Startup Funding: Bootstrapped 7 Years Then Raised $20M episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 18, 2016 · 57 MIN

Startup Funding: Bootstrapped 7 Years Then Raised $20M

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

Two university students with a machine learning thesis, no coding skills, and no money wanted to build a SaaS company. Seven years later, their patience with startup funding paid off - they raised $20M in a single round, skipping VC funding entirely. Pini Yakuel turned down $1.5 million in SaaS fundraising in 2012 and kept bootstrapping. Optimove's startup funding strategy was unconventional. Pini used consulting revenue to self-fund the business, grew 100% year over year, and waited until the company had real traction before raising a seed round from a growth fund instead of a traditional VC. That delayed approach to startup funding led to better terms and stronger culture. Pini Yakuel is co-founder and CEO of Optimove, a platform that predicts customer behavior across the entire lifecycle. The company has 100+ employees and offices in Tel Aviv, New York, and London. Pini shares why startup funding timing matters more than raising itself. 🔑 Key Lessons 💰 Startup funding works best from a position of strength: Pini always met VCs as a profitable founder who did not need money, which gave him leverage and allowed Optimove to raise $20M on favorable terms. 🧠 Use consulting revenue to self-fund your SaaS before startup funding: Optimove started as a consulting business, using client revenue to hire developers and build the product - turning real customer data into a stronger product. 📉 Turning down VC funding can protect your company culture: Pini rejected $1.5M because VC pressure to grow faster than the business was ready for would have damaged culture and forced premature decisions. 🎯 Every SaaS founding team needs a founder who can sell: Startups with all-technical co-founders struggle in early sales because hired salespeople only work once the brand is established. 🚀 Reinvest every dollar as an alternative to startup funding: Optimove grew 100% year over year by reinvesting all revenue, never taking dividends, and spending aggressively only on proven bottlenecks. Chapters Introduction What Optimove does - predictive customer modeling How Pini and his co-founder came up with the idea Spending 4-6 months meeting companies to find the right problem Not knowing how to code and outsourcing the first build Starting a consulting business to fund the SaaS product Building the first product version with a $30K grant Reaching product-market fit Why every founding team needs a salesperson Competing in the CRM and marketing automation space Turning down $1.5M in VC startup funding in 2012 Why Pini rejected VC money and waited 7 years Patience as a strategy - growing 100% year over year Data-driven decisions vs. gut instinct as a founder Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/131 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

Two university students with a machine learning thesis, no coding skills, and no money wanted to build a SaaS company. Seven years later, their patience with startup funding paid off - they raised $20M in a single round, skipping VC funding entirely. Pini Yakuel turned down $1.5 million in SaaS fundraising in 2012 and kept bootstrapping. Optimove's startup funding strategy was unconventional. Pini used consulting revenue to self-fund the business, grew 100% year over year, and waited until the company had real traction before raising a seed round from a growth fund instead of a traditional VC. That delayed approach to startup funding led to better terms and stronger culture. Pini Yakuel is co-founder and CEO of Optimove, a platform that predicts customer behavior across the entire lifecycle. The company has 100+ employees and offices in Tel Aviv, New York, and London. Pini shares why startup funding timing matters more than raising itself. 🔑 Key Lessons 💰 Startup funding works best from a position of strength: Pini always met VCs as a profitable founder who did not need money, which gave him leverage and allowed Optimove to raise $20M on favorable terms. 🧠 Use consulting revenue to self-fund your SaaS before startup funding: Optimove started as a consulting business, using client revenue to hire developers and build the product - turning real customer data into a stronger product. 📉 Turning down VC funding can protect your company culture: Pini rejected $1.5M because VC pressure to grow faster than the business was ready for would have damaged culture and forced premature decisions. 🎯 Every SaaS founding team needs a founder who can sell: Startups with all-technical co-founders struggle in early sales because hired salespeople only work once the brand is established. 🚀 Reinvest every dollar as an alternative to startup funding: Optimove grew 100% year over year by reinvesting all revenue, never taking dividends, and spending aggressively only on proven bottlenecks. Chapters Introduction What Optimove does - predictive customer modeling How Pini and his co-founder came up with the idea Spending 4-6 months meeting companies to find the right problem Not knowing how to code and outsourcing the first build Starting a consulting business to fund the SaaS product Building the first product version with a $30K grant Reaching product-market fit Why every founding team needs a salesperson Competing in the CRM and marketing automation space Turning down $1.5M in VC startup funding in 2012 Why Pini rejected VC money and waited 7 years Patience as a strategy - growing 100% year over year Data-driven decisions vs. gut instinct as a founder Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/131 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

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Startup Funding: Bootstrapped 7 Years Then Raised $20M

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This episode was published on November 18, 2016.

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Two university students with a machine learning thesis, no coding skills, and no money wanted to build a SaaS company. Seven years later, their patience with startup funding paid off - they raised $20M in a single round, skipping VC funding...

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