Gretchen DeKnikker, ex-COO at SaaStr and Co-Founder of Social Pandas, who now is the COO of Girl Geek X, kindly took time to share with us her thoughts on the SaaS universe, challenges startups are facing today, and her own path and experience in enterprise SaaS.
I started my first real job in 1998 as a temp. It’s the classic dot-com story: I went to this company one day for a temp role in a three-bedroom flat in the Marina district. I remember calling my friend at lunch, being like, “This is not even a real company.” They made enterprise software delivered via a browser, which was not really a thing back then. SaaS wasn’t called SaaS, and many people didn’t even have computers at home. But I got hooked on startup life, and I stayed.
Seven years ago, enterprise was not what it is today, not at all sexy. Everything was about the consumer, which I think is very complicated and competitive. Enterprise is as well, but it is much slower, and you have the chance to course correct sometimes. In a SaaS model, to die, you have to lose more customers than you gain each month. There’s time to course correct, because of MRR or ARR, and because people aren’t quick to change in enterprise.
I think the persistent challenge is a vitamin versus a pain killer. In SaaS, your job is to figure out how to solve one problem and make it exponentially better. It can’t be even three times better, it has to be an order of magnitude better. The key to a successful software is its ability to change someone’s behavior, how they get their job done. That is the challenge.
Nowadays, it’s much easier than before to start a company. We’ve been in sort of the best of times where the money is flowing very freely and investors are willing to experiment and bet on a few things, especially in the early stage. I think those two things allow for a lot of vitamin building.
And now there are a lot more angels, you can raise $500,000 just on notes. You don’t need an institutional investor, you don’t need to price the round. In SaaS, however, you need to have two years of money minimum, otherwise you’re most likely going to run out of money before you can show the traction that you need to raise more money. It’s a long journey.
Jason’s theory is that up to the first million ARR, everyone gets there in their own way. For product founders, they’re leading with the product. Or you have a very sales or a very marketing-oriented sort of founder, and that founder, through whatever those skills are, will get you to the first million ARR. It’s just hand-to-hand combat for a very long time. And then after a million, every SaaS company at a given ACV roughly scales the same way.
It is all about getting to that traction, and understanding when you’re at that traction, which is only ever clear in hindsight. We just sit around going, “Are we there? I think we’re there. Maybe we’re not there.” You have no idea when it actually happens, but I think most founders just have it in their gut somewhere where they know it’s time to pour gasoline on it.
I want to do something that supports minorities and women, whether that’s a side project, or if that’s a more direct way at an intersection with software that helps solve a problem. I think it’s an interesting time to be a woman in tech. Certainly, in my 20-year career, this is the most interesting time. I think it’s, for better or worse, a great time to be a woman. I feel there’s this awareness, and there’s this focus on, “Oh, we need to be better about this.” For many years it’s been awful, and I would say that venture capital has far further to go than software companies and tech companies. But I think we’ll move past this idea of “women and minorities” to focus on inclusion, which is very important.
My advice for women in tech is:
“Don’t sweat it, especially if you’re a founder. Just focus on being awesome, because you are already.”
There’s an opportunity cost to focusing on it. Male founders are focused on building their business. You don’t have anything to prove to anyone but yourself, so give yourself all of that time.
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