The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - First Time Founders with Ed Elson – ft. Tyler Denk of Beehiiv
Episode Date: January 7, 2024Ed speaks with Tyler Denk, the founder and CEO of Beehiiv, a newsletter platform. They discuss Tyler’s background at Morning Brew, his thoughts on selling secondary shares, and dealing with personal... loss while running a company. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Scott, you invested in our next founder.
What do you look for when you're investing in a startup?
Someone who's been able to attract really talented people.
I try to interview the whole management team.
So it's more really looking for a team of talented people who clearly get along.
I went on the board and was an angel investor in a company called Olapik, which was, it was like a visual image curation software platform. And it was three guys from Columbia and they just could
finish each other's sentences. One was a tech person, one was the marketer, one was the CEO.
They were all very, very smart, very hardworking, got along. And I thought, I just want to back this
team. So it's really when you're early stage investor, you're really not investing in a
company, you're investing in people. which became the home for writers and creators who wanted to monetize their work independently.
Newsletters are also essential to our business.
Scott considers our newsletter, No Mercy No Malice, to be our flagship product.
We've invested significantly in this asset,
and we now have nearly half a million subscribers interacting with our content every week.
That's why I'm excited to introduce our next guest, Tyler Denk, who's an expert in all things
newsletters. After leading growth and product at Morning Brew, Tyler started a newsletter
distribution platform called Beehive. In less than two years, Beehive amassed a network of nearly
15,000 active newsletters, 50 million readers, and 500 million monthly impressions. And unlike
so many software platforms these days,
he achieved profitability.
Now he's looking to take on the incumbents
with Substack at the top of the hit list.
Tyler, thanks for joining us.
Thanks for having me.
Happy to be here.
The story of Beehive really begins at Morning Brew.
Could you give us the rundown of first
what Morning Brew actually is?
And then also what you did there
and how that led to the creation
of this newsletter platform, Beehive.
Yeah, for sure.
So I joined Morning Brew back in 2017
as the second employee in a very fun role,
ranging from growth and engineering and product,
just doing anything we could possibly do
to scale the newsletter size.
It sounds like you're pretty familiar
with the whole game of being able to scale your audience, expand the newsletter. My first project was
creating the Morning Brew referral program where by incentivizing different readers, you could
earn t-shirt, coffee mug, crew neck, whatever that looks like. We realized that our existing
audience was already natively sharing with classmates, friends, family. So being able to
help further incentivize them with rewards. One thing led to another, I built that on contract.
Austin Reef asked me to come on full time and I came on and just built anything that would help
us grow. I guess to take a step back and answer your question, like what is Morning Brew? Morning
Brew is a, or at the time was a daily newsletter Monday through Friday that covered business news and finance,
kind of like Bloomberg, but more for younger demographic millennial told in the conversational
voice and tone. I joined, it went to about 50,000 people every day, Monday through Friday.
When I left, it was seven days a week going to three and a half million subscribers. And then,
the team grew from obviously me as the second employee to about 35, 40 people when I left in 2020. Why did you decide to join a daily newsletter
with 50,000 subscribers? What led you there? Yeah, it sounds crazy now, right? Yeah. Yeah.
Looking back, everyone's like, oh, you were early. At Morning Brew, that's amazing. At the time,
it was the furthest thing from a sure opportunity.
There was the two co-founders and a writer in a closet-sized office in the NYU campus dorm.
When Austin, who is a friend from Baltimore, reached out to me, I had $4 in my bank account.
And when he asked if I would be able to build a referral program, I lied and said that I could because I needed money and I built it. And after building
that in the two to three weeks that that took, it was the first time that they had a engineer,
quote unquote, I'm self-taught, but an engineer to help build something. And of course, as like
a team that's growing, they had a laundry list of things that they wanted to be built.
And I provided an opportunity. So I spent that summer building a little bit of everything from
the website, the referral program, social share icons, where you could share the individual stories on
Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn. And during that process, I had full access like you do in a
startup to everything from the inbox, from user feedback, to other people talking about the
product and seeing how the team works from the inside out. And during that experience, I saw the
rabid fan base that they had of people emailing in daily, being like, I can't start my day without
reading Morning Brew. I've shared it to my entire class. All my co-workers are reading it. They're
raving about it. And it was kind of like that aha moment of they've clearly struck a chord in an
opportunity in a market that I think there's already a huge market for business news from looking at Bloomberg and all of the other larger established publications.
They were doing it in a very fun, novel way, and it clearly resonated.
And then seeing how passionate the team was was kind of like my two-month on trial experience of being like, I actually think they're onto something massive here. And whether they go into education or just being one of the largest publications for
millennials to get business news, I felt both were a pretty promising opportunity.
So then in around late 2021, you decide you're going to start your own newsletter platform
when things I presume were going super well at Morning Brew. Why did you do that?
Yeah. So there was a slight gap. I left Morning Brew in 2020, right before they got acquired by Business Insider. I didn't know that that acquisition was happening, but through that
experience of three and a half years at Morning Brew, fortunately, Morning Brew was a huge success.
We were making a lot of money. We had 40 people on the team. We were like the go-to email newsletter.
And I had built everything from the referral program to the website, to our content management
system, to an ad management platform that our sales and copywriting team would use to
handle all of the different brand advertisements.
So more or less kind of built a platform within the company that was internal for our employees
to use.
And it worked really well. It was kind of what made us a well-oiled machine to be able to operate at the
scale that we did. And at that same time, the good thing about email is you can always receive replies
from your readers and get feedback. And there was always feedback coming in daily of what referral
program do you use? It works really well. How does your newsletter look so good in all of these different mail clients?
How are you able to share your stories
to different social platforms?
I'm trying to work with a developer
and build something similar.
So there was both an appetite
for email newsletters at large,
and there was an appetite for software
that kind of did what Morning Brew did well,
which is make the emails look great,
make it easy on the team,
be able to integrate advertisements, being able to integrate different growth tools and analytics to understand
who your audience is. Historically, those were five or six different platforms. And building
something very robust that worked well through trial and error for three and a half years gave
me the opportunity of seeing what worked, what didn't, and how can we make this applicable to
anyone with a newsletter. So that was kind of like the real moment of the more feedback and
input we got from readers. And our readers weren't even necessarily newsletter operators,
and there was an appetite with them. I figured there was some value in what I had built internally
with my team at Morning Brew. And then around the same time, as you alluded to in the intro,
other companies like a Substack were raising money at $650 million valuation plus.
And using their software, using what I had built at Morning Brew, I thought that what I had built and the tactical like boots on the ground experience at Morning Brew was a pretty core competitive advantage.
And that's what really led to wanting to launch a company to white label a lot of that. So you basically went to work at a startup, no experience, built a product for a startup that took them to growth and success.
And then you were like, okay, I'm going to just take this product that I built and start selling it to other people.
Is that a fair characterization?
If you were to take a few steps back, yeah, you could probably summarize it like that.
Yeah. So would Morning Brew be upset in any way that you took a sort of your core differentiated product that you'd built in-house and then started selling it to other companies?
Very loaded question.
I would say a few things.
There was a point in Morning Brew where I had pitched this idea, actually, to build this and white label it to other software vendors.
And at the time, they were already going through acquisition talks with Business Insider and others.
So it's kind of a curveball to also pivot into SaaS, like in the ninth inning of acquisition talks.
There's also a lot of traditional media companies who have attempted to get into software and failed. I think Washington Post just shut down their media or their tech division relatively recently
or their software platform. And so there's a lot of nightmare stories as to why you don't want to
divert away from something that's working really well, which is their core competency. I don't
think necessarily was the software and the product. That's a lot of the operational things
that made things move the way
that they did. But I would argue Morning Brew's core value prop was understanding their audience
and creating the best content for that audience. The tech was kind of like behind the scenes,
the underlying thing that facilitated a lot of that to happen at scale.
Yeah, definitely. And you also mentioned Substack. What was the key differentiator in your mind
when you decided, okay, I'm going to go start my own competitor? Very directly, I thought I could compete because at the time when signing
up for their product, I wasn't overly impressed. And knowing what I had built at Morning Brew,
I actually thought our internal tech had a lot more flexibility and customization for our writers.
I'd say the other big difference is I think fundamentally they have a principle around
wanting to enable writers to
earn a living kind of like the Patreon and OnlyFans model of monetize your audience directly.
Right.
And charge a subscription, which I subscribe to several paid newsletters. I think they're great.
And I, but I do think it's very difficult to charge a premium subscription for newsletters
in a competitive media landscape where there's HBO Max, Netflix, all of these other paid products. It's really hard to deliver reliably
a newsletter product that warrants paying for. And I actually think that's a very small market
where my initial thought was in seeing what made Morning Brew successful and seeing the Hustle,
Axios all get acquired,
they were all ad-based newsletters. And I think actually the most difficult thing that we did at
Morning Brew was scale a sales team that could really take the data and understand who the
audience is and be able to sell that to premium advertisers. And so that is what we are building
at Beehive is one, just facilitate, make it so easy to create good looking content where you can engage with your readers and understand who they are. But if you want to
monetize rather than you having to sell all of these DTC brands or premium advertisers on why
they should monetize and advertise in your newsletter, we can actually help facilitate
that transaction and place premium ads in these newsletters. So you have the upside of monetizing
without having the sales team to do so. So you have the upside of monetizing without having the sales team
to do so. So where is the majority of your revenue coming from? Our primary business model is more of
a traditional SaaS. So we have the free plan to get started. We have a $49 plan, a $99 plan,
which is a fraction of a lot of the competitors in the space. But that is like a traditional,
if you were sending emails, I'm sure you're familiar with no mercy, no malice. Yeah, there is a monthly fee associated with paying the
software vendor used to send those emails. That is the majority of our revenue. I alluded to the
ad network as well, we take a transactional cut on ads place. So in place of you having to source
your own advertisements, and pay commissions to a sales team and do all of that work. We
facilitate premium ad deals for you and we take a cut of that, which varies. So that's a second
revenue stream. And then we also have like some transactional like growth tactics built into the
product where you can recommend another newsletter in the B.I.E. ecosystem. We take a 20% cut off of
like co-registration is essentially what it is. So those are the three primary revenue
streams. We facilitate premium subscriptions like Substack, but we don't take a transaction fee. So
that's 100% revenue to the content creator. I feel like the big milestone that people like
founders like to talk about is 1 mil in ARR. So when did you hit that and how long did it take for you to hit that?
And then finally, what decisions did you make that you think led to that milestone being
achieved?
There's a lot there.
I feel like I can kind of do like a masterclass of like everything going on in my head in
terms of how I was, I mean, any, I feel like any company that starts and can go from zero
to 1 million ARR in a very competitive space has dozens of growth
tactics and things that they did very intentionally to help reach that milestone because the zero to
one is by far the hardest part, especially in a hyper competitive industry like email in general.
So it took us 14 months to go from zero to a million ARR. And there's probably dozens of
things I could attribute that to,
but a few that jump out is,
one, our very first seed round,
which actually Scott is an investor in.
We strategically had a long tail
of strategic investors who have newsletters,
who have media experience
in the hopes that being our early adopters,
kind of incentivizing them
to move their newsletter over.
Again, when you launch,
like your product is the worst it will ever be day one. And when there's much more mature platforms
in market, you kind of need like an extra incentive to win over those early adopters.
And so leaning on early relationships and investors is like one kind of like growth
hack to get that initial cohort in the door. So that helped. Two is, I would say,
building in public has been very powerful for us.
I know it's cliche and a lot of people do it. Some people are like totally against sharing numbers and metrics. I'm the opposite. Everything is an open book. I share cost, I share revenue,
I share growth, I share the upsides, the downsides. Because one, I think people can align with a
person and a story more than like a business and a brand.
And so I never intended to really be the face of the brand,
but in being able to share and promote other newsletters
who are having success on the platform
and also being very quick to respond to user feedback
and how we can make it better,
I've kind of become the face of the brand.
And in doing that, I have been very vocal
in how we're building the business because I actually think, one, it's hard as shit.
And I think that people actually resonate and are intrigued to learn about how you go from zero to one and even how you hit scale, how we're prioritizing engineering versus support versus product versus growth, what's working and what's not.
And so I've kind of done it through content and just being able to share
the journey of how we've been able to do that. And then I'd say the last one is we've developed
a reputation for shipping features very quickly. I think a lot of that's actually born out of the
insecurity of being a young company. And when we're in this space where our top 10 competitors
are so much further, they've been around for five, 10 plus years. They have a much
more robust feature set. What I wanted to prove to the market was one, we can ship really good
product very quickly. And what that tells them is maybe we don't have feature XYZ, but if you've
paid attention to our pace and velocity of shipping, odds are we will get to XYZ very quickly.
And so it kind of buys you a little bit of time of winning people over with whatever features we do have.
And if they grow frustrated that we don't have something,
kind of earning their trust that we hear them,
we know what's important and that we can prioritize that.
Yeah, the building in public thing is so interesting.
We've had a lot of founders on who've discussed,
we've discussed this topic.
Why exactly is building in public good for generating revenue
versus just getting followers i actually think if you were deciding between a different software
vendor and you're kind of like up in the air between two or three being able to bet on trajectory
and a person that you think actually has your best interest in heart and is trying much harder
to make this work and succeed and that you have
their ear directly to provide feedback i actually think is a pretty key selling point yeah whether
it's the most scalable selling point is tbd but i'm sure that there's plenty of people that i've
dm with over the days that view it as a competitive advantage to be able to say here's three things i
think you can do better and i have the track record of listening to them and delivering on
those three things pretty quickly yeah and then lastly, when you hit milestones, it opens
up a lot of doors, right? I don't have to share on Twitter and LinkedIn that we hit 3 million ARR,
4 million ARR, 5 million ARR. But when I do, I get dozens of warm leads from people who are like,
I've been following the journey. I think I'm moving off platform X to jump over to you. Or, hey, can I make an introduction to this investor,
this advertiser, this newsletter? Because I think they'd be a perfect fit. And I think it's just
like maximizing your luck surface area. The more you can share, the more hype that you can build
around the narrative that you're building on, the more opportunities and doors that open of people
who either align with you and want to help you succeed, or at least just with like the algorithms and everything else,
being able to surface your success as a broader opportunity to whether it's investment is what
you're going for or new customers. It helps just expand the opportunities there.
If you're willing to disclose it,
how much of the company do you own and have you taken any off of the table?
I won't share how much I own, but I have not taken any off the table.
Okay. And what is your opinion on selling secondary shares? Do you approve, disapprove?
Would you ever do it yourself?
Yeah, I think everything is like a big, like it depends on the person in the situation, right? So
if you had a family if you
needed a larger house because you just had a kid um whatever it is like there's circumstances in
life i think i think there's like a classic saying or thing within startup culture of like paying
yourself very little as a founder because you need to focus all your time on the business and
like you need to kind of earn that salary. And I completely disagree with that. Like I'd rather I'm able to pour 14, 16 hours a day into the startup because
I pay myself well enough that I'm not stressed financially to have to worry about bills and
other miscellaneous things that distract you in life. And so by giving myself a livable salary
that I'm okay with, I can focus 110% on the business. And so I think that can be
extended to secondaries as well, right? Like if you are in a place in life where you're a significant
other and you have a kid and you need a larger space and you don't have the available liquidity
to do that, to be able to sell a secondary and be able to take care of your family so you can
focus on the business, I think is totally acceptable. I mean, to give an idea of
equity stake, I have two co-founders. We didn't split equally, but roughly. And then we've done
a seed round and extension and then our series A. So fairly diluted. And I'm also someone who
doesn't love the traditional raise an A, raise a B, raise a C. That's why you alluded to in the
intro, we were profitable for two months earlier this year. Since raising our A, we've hired a shit ton and are not
profitable on a month to month basis. But I think we should get pretty close to profitability again
in 2024. And the goal is to not raise again for a lot of the reasons we kind of just mentioned,
right? Like I am diluted a good bit from having two co-founders and having two rounds
of funding. And I think we've been able to run the company extremely lean. We have people who
are really good at what they do and the business itself has pretty high margins. So I don't see a
reason to continue to burn cash just so we can go to the series B. I'd rather build like a
sustainable business that can eventually flip the switch and optimize for profits. To what extent is money motivating you as you build this business? And do you consider
Beehive to be the thing that will set you up financially for the rest of your life?
The goal is for that answer to be yes, right? So 5 million ARR right now in like month 20,
and that doesn't include the other revenue streams. So at about a $7 million run rate in under two years, I feel really good about our team. We're extremely
talented, extremely hungry, run really lean, and the space I think is pretty ripe to be disrupted.
And so I don't see any reason where if MailChimp can get acquired for $12 billion, I think our goal,
our ambition is much broader than the software that they built when they got acquired for $12
billion. And so I do think this can be a massive multi-billion dollar business, which I think by
most measures of success would be financially set if that were to happen. So that's for sure
the goal and the vision of what we're looking to build. As far as like money as a motivator, like I remember in a younger stage of my life thinking people always like after an entrepreneur sold the company talking about like their users and how like the new acquirer like didn't set up their users for success long term.
And like there's always like kind of headaches after an acquisition or that there can be.
And I always viewed that as like, who cares? you kind of just walked away with $100 million, you really give a shit. And I've changed a lot on that. And like, the answer is like, yes,
because there's a lot of users and people who really stuck their neck out and helped us get to
the point that we are. Yeah, there's a lot of users who put up with months of our product being
like a clear number 10 in the space, but trusting that we would figure it out and build and actually proactively
provide a lot of feedback.
And so there is like a very unique perspective in like, I want to do what's best for our
users.
And I've also, in building this, you kind of forget a lot of these businesses are newsletter
first businesses that are trusting us as a 20 month company to run their business, to monetize, to be able to push conversions downstream.
And there's a lot of responsibility in making sure that we do that really well.
I'm not going to bullshit you and say that money isn't anything that I care about.
I for sure have aspirations, would love to be financially free to be able to support my family and those that I care about. Like I for sure have aspirations, would love to be financially free
to be able to support my family
and those that I care about.
But there's a lot of like mission
and vision built into that
that was always there from the beginning,
but it actually becomes a bit more amplified
throughout the journey, I'd say,
to really look after your users
and make sure that their best interests are in heart.
We'll be right back after a quick break.
We're back with First Time Founders founders what are the biggest challenges you faced
starting this company and as a founder yeah i mean a lot i remember like when everyone always
gives like the ups are really high and the lows are really low and they say like any week can be
the highest highs and lowest low and i always like to think like any hour can be the highest
high and lowest low and i've had someone who I was super optimistic on joining the company turn us down an offer.
And then the next hour have a massive user say that they're churning from their platform
and moving over to us.
And the swings are wild.
And when you care as much as I do, like it's very much amplified.
And something I'm trying to work on is trying to be a little bit less,
you know, a little bit more steady along the journey because there's a lot of swings.
We, one of our not yet co-founders, but first I'd say employee, our CTO, Andrew Plackin,
was a good friend and he ended up passing away about eight months into the journey.
And so he worked with us before we went full-time for like that summer in 2021 and built the company had our initial seed round he joined full-time along with my two co-founders and
unexpectedly passed away in may of 2022 and so as a company of i think six people at the time
he was kind of like our x factor. He was like a 10X engineer.
I don't think 10X actually does it justice.
He was like incredible.
And just about the time
that we were really hitting product market fit,
we had a lot of big time users
with high expectations moving over.
And he was kind of like the de facto guy
to fix things, solve things, push features out.
So it's like a small six person company losing arguably the most important person in the company,
both on like a personal and emotional level, but also the technical competence and everything in between.
I mean, it's hard to compare anything as being like a more difficult experience in the journey
than losing probably the most important person in the company.
Also at a time really when
startups are so difficult and all of the metrics of nine and 10 startups fail.
And it was right around that time in March, April, where we really struck a chord in the market.
We were really starting to compound and scale. And it was like that, oh shit, I think we broke
through the, is this even going to work and get off the ground like this is off the ground and working now we just need to execute and scale and everything
we were pouring you know 16 plus hours a day into to have someone in your core team your cto pass
away one emotionally and personally like devastating from everyone that looked up to him
on the team myself included yeah and then just from a, it's hard to not conflate the business and the personal, but it's like everything we've worked so hard could completely fall apart unexpectedly because of this.
And so that was an extremely challenging, I'd say several months of shuffling CTOs, trying to hire a CTO, try to regroup the team when we were so small and fragile.
And in a way, like not that there's any positives out of that, but to go through that experience
and be able to rebound the team and really align and execute and everyone kind of stepped
up to get done what they needed to get done has put a lot of the other challenges into
perspective because I hope that nothing is ever as terrible as that was
and that makes the other like day-to-day challenges a little bit more manageable.
What did you do personally to move I mean not past but how did you motivate yourself
personally in the midst of I'm sure extreme? And then how did you as a company move
past that? What kind of tone do you even strike with your employees when something like that
happens? Yeah, I feel like it's the classic fight or flight or wartime peacetime CEO where,
not that I wasn't already giving it 110% and cared way too much
about this business and was like giving it everything I could, but my way of dealing with
it, probably not the most healthy in retrospect, but like, I need to work twice as hard to make
sure that we can get through this. And also kind of towing the line between vulnerability and going
through that while also being like, everything's going to be okay. It really was a time in the company where you're so young,
you don't have like dependencies and everyone's context sharing. Like he was owning mission
critical things to the business and outside of the personal tragedy that it was, it's like,
oh shit, who knows how to do anything? And like the business is still going. Like people are sending emails that next day
expecting XYZ to work perfectly
and no one knows how XYZ actually works in the company.
And so it's like a very tactical,
like everything and anything had to be done.
My co-founders are incredible.
So both of them are engineers as well.
They were teaching themselves new languages
that he was owning just to get caught up.
Everyone was working extremely hard.
I feel like when you're a founder and a CEO, you have to have this almost delusional level of excitement and enthusiasm for your business.
You have to turn it into the be-all, end-all of your entire existence. And I can imagine when something like that happens,
it might trigger feelings such as, what is this all for? Did you feel that you had to
take a step back and reevaluate the things that were important to you as a CEO?
I think that probably would have been the healthier way to do it.
I half browned out and it's like, that's why it's difficult to talk about because
it was such like a very high stress chaotic situation.
It was also like my way of dealing with it was the delusional, like that is
terrible, but I'm going to put my head down and work harder than I possibly can
to push forward, to DM every single person on LinkedIn who could be a CTO to help us to reach out to our contacts, to email every single user who's having issues explaining the situation that we're working on it.
But my way was the unhealthy, like just grind it out and get it done.
And like, we will see the other side of this. And then after, like, I went to the funeral and like hearing everything from his friends and
family of how much he, like, I didn't know a lot of this at the time, but how much he had attempted
to build other startups in the past and kind of failed, but how entrepreneurial he was and how
passionate he was about Beehive actually ignited a lot of passion and like motivation in me
and giving it a broader purpose beyond just like, yes, there's building a successful business
and I'm extremely competitive. I want to build a market defining business and like the money and
fame and everything else, like all of the other extraneous things that you would build a company for.
But his mom owns part of the company and having that as like a motivating factor to kind of do it for him in a way is also something that is very top of mind.
What's one piece of advice that you would give to other young entrepreneurs that you think is worth knowing before deciding to start a company?
Yeah, it's a difficult one, right? I guess know why you're doing it. If there's not a purpose,
like there's a lot of terrible things that happen in a day-to-day, week-to-week basis that you
really need to have the drive and like an end goal of like, what is your why of why you want
to build something? And without that, I think it's really easy to get caught up in the negatives of building a
business, the stress, the lack of work-life balance, the expectations from now I have 40
people that look to me for answers, look for me for providing for their family. And there's a lot
of expectation to continue to build a successful business that can pay them and provide for their family. And there's a lot of expectation to continue to build a successful business that
can pay them and provide for their family. And so without having like a real vision and drive
and why for what you're doing, it becomes a lot easier to lose sight and lose focus, I believe.
And also just like what it takes to build a successful business. Like one of my more
controversial, but I don't think that controversial takes
is that it's a huge competitive advantage
to be a single founder.
And like it, I, and you can take that however you like,
but like I have other friends who are building businesses
and they can't work on Thursday nights
because they have to go out to dinner
or they're taking their kid to the park on Saturdays.
And like, I don't have that. For better or worse,
like my top 10 priorities are
how do I make this business better and stronger?
And how can we position ourselves
to dominate in this market?
And for the short term and in the medium term
and maybe long term,
like that's the only thing I really care about.
And I do think that's like a huge competitive advantage
relative to other people
who have other extraneous situations and circumstances. Do you think that you
had your, your why you find your why have you found it? Yeah. I mean, I also think there's a
level of like, it's, I complain all the time about how stressed I am and how there's so much to do
and not enough time in the day. But at the end of the day, it's really fun. Like I'm solving problems. I'm working with really talented,
smart people that I like to work with. And we are the underdogs in a very competitive industry,
and we're doing really well. And it is like a fun thing to do. And I think just fundamentally
taking a step back and like you work for what, 50, 60, 70% of like your waking hours,
you might as well do something you care about.
And that's fun and enjoyable and challenging.
And every day is a challenge.
So on a personal level, the why is continuing to learn, continuing to build, and do something that I care about.
I am also extremely competitive.
And so I take notes of everyone who said no to us on the investing side, all the competitors who think that they can run over us. The list goes on of different small things that motivate me, but
being extremely competitive and wanting to build something that I think can be as synonymous
as a MailChimp or a Google at one point is something that I'm trying to build.
And it's a big, audacious goal. And that's what makes it fun
is kind of putting your head down
and trying to build it.
We'll end with this,
which is what's been the best moment
in this journey?
Your highest high?
Yeah, it might not seem like much,
but there was a time when I think
one of our second or third engineers joined
and we were making $2,000 a month.
And I think maybe, I don't know, 10 months ago, he put in Slack. He was like, yeah, we're making $2,000 a month. And I think maybe, I don't know, 10 months ago,
he put in Slack.
He was like, yeah, we're making $20,000 this month.
It's like 10X since I've been here.
But like that level of ownership of I've been here
and I helped build that.
And like seeing that from someone that you hired
and has worked really hard was like really cool.
Almost like a parent moment of like someone
who you trusted to do a lot and he's built
it and crushed it but the fact that he can like really resonate with hey i've been working my
ass off and building something and like here's what i can show for it like we've 10x revenue
since i've been here and i feel like i'm happy to be a part of that is like all i could ask for
as a founder and providing opportunities for people to do meaningful work that they care about. And so that was a moment where that hit me and like reading that
was like really awesome. Being able to do that for other employees as we scale and really making
sure that everyone feels like they're a part of something special and they're actually contributing
is like my top priority as a founder. Well, thank you so much for coming on,
Tyler. This was awesome. Yeah, I appreciate you having me.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our executive producers are Jason Stavis and Catherine Dillon, and Drew Burrows is our
technical director. Thank you for listening to First Time Founders from the Vox Media Podcast
Network. Join us on Wednesday for office hours and Monday for Profit Markets.