SaaS Acquisition: One Feature 3X'd Revenue Post-Exit episode artwork

EPISODE · May 17, 2018 · 46 MIN

SaaS Acquisition: One Feature 3X'd Revenue Post-Exit

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

Sri Ganesan spent years building a bootstrapped SaaS messaging product, resisting the one feature customers kept asking for. Then the SaaS acquisition by Freshdesk changed everything. His team finally built web support - and generated more revenue in three months than the entire lifetime of the previous product. This is a story about selling a bootstrapped SaaS and what happens after the startup acquisition closes. Sri's salesperson was closing deals by pitching just push notifications, but Sri kept overcomplicating the pitch with the full product vision. In hindsight, leading with the easy sell and upselling later was the smarter approach. Sri Ganesan is the Director of FreshChat, formerly Konotor. The SaaS exit happened after a single breakfast conversation with Freshdesk's CEO. A $125,000 Qualcomm prize and a Target accelerator had kept the team alive without formally raising venture capital. 🔑 Key Lessons 🎯 Lead with the feature that sells, not the full vision: Sri's salesperson closed deals pitching just push notifications, but Sri kept overcomplicating the pitch. Leading with one simple feature and upselling later would have accelerated growth. 📉 Ignoring market demand cost years before the SaaS acquisition: Large customers asked for web support repeatedly, but the founders refused. After selling a bootstrapped SaaS to Freshdesk and adding web, FreshChat made more revenue in three months than Konotor's entire lifetime. 🧠 Large markets with many competitors signal opportunity: Sri shied away from live chat because it was crowded. His post "The Market Trumps All Else" explains that many competitors doing well usually means massive demand. 💰 Bootstrap through prizes and accelerators before a SaaS acquisition: Konotor survived on a Target accelerator, a $125,000 Qualcomm prize, and customer revenue without formally raising venture capital. 🤝 The best SaaS acquisition prioritizes team success: Freshdesk's CEO made the deal feel like a win for Sri's team, offering space to continue their product vision with more resources. Chapters Introduction Sri's motivation and background From WhatsApp competitor to in-app messaging How long the consumer app took before pivoting Dropping the B2C product Bootstrapping through an accelerator and Qualcomm prize Finding first customers through hustle and cold email The SDR model and personalized outreach Quora post that drove inbound leads Powered-by badge and bowling pin strategy The push notification sales lesson Why the salesperson was right about simple pitching Ignoring customer requests for web support Why they resisted large markets The SaaS acquisition by Freshdesk One breakfast conversation closed the deal Adding web support and hockey-stick growth The market trumps all else Advice for founders stuck in small markets Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/174 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

Sri Ganesan spent years building a bootstrapped SaaS messaging product, resisting the one feature customers kept asking for. Then the SaaS acquisition by Freshdesk changed everything. His team finally built web support - and generated more revenue in three months than the entire lifetime of the previous product. This is a story about selling a bootstrapped SaaS and what happens after the startup acquisition closes. Sri's salesperson was closing deals by pitching just push notifications, but Sri kept overcomplicating the pitch with the full product vision. In hindsight, leading with the easy sell and upselling later was the smarter approach. Sri Ganesan is the Director of FreshChat, formerly Konotor. The SaaS exit happened after a single breakfast conversation with Freshdesk's CEO. A $125,000 Qualcomm prize and a Target accelerator had kept the team alive without formally raising venture capital. 🔑 Key Lessons 🎯 Lead with the feature that sells, not the full vision: Sri's salesperson closed deals pitching just push notifications, but Sri kept overcomplicating the pitch. Leading with one simple feature and upselling later would have accelerated growth. 📉 Ignoring market demand cost years before the SaaS acquisition: Large customers asked for web support repeatedly, but the founders refused. After selling a bootstrapped SaaS to Freshdesk and adding web, FreshChat made more revenue in three months than Konotor's entire lifetime. 🧠 Large markets with many competitors signal opportunity: Sri shied away from live chat because it was crowded. His post "The Market Trumps All Else" explains that many competitors doing well usually means massive demand. 💰 Bootstrap through prizes and accelerators before a SaaS acquisition: Konotor survived on a Target accelerator, a $125,000 Qualcomm prize, and customer revenue without formally raising venture capital. 🤝 The best SaaS acquisition prioritizes team success: Freshdesk's CEO made the deal feel like a win for Sri's team, offering space to continue their product vision with more resources. Chapters Introduction Sri's motivation and background From WhatsApp competitor to in-app messaging How long the consumer app took before pivoting Dropping the B2C product Bootstrapping through an accelerator and Qualcomm prize Finding first customers through hustle and cold email The SDR model and personalized outreach Quora post that drove inbound leads Powered-by badge and bowling pin strategy The push notification sales lesson Why the salesperson was right about simple pitching Ignoring customer requests for web support Why they resisted large markets The SaaS acquisition by Freshdesk One breakfast conversation closed the deal Adding web support and hockey-stick growth The market trumps all else Advice for founders stuck in small markets Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/174 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

NOW PLAYING

SaaS Acquisition: One Feature 3X'd Revenue Post-Exit

0:00 46:56

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders?

This episode is 46 minutes long.

When was this The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders episode published?

This episode was published on May 17, 2018.

What is this episode about?

Sri Ganesan spent years building a bootstrapped SaaS messaging product, resisting the one feature customers kept asking for. Then the SaaS acquisition by Freshdesk changed everything. His team finally built web support - and generated more revenue...

Can I download this The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!