Product-Led Growth: Chrome Store to $10M ARR at Yesware episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 20, 2016 · 52 MIN

Product-Led Growth: Chrome Store to $10M ARR at Yesware

from The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders · host Omer Khan

Matthew Bellows launched Yesware at $5 a month. Investors told him "software for salespeople" wasn't even a category. Then the Chrome Store became his SaaS distribution channel for product-led growth - driving 100% of early users for free, hundreds per day, without spending a dollar on marketing. PLG through a self-serve growth channel changed everything. Yesware CEO Matthew Bellows grew to $10M+ ARR and 750,000 users through product-led growth powered by the Chrome Store as a free distribution channel. He pivoted from email templates to one-to-one email tracking as the breakthrough feature. The company has raised over $35 million in funding. Matthew Bellows is the co-founder and CEO of Yesware, a sales platform that helps salespeople connect with prospects, track engagement, and close more deals. Yesware serves 750,000+ salespeople at companies like Adroll, Groupon, Salesforce, Twilio, and Yelp. 🔑 Key Lessons 🚀 Your product-led growth channel can outweigh your product: Yesware's Chrome Store listing drove 100% of early users for free - Matthew says distribution is at least as important as what you build. 🎯 Pick a smaller market with better product-led growth access: Yesware chose Google Apps (5-6% of market) over Outlook (90%) because it had early adopters and the Chrome Store for organic distribution. 🛠️ Your breakthrough feature may not be your first idea: Yesware launched with email templates that got modest adoption, then added one-to-one email tracking that transformed engagement. 💰 Low pricing works if you nail self-serve growth volume: Yesware grew to $10M+ ARR charging just $15/month by acquiring massive free user volume through organic channels. 📉 Free users can become a liability if they don't convert: After five years of freemium, Yesware ended the free plan because analysis showed free users weren't contributing enough value. 🤝 Stop being both CEO and VP of Sales: Matthew tried both and the sales team suffered. Hiring a dedicated VP of Sales who worked in the trenches was the turning point. Chapters Introduction Meet Matthew Bellows and Yesware What Yesware does for salespeople The pipeline slide that inspired a startup How the idea for Yesware began Meeting co-founder Cashman and early validation From bootstrapping to raising a seed round Why focusing on Google Apps was the key product-led growth decision First 20 users and the Chrome Store discovery How the Chrome Store became a growth engine Email tracking as the breakthrough feature Raising funding when investors said it's not a category Sales challenges converting free to enterprise What the new VP of Sales changed From $5/month to $10M ARR pricing journey Why Yesware killed the free plan Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/127 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

Matthew Bellows launched Yesware at $5 a month. Investors told him "software for salespeople" wasn't even a category. Then the Chrome Store became his SaaS distribution channel for product-led growth - driving 100% of early users for free, hundreds per day, without spending a dollar on marketing. PLG through a self-serve growth channel changed everything. Yesware CEO Matthew Bellows grew to $10M+ ARR and 750,000 users through product-led growth powered by the Chrome Store as a free distribution channel. He pivoted from email templates to one-to-one email tracking as the breakthrough feature. The company has raised over $35 million in funding. Matthew Bellows is the co-founder and CEO of Yesware, a sales platform that helps salespeople connect with prospects, track engagement, and close more deals. Yesware serves 750,000+ salespeople at companies like Adroll, Groupon, Salesforce, Twilio, and Yelp. 🔑 Key Lessons 🚀 Your product-led growth channel can outweigh your product: Yesware's Chrome Store listing drove 100% of early users for free - Matthew says distribution is at least as important as what you build. 🎯 Pick a smaller market with better product-led growth access: Yesware chose Google Apps (5-6% of market) over Outlook (90%) because it had early adopters and the Chrome Store for organic distribution. 🛠️ Your breakthrough feature may not be your first idea: Yesware launched with email templates that got modest adoption, then added one-to-one email tracking that transformed engagement. 💰 Low pricing works if you nail self-serve growth volume: Yesware grew to $10M+ ARR charging just $15/month by acquiring massive free user volume through organic channels. 📉 Free users can become a liability if they don't convert: After five years of freemium, Yesware ended the free plan because analysis showed free users weren't contributing enough value. 🤝 Stop being both CEO and VP of Sales: Matthew tried both and the sales team suffered. Hiring a dedicated VP of Sales who worked in the trenches was the turning point. Chapters Introduction Meet Matthew Bellows and Yesware What Yesware does for salespeople The pipeline slide that inspired a startup How the idea for Yesware began Meeting co-founder Cashman and early validation From bootstrapping to raising a seed round Why focusing on Google Apps was the key product-led growth decision First 20 users and the Chrome Store discovery How the Chrome Store became a growth engine Email tracking as the breakthrough feature Raising funding when investors said it's not a category Sales challenges converting free to enterprise What the new VP of Sales changed From $5/month to $10M ARR pricing journey Why Yesware killed the free plan Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/127 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

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Product-Led Growth: Chrome Store to $10M ARR at Yesware

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Matthew Bellows launched Yesware at $5 a month. Investors told him "software for salespeople" wasn't even a category. Then the Chrome Store became his SaaS distribution channel for product-led growth - driving 100% of early users for free, hundreds...

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