yeah that first 750 was from them got it and they wanted to write a million dollar check i was like
no i'll take 250 at this cap uh and then i went to went away and it made some progress and i came
back like i'll have another 250 now but it's had a more expensive price and then the next 250 was
at an even more expensive hashtag second time founder yeah yeah just play the game play it
nicely yeah and everyone will will enjoy themselves um so yes we
did have a board but it wasn't really a thing that i was turning to them for help on so the
tears through your eyes were like yourself like not not just like less so like yourself and like
oh shoot now i gotta go explain to everybody where we are oh oh sure yeah like explaining it to the board
was the very least of my concerns yeah yeah because you know these are folks ed i made money
for in the past a report of bill is a long-term investor he just fundamentally believes in what
we're doing all of our other investors fundamentally believe in what we're doing
if i went to them and i said hey this is the direction I think we should go. They would always be like, good. We believe in you. This, this is why we
invested in you. It was the team who are working on this day in day out. I wanted to give them
a path and an engine that could work. And so I found a piece of work by Sean Ellis, who's famous for coining the term growth.
Exactly.
He came up with that.
And he ran early growth at Dropbox, LogMeIn, Eventbrite.
And during his days of doing growth consultancy to startups, he found a benchmarked, predictive way
to measure product market fit.
You simply ask your users,
how would you feel if you could no longer use the product?
And you let them answer either,
I would be very disappointed,
I would be somewhat disappointed,
or I would be not disappointed. would be somewhat disappointed or i would be not disappointed
and you measure the percentage that say very disappointed and what he found is that the
companies that struggled to grow almost always had less than 40 percent very disappointed
and the companies that grew the most easily almost always had more than 40 percent
very disappointed in other words if more than 40 percent of your users would be very disappointed
without your product guess what you have initial product market fit threaten to take it away and
see what they say exactly it's it's a stroke of genius I'm not going to claim to have invented it. He did. It's more
predictive of success than Net Promoter Score. It's benchmarked across hundreds of venture-backed
companies. It's a really phenomenal metric. And you know, the most exciting thing about this metric
and the thing that we did at Superhuman is that you can use it to build
your very own product market fit engine. You can use it to come up with a systematic
methodology to numerically optimize product market fit, which sounds crazy, but it's true.
You can actually build this thing. It's fascinating. So that is the measuring stick
by which you can determine if the changes
that you're making in the product are bringing you closer to product market fit. What then is
the other side of that equation to actually govern how you should change the product to hopefully
get you closer when you measure that? Like how do you figure out what the inputs need to be
in your product changes? So we have a whole very lengthy
article about this. I'll give you the... We'll put it in the show notes. Yeah, I'll give you the quick
summary, but I would very much recommend reading the article because there's a ton of subtlety
around how to do this correctly. So it begins fundamentally with surveying your users. For every user who comes into your product and who then experiences the core benefit of your product,
that usually means they've done the thing, whatever it might be, two or three times.
They've probably been there for about two weeks.
You send them a survey.
And in that survey, you ask a number of questions. You ask four
questions. Number one, how would you feel if you could no longer use, I'll take superhuman as an
example. How would you feel if you can no longer use superhuman with the answers that I outlined?
Number two, what type of people do you think would most benefit from superhuman number three what is the main
benefit that you get from superhuman and number four how can we improve superhuman for you free
text or or drop downs and uh so the first one is a tri-state yeah like i described and the other
three yes free street free text yeah and type form is is what we use it's probably the easiest
way to get this done nice keyboard shortcuts great that's actually why we chose it that's
like that's our primary at pioneer square labs that's like all we use for validation now i wish
everything had keyboard shortcuts to just make everybody's lives so much better and faster
how do you then use those four questions to guide you toward what features should we build
or change?
So we then have a four step engine to systematically generate your roadmap and increase product
market fit.
And the four steps that you go through are number one, segment, number two, analyze,
number three, build, and number four repeat and it just
occurs to me that this creates a nice acronym which is saber segment analyze build and repeat
so you got to saber your users that sounds quite violent this is getting so it's interesting
because like you're an artisan like you are three, four weeks writing copy on a landing page. You're an artisan.
And yet, what you're describing here, it's an algorithm to start a product market fit startup.
It sort of begs the question, if you have the right team who are capable of doing all of these
functions, writing that survey, analyzing the results, you know, doing Sabre, will every startup idea end up at an end state of product market fit if you apply the
correct algorithm to it? I think that this greatly increases your chances. But the sad and realistic
answer to your question, I think is obviously no. Why? Well, let me give you three big reasons.
Why? Number one, many startups will run out of money
before they finish this process yeah number two many co-founding teams will have disagreements
and fall apart and number three many teams will just get tired yeah and go you know what i can't
do this anymore and those are the three fundamental reasons that people will fail even given the
Sabre products market fit engine. Yeah. And it could be too, if you start with a kernel of an
idea that is sufficiently bad for a sufficiently incorrect market, it could just take too long to
ever iterate your way toward whatever the ultimate correct end state is. Yes, I do have some rules of thumb around that. So the first step of this
engine is to segment. And if you like, we can get into the details of how you might do that.
But if after that first segmentation step, your very disappointed score, your product market fit
score is in the region of 5% to 15%, my considered advice to you
would be to suggest not doing that product.
And I mean, like in all, you know,
totally, realistically,
we all have only so many years on this earth.
Take the capital you've raised,
take the team that you have
and do a brainstorm and try something else.
And I'm sure your board will be supportive
if you have the data to show
that it's not really working.
But if you're in the to show that it's not really working.
But if you're in the 15% to 25% mark,
which is where we were after that original segmentation,
then I do believe you can actually iterate your way to success.
And the challenge then becomes raise enough money and keep morale high enough for long enough
so that you actually have the time to make it work. Hence the job of the CEO, the momentum creator.
It strikes me that, I'm curious if you'd say this has to be the case,
but in your case, certainly is the case. You have this engine, and this is a mixing metaphor,
is the engine is the transmission of the startup. But the true engine of the startup is your
passion. This is your destiny, right? You were through that nine month process like there was no other company that you would start and i
would imagine that is you know in many ways giving you the perseverance the drive to look at your 15
to 20 25 you know score on that on that rubric and say okay okay, we're going to make that better versus like, ugh.
I think so. I suspect I may just be on the far end of persistence compared to most people.
We had a very interesting debate as an executive team over the last year about redefining our company values. And this idea of persistence
kept coming up over and over again. And I was like, you know what, maybe we should have persistence
as a value. Now, ultimately it didn't end up becoming a company value, but I do believe that
even if it's not a company value, every single founder needs to exhibit unnatural levels of persistence i think again to quote paul graham he talks about
grimly determined founders and how during the days when he was operating yc he would see
these people come out of college and they're like they're super nice and bubbly and then like a year
or two later they're just these sort of grimly persistent people who
will stop at nothing. And they've got the battle scars from running through brick walls over and
over and over again. And I do genuinely believe that if you're a co-founder, if you're a founder,
especially if you're a CEO, this is your job. You have to run through the brick walls over and over
and over and over again.
And when it's time that other people might be thinking of giving up or backing out,
you have to be the person to say,
nope, we're going to keep on going.
Absolutely.
Yeah, also resonates so much.
So we're going to loop back to a previous question
that we sort of talked about to end this segment here.
I'm going to read it from my Google Doc here,
which is
written much more eloquently than I phrased it earlier. So when you're building for a narrow
segment of users who love you at the start, how do you think about building for them without
overfitting the product to them such that you can't serve the broader market later?
So I'm going to read the answer from my equivalently formatted Google Doc. It's not even my answer, but this is just something I believe so strongly because it seems so self-evidently true to me. And again, it's going to be a Paul Graham quote.
Oh, is it about local maxima?
It is, yes. I'm going to quote two different of his essays.
Ooh, DJ Rahul. So number one is going to be from startup ideas, where he talks about how
you find startup ideas and some good startup ideas. Incidentally, and tangentially to this
answer, one of them is just build Gmail, but fast. And that was public on the web for about 10 years
before we started superhuman. So the idea was out there.
That was one of PD's startup ideas. I'm pretty sure it's in the essay startup ideas.
He says, uh, and I'm going to try and quote this from memory. He's like, just build Gmail,
but fast it's become so slow. There are sufficiently many people like me that,
and he had some insane price that would spend a thousand dollars a month on Gmail because it's literally all we do yeah i mean he should have
started superhuman he wasn't grimly determined it was not grimly determined okay so startup ideas
he says when a startup launches there have to be at least some users who really need what they're
making not just people who could see themselves using it one day, but who want it urgently.
Usually, this initial group of users is small for the simple reason that if there were something
that large numbers of people urgently needed, and that could be built with the amount of effort that
a startup usually puts into version one, it would probably already exist. Which means you have to
compromise on one dimension. You can either
build something that a large number of people want a small amount, or something that a small
number of people want a large amount. Choose the latter. Not all ideas of that type are good startup
ideas, but nearly all good startup ideas are of that type. other words what he's saying is don't worry too much
about building for a narrow segment of users and therefore overfitting it's precisely what he's
advising that you do and then you might say well doesn't that give you the problem of being boxed
into a particular niche or a particular segment of
the market. And then to quote from a different essay, one that we've already referenced,
startup equals growth. He says, in theory, this sort of hill climbing could get a startup into
trouble. They could end up on a local maximum, but in practice that never happens. The maxima in the space of startup ideas are not spiky and isolated. Most fairly good ideas extremely adjacent to the idea of houses being hotels
and the other very timely is uber where the idea of a luxury car that comes to your house with a
chauffeur is adjacent to peer-to-peer driving it's amazing i mean literally every single one of the
you know quote-unquote a plus companies that we're going to cover on this season of the IPOs, Airbnb, Pinterest, Lyft, Uber, Slack, Stripe fits this definition.
Even Stripe.
I mean, I'm thinking about Stripe now too.
Like the original market was startups that need to get their merchant accounts faster and implement them quickly.
And it turns out everybody that needs better merchant accounts.
So it makes so much sense. and implement them quickly. And it turns out, everybody that needs better merchant accounts.
So it makes total sense. Well, to put words in your mouth,
for email,
the business people and executives
who spend three hours a day on email,
they really desperately care about faster email.
But everybody cares about really faster email, right?
Absolutely.
And the good thing for us,
it turns out that even that particular market
will lead to a multi-billion dollar company. And so there is this potential to create an
enduring franchise, a company that could last for over 100 years. And that's certainly our goal here.
All right. Well, we very much look forward to covering the superhuman ipo on the
the main show next i think the next acronym gonna be um i don't know who else is in your cohort
that's gonna be all ipoing around the same time i'd love to see all the great productivity
companies right now notion air table we're in a total renaissance we are we really are that's so cool well before we break rahul where
can our lps find you on the internet and two what is the best way for them to get access to superhuman
okay so i am on twitter at rahul vorah that's my name r-a-h-u-l-v-o-h-A. And of course, at email at rahul at superhuman.com. And to get access by far,
the best way is to get a referral from an existing user. I would just recommend going
to search.twitter.com and typing in superhuman. And there is a high volume of tweets. There's a
lot of very helpful superhuman users out there. You can see which ones the most
helpful users are just by who's jumping in on which threads, giving out invites. If you don't
feel inclined to do that level of work, then you can sign up on the website, but that will be a
fair bit slower. All right. What about, what are you hiring for? I'm sure there are lots of listeners
who would love to come work here. Well, you mentioned that just before we started, your primary audience is actually product managers right now.
And it turns out that I'm hiring for our very first product manager.
Whoa.
So this is a super exciting role.
You get to work with me, for better or for worse, all day, every day, on building the fastest email experience of all time.
And I'm really thrilled to be hiring for this role.
I've carried product in the company for a number of years, and it's a really fantastic opportunity for the right person. Terrible boss, but like great.
I don't know. I think I rate okay. I think I rate okay. But yes, really great product.
Really great product. And in addition to that engineers of all types lead back-end
engineer front-end engineer uh if you're a phenomenal developer we'd really love to speak
with you awesome well we rarely uh do lp shows i think with early stage companies that are still
early stage in quotes here but i think we we very intentionally and selectively reached out and i
think we think incredibly highly of superhuman so LPs, if you do feel so inclined
that that may be interesting for you,
please don't hesitate to reach out.
Thank you.
Awesome.
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Thank you, everyone.
Later, David. Thank you.