0:22 [Music] 0:31 thank you 0:41 this is WP product talk the place where every week we interview an experienced WordPress product owner on strategies 0:48 tips experiences failures and successes of running a successful and thriving 0:53 WordPress product businesses and I'm Katie Keith co-founder and CEO at 0:58 barntube plugins and I'm Matt Cromwell co-founder of give WP and senior director of customer 1:04 experience at Stellar WP and today's topic is elevate your game 1:09 secure investors and grow your WordPress products I'm personally really excited to talk 1:15 about this one because it's honestly um kind of like a newer phenomenon I would say in the WordPress product 1:20 ecosystem uh WP products um were really not all that entrapment attractive 1:26 investment options in the past um and uh with the huge success of things like woocommerce of course uh 1:32 they don't have investment but they're a huge success um and Elementor and others like that 1:39 things have changed dramatically so now we even have investment funds like Amelia capital and wpbeginner 1:46 accelerator that are dedicated specifically to funding WordPress products so it's exciting times it's a 1:52 cool subject yeah and to talk to us today about this subject is Vito peleg 1:58 welcome veto to the show how are you 2:04 good good thanks for being here man my pleasure I have uh you just your whole 2:11 environment there just is really fun because uh I'm still remembering you 2:16 live at cloudfest I I need to I need to post that video yeah we've all seen the video yeah 2:24 Set uh in concert at cloudfest and I had a couple really really killer solos man 2:30 great job thank you thank you that's the you know that kind of brought me back to the stage after seven years of uh doing 2:37 uh a business or wordpressing without being in a band so that was really nice 2:43 uh to have some friends from uh you know from from the current life you know 2:49 seeing some of the things from the previous life you know yeah if only music paid as well as WordPress right 2:54 tell me about it we wouldn't be here you know none of us 3:00 would have that's right yeah I'd be doing something else too 3:07 um hey folks if you are here watching on YouTube um that chat is open and we'd love to 3:12 respond to your questions or comments or feedback or anything so uh uh but let's kick us off 3:18 um we always want to start first by talking about what's uh so what's such a 3:23 big deal about this subject why is this so important um so veto uh we want to give you the 3:29 honor um maybe if you don't actually first give us just give everybody we know who you are but give everybody a 3:35 little bit of a background of who you are what you do and why did we bring you on to talk about this right 3:41 um so uh I run a company called adorem.io I'm the co-founder and CEO and 3:47 we started or I I think I started my or when I see my journey starting as um as 3:54 a musician back in the day and I started building websites from the back of a van and just to make some you know some 4:00 money from the side that route to a small freelancing business and then eventually once uh I turned 30 and it 4:07 wasn't really nice to live in a smelly van with a bunch of other guys anymore then we settled here in London and I 4:15 built an agency and through that experience I I tried to fix my own 4:21 problem of collaborating with clients and getting on the same page with them and that was the basics of what became 4:29 WP feedback which is a plug-in that later evolved into adirin which is the SAS platform with a focused WordPress 4:37 plugin um that helps teams collaborate internally as well as externally with 4:42 clients and stakeholders and things like that then we also uh did a raise uh 4:48 recently about a little less than a year ago a few of our friends in the WordPress space and even your co-founder 4:56 their Matt joined us on this uh on this last or the first round 5:02 um which was really exciting to see people that you know from events and you know from just hanging out in the space 5:09 um being in that position where they can help Founders take things to the next level in that way so as you mentioned in 5:16 the intro this is a really emerging subject and I've been looking into this 5:21 um really from the inspiration that you mentioned regarding Elemental and tools like that and how they did it and I even 5:29 spoke to some folks there to try and understand how we can do that so I'm happy to share and I'm excited to share 5:35 some of the stuff that I learned because it wasn't an easy process but yeah for 5:40 us it was the right thing to do absolutely nice yeah I mean I I do feel 5:45 like thinking back a bit you're one of the earliest ones that I noticed it was taking funding uh in a in a serious way 5:53 as as an approach to scale your business um and uh I and and doing it 5:59 successfully uh from all outward appearances um and then there's also of course been 6:04 others um and uh we actually Amber Heinz is uh on uh one of our co-hosts and she has uh 6:12 uh secured some investment from Amelia capital in particular so 6:17 um it's it's definitely coming uh and it's a it's an interesting one so 6:22 um Vito what's your take though why is this so important for WordPress product owners in general why is this something 6:28 that they all should be thinking about or getting uh informed about so I think that um it might not be really important 6:35 it really is dependent on your goals and what you're trying to take where you're trying to take your business uh because 6:42 um raising money has a lot of uh implications that come along with it 6:48 mostly for from being then um being the right 6:53 Shepherd of this of these funds and to make sure that you know how to leverage 6:59 this in the right direction to give yourselves as well as your 7:05 investors a good Roi or a good return on their investment in that way so thinking 7:10 in this direction um what it did for me initially it first of all it opened my mind to what does 7:16 that even mean and if even if you're not looking to raise money and but you are looking to sell the product eventually 7:23 preparing it for a raise is a very similar process only that if you're doing it right now rather than later on 7:30 that that that gets you thinking in the right direction for for being ready for 7:35 a later acquisition as well yeah nice absolutely gosh that's really 7:42 good Insight I mean this is a subject that I do try to inform myself on uh a 7:47 bit and it is something that uh uh definitely have looked into we'll talk about that a little bit later but uh 7:52 it's really really helpful for us to have somebody like you on who really has hands-on experience with it so yeah and 7:59 you've done the same thing with uh with selling give so there's probably 8:04 insights in that way that really connect to the fundraising side of things yeah 8:10 absolutely for sure um overall for me I think this one is so 8:15 important for folks because in in a lot of ways there's 8:20 um there's a lot of ways to go from zero to uh 8:26 what's the best way to say it zero to zero to sustainable zero two I'm not 8:32 afraid I'm not going to be able to pay the bills tomorrow like that that little spot right there is a really hard place 8:39 to be in when you're building a product um getting past the like I have to worry 8:44 about paying my bills part is is always like ah once you're past that and you're 8:49 like oh I think I might actually even be able to like hire employees and things like that all of a sudden you start to 8:55 have some confidence in what you're doing and and uh it just changes the way that you think about everything you do 9:01 so I do think that like investment uh is a good option uh is one good option to 9:08 help bridge that and ideally push way past it because ideally you want investment to be able to do a lot more 9:15 than just pay the bills um but um it's a good way to get finally into a spot in which you don't have to 9:22 be so worried and concerned about whether or not you're going to go bankrupt tomorrow or not yeah 9:27 um that's one one big reason why um the other one is just just simply that it's an opportunity that is 9:34 available that like I said before that wasn't really before um and any opportunity that business 9:40 owners have to expand their business and grow their business they should take seriously 9:45 um so the whole concept of of investment I think for a lot of folks who maybe are not into that world or have always 9:52 really just bootstrapped or been solopreneurs and things like that sometimes they them they might even be 9:57 like ah why would I take other people's money they might have a negative connotation even to it 10:02 um but I'd really encourage folks to get over that and just at least get a lot more informed and understand how it 10:09 might free you up in ways that you didn't think was possible today um so that's that's kind of I don't know 10:15 where I come from from a little bit so I don't know does that make sense for veto or am I 10:20 um it does even though I you you mentioned that this is a nice way of getting um of making sure that you don't get to 10:27 go bankrupt I think it actually increases your chances of going bankrupt yeah there is that threat too yes you 10:34 know because you're you're intentionally increasing your spend as opposed to when you're on when you're a bootstrapper and 10:40 when you're bootstrapping you're very conscious of these things and making sure that you are always within profitability 10:47 um and you just grow slower but you take those steps but then when you when you 10:53 raise money you have a large sum to spend exactly on growth and so what 10:59 happens if it doesn't work you know yeah absolutely and that that's the risk that you have to take into it but like if you 11:06 believe that this is the way that that you're gonna go and you have a plan that's kind of that you feel confident 11:12 is going to work it can alleviate a lot of stress that's that's yeah that's 11:17 helpful context I appreciate that um Katie what's your take 11:23 yeah so at Barn two we've always been completely bootstrapped and um I'm 11:29 interested in learning more really about what would be the benefits at different stage of the company life cycle I see 11:35 Nathan's added an interesting question as well uh what stage about raising because it does have permanent 11:42 consequences that have always kind of put me off personally about the um reduction of control and of having 11:49 investors because they are not entirely Your Own Boss in the same way so I'm interested in learning about the pros 11:55 and cons and helping other people do the same nice I didn't even notice this this is a 12:02 great one let's bring it up already uh since it is directly directed at Vito Vito do you mind talking a little bit 12:08 about this of course so we were bootstrapped for about three years before we did the race and so we already 12:14 had um uh thousands of customers uh that were using uh the platform and tens of 12:20 thousands of installs of uh you know on the websites um before we actually got into that step 12:27 the reason why I went to it is because we I felt that we reached the stage where we had a workable product so this 12:34 is to answers Nathan's Point here did you have a workable prototype it was more than a prototype we I felt it at 12:41 that stage we had product Market fit and um and I can take what I learned over the past three years and scale this up 12:49 big you know and really what I and and I think it's a it's a good place to frame 12:55 that my goals are are are are are rather big know in terms of where I want to 13:02 take the company and Volvo was mentioning here about 1 billion exits and things like that so I'm 13:09 actually really am looking into these directions and how can I get to that you know how can I get to a one billion exit 13:16 eventually from uh from the company um it's not far-fetched many people have 13:22 done this before it's just a matter of focusing and thinking in this direction and so when I did the calculation of how 13:28 long it's going to take me from a place where I have a workable product I have product Market fit I have customers that 13:33 are enjoying it that it's useful to them uh how how do I get into that stage so 13:39 it what I really figured is that if I'm Gonna Keep at that current rate it's going to take 67 years 13:45 to get to my goal and uh you know in the olden days that's how people did it they 13:50 actually built generational companies to get to those stages uh but now we use 13:55 money as an accelerator and so that's one was one of the uh one of the drivers 14:01 there already nice yeah we have uh quite a few good uh comments and questions here vova uh who 14:08 has been on the show before is asking good as saying some good comments and asking some good questions too I'm gonna 14:13 bring them up as much as I can because uh it's super helpful I think uh this is Boba State boba's founder of freemius by 14:20 the way folks if you don't know traditional VC investors are often are after unicorns because they need that 14:26 one billion dollar exit to compensate for the rest of the failures true um that's I I I can sympathize with that 14:33 absolutely and for those who might not understand like unicorns are essentially the folks who kind of are the Jack of 14:39 all trades that kind of do all the things they're product Builders they're marketers they're developers they uh 14:46 they have a good business Acumen um all kind of all the above um is the 14:51 kind of folks that they're looking for well the actual um in in fundraising talk unicorn is 14:57 really around the 1 billion Mark um company their evaluation has reached 15:02 1B million that's that's when you become a unicorn you know got it got it good clarification too 15:08 thank you um but uh one more question from vova 15:13 what outcome are WP investors actually aiming for what's your take on that one veto so it's it's very right because uh 15:20 going through this process I went through a lot of discussions with traditional VCS and 15:27 um and I even tried to go or explore this uh this channel uh early on in the 15:33 days of the product um the world changed my mind because kovid hit at the same time as I was 15:39 starting to do Outreach and they said all right let's just focus on what we have here for now and then revisit this 15:45 idea later um but when I had these discussions uh early on when we were 15:51 um a plug-in this is what is all that it was there was no dashboard there's no SAS built around it that was a lot more 15:58 challenging uh um traditional VCS they don't see WordPress as a significant 16:04 space to invest in and one of the metrics or the reasons why I think that 16:10 this is uh happening is because they look at the biggest exits that happened in our ecosystem and let's say and you 16:18 mentioned woocommerce as one of the biggest exam or woocommerce is a huge success story in the WordPress space 16:26 um but if you look at how much they sold the company for compared to the valuation of Shopify even though they 16:32 are like three times on the market share um and then then it's peanuts you know 16:38 yeah absolutely and so it was a long time ago wasn't it when WordPress wasn't valued in the same way yes yeah and even 16:45 then though I feel like a lot of folks felt like they sold for less than they should have sold for probably very much 16:52 yes exactly and I think that this even goes it carries out to even recent exits 16:58 that happen in the space um you know I think that that um some of 17:04 us here on the panel know some of the numbers even behind the scenes of some of the companies that have sold so it 17:09 it's not in the numbers that you see Google buying a company you know or the numbers that you hear in New York Times 17:16 about an acquisition or this this person is now they went public and you know those kind of stories uh it's not in 17:24 these it's not even close to this reality and so when when you need to 17:29 manage as a fund there's a VC you need to manage other people's money and you try to figure out where should I put that or would I put that in a SAS 17:37 um a business that already was proven uh this category was proven to generate 17:43 these exits in that level or should I put it in a plug-in that these exits have generated a lot less in that way 17:51 you know yeah the multiples are very different aren't they in WordPress versus 17:56 um Tech more generally which is a shame and I think it's improving but very slowly but of course atherim is a SAS 18:03 isn't it so it's a bit different yes well you became a SASS and which like I 18:09 think this is what's so interesting too is like part of our conversations that we've been having we've had a couple 18:14 different conversations on the show about uh WordPress plugins versus SAS yeah should you sassify and things like 18:20 that it sounds like you decided to change your plugin to a SAS specifically 18:26 for the investment angle is that right no so there wasn't it wasn't connected to that specifically it was mostly 18:32 because users um so the plugin what it does it adds stickers to a website like Post-it notes 18:39 on an actual website kind of thing and then as we started people were saying okay but I have 50 website 200 500 18:47 websites what do you expect me to go into each website and see who left comments where and all of those kind of 18:53 things so we realized we needed a centralized experience to bring in all 18:58 of these communications uh it was purely user-led at the early stage of it but it 19:04 did turn out to be a good choice because of these uh because of these decisions it and I'll tell you even more than that 19:10 when we were already assassed and the only way to use the tool was in 19:16 WordPress because we only had the plugin connected to the SAS dashboard it didn't help much because then it's still a 19:22 plug-in with a SAS or rather than right now we're more of a SAS with a plugin 19:28 yeah and then there's other implications like um a open source that's not cool for 19:34 investors uh much you know they don't like this model because you can protect your code you can't build a moat around 19:40 your company um and uh and you can't really sell the 19:45 technology that because it's the code is available we're selling our technology every day when we sell a plug-in you 19:52 know um so um so that creates another challenge for them as well yeah 19:59 um very directly um or Katie or Vito what do you what outcome do you think WordPress investors 20:06 are actually looking for when they invest what is it that they want when they're investing in a WordPress product 20:11 specifically right it's too obvious answer um a 20:16 return on investment I don't know ultimately exit but at least a good 20:21 income but I'm ideally a WordPress investor would be from within the industry and 20:28 able to add that value on the growth and obviously veto you've got some very knowledgeable experience people from 20:35 within WordPress that could be active which will help to accelerate the growth more than what they've put in 20:40 financially hopefully and this one thing that's what vulva's follow-up here is 20:46 very uh clarifying I think um like do you believe that a WordPress focused or a WordPress only plays enough 20:54 to raise funds with or as it more of a transition to a SAS is it required to get investors so not necessarily if you 21:02 position it in that way you just need to approach the different audience because VCS are probably going to be out of uh 21:09 you know um Out Of Reach and even for for the Rays that we were doing and I was 21:14 speaking to VC funds that I know that um is um invested in company is that I 21:21 aspire to become if you will you know like companies that I look up to and so I reached out to their investors and I 21:28 asked them if we can have a meeting and this kind of stuff right and a lot of them were like okay our Base ticket is 21:34 eight million dollars uh you know to invest um we're not sure if you're there yet or 21:39 what's the valuation that you're looking at it's like okay you're gonna buy the company a few times over at these 21:45 numbers uh so um so so they play in a much bigger they are they're playing a 21:51 much bigger game and but then the the the thought is not to just discourage or 21:57 just drop the whole thing is who are the people that should be relevant and after 22:02 doing a lot of discussions with BC then I'll I'll even share the story there there was an interesting story there 22:07 that I can share later um around this um what I kind of got into the place 22:13 after doing more than 50 calls with different VCS that um some of them were really interested 22:19 but it was a nightmare to just work with them and they're a lot of back and forth 22:25 and waiting and the mark and the market conditions are currently in this way and you know all of these kind of like uh 22:31 wearing a tie kind of experience and you're talking to an analyst you're not talking to a human you know and so um so 22:40 then I I thought about like okay so I get the money but I still need some guidance so the the realization was 22:47 let's try and go to ex-founders that understand what we're what we're trying 22:53 to do understand the value that we're already providing to users because uh um fortunately atarim has become rather 23:02 known in the space over the past few years so it's an easier let's say sell to someone that already knows you that 23:08 already trusts what you're trying to achieve and if you present a good business plan on top of it then awesome 23:15 let's go and and do this thing together So eventually we end up with that or we 23:22 actually said no to a bunch of VCS just so that we can work with people that are ex Founders 23:29 um that can bring more than just money but also it's an experience nice that's 23:35 a really interesting angle too for sure um great questions folks if you have 23:41 more questions keep bringing them because uh we will keep putting your face up on the show and answering your 23:46 questions so um Katie did we get to your why is this most important did we get to you yes 23:52 we've done that yet okay cool uh story time then let's uh talk about our personal experiences with this uh 24:00 subject in particular um I'll say from my perspective uh mostly 24:06 the give WP story which I've told in a lot of different ways over the course of 24:11 this show um we I I'll say we approached this whole question from uh the desire to 24:18 grow the brand uh that was it that was it we were at a stage where we felt like 24:24 we are doing what we want to do we are actually growing the revenue and the 24:30 profitability and the team and the product in a way that we feel like is sustainable in the in in for the long 24:36 term but we just can't do it fast enough um and we were just like ah we got so 24:42 many big plans and Big Ideas um and we can get there but it might take us 27 years 24:50 um so what can we do to actually accelerate our growth um and um we were looking into financing 24:58 our company in a lot of different ways um and at the same same exact time that 25:04 we started just looking into I would say debt options or financing options we had 25:10 a lot of different folks actually just approach us and start and start basically saying that they're interested 25:16 in investment and I I do feel like the time that we were interested was definitely the very kind of cusp 25:23 beginning of this whole Avalanche of a lot of Wordpress Acquisitions right 25:28 um and um and we kind of that meant that we talked to a lot of people or were approached by a lot of people and they 25:34 all came to us with different intents and different motivations and different desires 25:40 um and some of them I I really some of them I honestly felt like they just 25:45 um used it as an excuse to like look under the sheets you know what I mean it's like 25:50 um let's talk about um investment options and and then then you sign in DA's and then it's finances 25:57 and then they're like all right have a good day that's a bad first date 26:02 um uh others were like all right what does it mean to to buy you all out immediately and it's like whoa like 26:09 that's too quick um uh and and others were just wanting to be 26:14 um investors and not uh not act not acquire um and they all came with different 26:21 intents and motivations um and um each one of them we had to weigh in in a different way 26:27 um and with different pros and cons um at the end of the day as you know 26:34 spoiler alert for the whole story everybody knows we got acquired by liquid whip um but um at the end of the day that 26:41 decision was mostly because liquid web really did check all the boxes in terms of the goals that we had for investment 26:47 in the first place we believed that by them acquiring us completely that we 26:53 would then have the resources and the funding to do the things that we wanted to do 26:59 um and uh and they without having a major change in our leadership or our product Direction uh because that's what 27:06 they said they said we don't want to buy you because you need to be bought we want to buy you because you're successful and you know what you're 27:11 doing like that message alone meant a lot to us um them acknowledging our success 27:16 instead of being like Oh let's come and help this little WordPress product um so uh that that made a big deal 27:24 um the at the end of the day while we didn't do Investments uh and direct 27:30 exactly was it and this was just probably just the options that we had available to us 27:36 um anyone who wanted to be an investor uh in the company um felt like they had 27:43 um plans and intentions for the direction of our product and our business that we didn't know 100 for 27:51 sure if that was what we wanted um and and that is a big factor I think in in terms of whether or not investment 27:57 is the right option it's kind of like how Hands-On are these invest investors going to be how how 28:04 much influence and direction are they going to um insert into the company or into the 28:10 product versus how much resourcing and advice and investment are they going to 28:16 give I really feel like it can be a give or take you know in in some ways 28:23 so that's that's I don't know Vito I know that you've talked a lot with my my 28:29 partner Devin too and so I don't know if that sound Rings true or is a different 28:34 take on the story but uh yes well there's from what I saw from my personal experience 28:41 um I didn't encounter many people that they said you should change it completely and just do that you know or 28:46 no you know like I think it would be better if you steer it in that of this direction 28:52 um that I you know like I was a bootstrapper all my life I think the the last job I had was when I was 16 you 29:00 know so um so I wouldn't I can't have that you 29:05 know what I mean yeah I I want I need to have the control to steer this in where my vision is uh is laid out but I laid 29:12 it out to show everyone what is what is coming and then they're there to support that vision and if they have ideas then 29:19 great then and I would listen to everything and I will implement a whole lot of them because they're good 29:26 ideas but if it's not aligning with the with the north style or where I want to 29:32 take the the company then it's probably not gonna go there yeah yeah yeah 29:39 Katie what's uh what's your experience with this uh question before we go to mine I just have a question for you 29:45 which is so when you either take investment or sell you're taking 29:50 evaluation based on the current value um in order to grow further and I kind 29:56 of get it if you're taking investment because you still have that majority stake and you gain from the growth in 30:02 the future but with you mentioned how you had such big plans for the growth of giving future but you're not the owner 30:09 anymore so even with like a short-term kind of deal with them you're not going 30:14 to benefit from the value in 10 15 years I would assume in the same way as if you 30:19 still owned it so I'm curious as to how that played into the decision yeah for sure I mean there's also going 30:27 into it uh it was um we did lots of we beat up a lot of different uh Financial projections of 30:34 like what if we did just do the investment route instead and what would our growth looked like and what would our our own profitability and take home 30:41 look like uh compared to uh an all-out acquisition and things like that 30:46 um and we took those into account once you do decide that like oh no this is going to be an acquisition instead you 30:53 start to think about um the the objectives and the outcomes a little bit differently 30:58 um and it also depends on the deal that you get like I I've talked with I think 31:04 most of all of the really big WordPress acquisition Founders um uh over the last couple of years and 31:10 they all got different deals and different details involved in what it looks like and what it means uh to to to 31:18 be acquired by these bigger companies sometimes it's not exactly like uh that you are are just handing over the keys 31:25 and just working there as like a lame duck leader it's it sometimes doesn't 31:30 include equity in the company it does sometimes include big payouts that uh that make a lot of big a big difference 31:36 for the owners in the short term um which especially when that big payout 31:42 for the owner in the short term is accompanied by a short contract um that then it kind of gets a lot more 31:49 interesting so um all of those things have to be taken into account for like what makes the 31:55 most sense uh for you at the end of the day I personally I wanted to keep going I wanted to keep working on give as much 32:01 as I could I love still being involved my involvement has changed a ton like at 32:07 this stage I'm I I'm I'm much less Hands-On than I've ever been 32:13 um which at the end of the day I actually am surprisingly really happy about 32:19 um I didn't expect to be happy about that um but it's because our give leadership 32:25 team is just stood up and just taken over in ways that I think are phenomenal and amazing I don't have to be uh really 32:33 deeply involved anymore I get to be involved at a level that I like and am comfortable with so did I 32:40 answer your question I feel like I did yeah that's really interesting yeah yeah so for my story time I thought I'll kind 32:47 of give the other perspective as to why I've never been interested in taking investment or selling or anything and 32:56 um a lot of Wordpress companies have a major lifestyle elements and 33:01 um one factor of that is independence and freedom and at band two we've always 33:07 grown as much as we can without compromising what we want lifestyle Wise 33:13 from the company and I've always kind of felt that um investment might compromise 33:18 that right um so for example in it was years ago way before covid like 2018 or something 33:26 I did apply for the wp beginner fund and got an offer and decided not to go ahead 33:33 with it um after talking with Andy my co-founder and we thought about and that we didn't 33:38 want to give up that freedom um it might have been the wrong investor 33:44 because they do have a certain way of doing things which we wouldn't necessarily have been comfortable with 33:49 like in terms of how they present sales or upsells or whatever so there probably 33:55 was a bit of a mismatch there but it wasn't just that it was things like when I talked to them about how you take 34:02 money out of the company I always just take money out when I want it like I 34:07 have to do legal stuff like dividends but if I want to like buy a property or something personally I just take the 34:14 money and nobody tells me not to and I suddenly realized that with an investor 34:19 we'd have to take sort of scheduled dividends and approve it and share it 34:24 out and all of that and I just we just saw no it's our money you know I'm sure 34:30 we're just very kind of small-minded in that and we have decided to grow less than we could 34:36 um as a result of this but um it is another perspective as well if you do value those choices but things 34:43 like what you spend the company money on um what your priorities are um and it of course as you said earlier 34:50 it depends on having the right investment but the other thing that put me off was taking money out at the 34:56 current value which was partly behind my question to Matt a minute ago so our offer was based on evaluation of like 35:03 450 000 and we're now worth like four times that or something so I'm very glad 35:09 I didn't sell 30 then because I don't believe that that would have grown Us by 35:15 more than 30 percent so therefore I'm just giving them money so for my mind 35:20 it's like if you have massive growth planned then investment can be a really good thing whereas if you're more of a 35:27 kind of Lifestyle company that's doing your best within certain parameters then maybe it's not so I just wanted to give 35:33 a different perspective really I love the perspective I think it's great I like that as well I think that 35:39 first of all 30 is a whole lot you know giving that up but as such a such an 35:45 early stage um is um you know without without the 35:52 um deciding for anyone else for me that would be a big No-No you know and we had 35:57 these these same offers in the early stage about uh this but you know it's a 36:03 third of the company that you basically lose so um Equity has a lot of meaning I do 36:09 agree with you Katie that um the dividend game is no longer a game you know uh 36:15 um like there's a there's a structure to it and um basically everything is invested mostly is invested back into 36:21 the company um in that way but it it really is aligning with the point of what are you 36:27 trying to do with your company because there's many ways to grow to to look at 36:32 a company it doesn't have to be a huge company it can it can be 36:39 um it can be great as a solopreneur just for yourself and and your loved ones and 36:44 it can be great for for as a small to medium business and supporting 20 30 50 36:50 other families you know that's that's a huge achievement on its own and that uh that doesn't require a lot of uh 36:57 external money but if you want to get to the automatic level they raise that much like 400 million or something crazy like 37:04 this and and I think yes please sorry and 37:11 there's a related question again vova he's always coming with all his uh his hard questions that's related a little 37:17 bit that I thought was uh worth talking about um after many conversations with WP product people about taking external 37:24 Capital One of the primary fears Founders have is losing control of their company veto do you feel like you lost 37:31 control I actually not I didn't lose any control no 37:37 um but I gained a lot more responsibility and that's what I'm I feel so on one 37:43 hand you're right that there is this uh as a bootstrapper you always have the kind of the chase of the of paying 37:49 salaries if you will or or making sure that uh you're you're profitable and this month is not that good what's gonna 37:56 happen in two months from now and that that kind of a daily concern that really was uh was just lifted you know that you 38:04 know that you have a nice cushion to grow with and it actually made 38:09 um when it comes to control I I felt that at that stage because I wanted to do so much I had a lot less control of 38:17 what I could do because um even things like working with some of the some of the big clients that that we 38:24 have required even basic things like changing our insurance uh setup to 38:30 accommodate Enterprise level customers and that would have been a 20K investment that needed to happen you 38:36 know and okay as a bootstrap this is a this is a big thing you can't do it straight away you gotta save for it or 38:42 you you gotta have some some kind of a budget lined up for a few months but if 38:47 you know that it's going to score the client and there is uh there's the money sitting in the bank then let's do it 38:52 let's let's move forward you know and let's do actually more of this now that we unlocked this new level 38:59 so it actually gave a lot more control in that way but I agree I understand 39:04 what Volvo is saying and it actually connects to my story of how we lost our 39:10 investment uh first before we actually secured it uh I don't know this story 39:17 so through the process of working with a bunch of those VCS early early on 39:24 um we got a solid offer from someone that said I want to take the whole thing the whole lot the whole round we're 39:29 going to invest the whole thing and let's get started and so they asked for documents and more documents and the 39:36 meetings and another meeting and you know it was months and months of uh due diligence and all those kind of things 39:42 and then um if you remember about a year ago a 39:49 uh the market changed there was a huge uh there was a huge stop in financial 39:54 markets so when it comes to uh to Investments and all VCS just stopped in 40:00 their place that's when all of the layoffs started happening in the big companies huge uh SAS companies that 40:07 were uh that that are even public companies lost 90 percent of their valuation uh within a span of a couple 40:13 of weeks that is literally less than a year ago that all this has happened and 40:18 we were at the stage where we already had a contract signed at that at that time and then they invoked Force Major 40:26 because of the market condition that hasn't happened in decades since the since the.com uh situation you know uh 40:35 to actually we were just waiting for the money to come in everything was just done and then they said let's talk in three 40:41 months for now we need to cancel this to see what's going on with the world you know regardless of the company 40:48 and at that point it took so long to get to that stage that I just tell them fine 40:53 let's talk in three months I never emailed them ever again and then I went on to find uh the channel in it to find 41:00 it in other places and that was like weeks from start to finish at that stage 41:05 and but a lot of it is because of the uh hurdles that I had to go through before 41:11 I was so prepared that it was a lot easier to pitch it to other folks and 41:17 just close it straight away but I feel that I dodged a massive bullet there in terms of control uh relating to what 41:24 Volvo was saying because if that was the process to get started and who knows 41:29 what they would have required for the ongoing absolutely oh my gosh that 41:34 sounded stressful and it's so hard to notice warning signs like that once 41:39 you're going through that process because you've got this sunk cost of all of the investment of time investment 41:45 you've already put in illegal and accountants and you know all this stuff 41:50 it's nearly over and then it will be fine it's only looking back I expect you realize that yeah 100 you you don't you 41:58 you just want to get it over with at that stage but um that was actually like a blessing in disguise that it happened 42:07 um and and um and then it connects to the valuation point that you were mentioning Katie because when when we 42:13 raised we weren't at a um the value the valuation that I asked 42:19 for was unreasonable it wasn't connected to reality if you will uh and and everyone was saying this 42:26 you know but it wasn't crazy but it was it was not connected to the revenue uh 42:32 and what we were actually making at the time um but what I basically pitched is here 42:37 is the plan here's the money that I need to execute on this plan and I'm not willing to give more than this amount of 42:43 shares uh so if that's cool that's cool let's continue the discussion if not that's fine you know that's that was the 42:51 that was my Approach at uh at that because I knew that I would probably need to do another raise to take us even 42:57 further next you know again looking at in Inspiration companies and things like that so the valuation doesn't have to be 43:05 tied to the exact Revenue right now because they're not buying the company they're investing in the growth of the 43:13 company if you buy a company you buy the asset but if you buy a part of it you're buying the potential that it can become 43:21 um so uh so that's that's a really small but big differentiation that 43:29 yeah that is really in insightful really helpful um for sure and uh 43:34 uh sometimes things like this I hope anybody who's thinking about investment or acquisition or things like that are 43:40 taking notes because sometimes the words like this you're like oh yeah that's interesting that makes sense but then 43:46 later you're like oh crap that makes a lot of sense [Laughter] um 43:52 nice hey well uh our last segment is always about our best advice um we always try to have a small 43:59 WordPress product shops in mind uh for this show uh trying to help everybody level up as much as they possibly can 44:05 and uh so we always close out with our best advice uh to you if you are interested in this subject in any way so 44:13 um Katie you're up first what's your best advice for small shops thinking about investment 44:18 my best advice is that well seeking investment can be a huge opportunity to really kick-start the growth of your 44:25 business but it's essential to partner with the right investor it's not just about getting the money and ideally find 44:31 someone who'll provide expert guidance to actively help you grow as well as the financial help and also I would say 44:39 think carefully about the permanent consequences because you are permanently fundamentally changing the structure of 44:46 your company and so you need to be aware of that and if that works for you then it can really help with the growth 44:53 absolutely nice Vito what's your best advice elevator pitch right so I would 44:59 say that um contrary to what some other people think I think that you need to raise 45:05 money when you're ready to pour some oil on an existing fire so you should have a 45:10 product that is already working you should have a plan that you know that that already has a small scale proof of 45:17 concept that that it can take you to where you want to get to and the plan will change even on the execution later 45:24 on as it often does in business and but at least you're coming in with uh with a 45:29 set um uh um process and it really is that it's a process of how do I take what we 45:35 have now and make it 5 10 100 times bigger than where it is uh at the moment 45:41 so that's the story that needs to be constructed first of all internally and even if you're not doing a raise it's an 45:48 awesome exercise to just um take some time and and think about these things things and writing them down creating a 45:55 pitch deck for yourself and selling there the future to yourself you know so I would suggest um first not rushing 46:03 this not just going without a business model and then starting company if you want to do this for the long run you got 46:09 to make sure that you have a solid product first we got one more question I'm gonna throw 46:15 it up anyway we're at the end but Nathan Nathan's a great person he's put 46:20 together some awesome products over the years um and uh California guy 46:26 um he has a good question here Vito how much work was it to put together the contracts for your raise did you hire a 46:32 lawyer or did you find a set of existing documents structured for what you were trying to do I did the ladder and then I 46:40 regretted it and I did it properly after and so uh so yes you gotta make sure 46:46 that you invest in a lawyer um this is 10 to 20K investment to go 46:52 through uh a process like this is what my experience has been from start to 46:58 finish and um but the the legal documentation is annoying as they are 47:03 and I don't like you know this these are the things that I don't enjoy in my day dealing with those with the contracts 47:10 and things like that um they are not a big part of it a lot 47:15 of the other things is straight up marketing creating a pipeline of people that you're going to be approaching 47:21 finding connections to them creating intros building networking opportunities 47:26 uh trying to build those relationships so that when you actually have the pitch they will listen to it creating sales 47:33 collateral material like a pitch deck and uh and the customers reviews and the 47:38 product showcases and creating a um an elevator pitch that you can 47:44 recite again and again and have it sound fresh but also updated for the person 47:50 that is sitting in front of you so it's very much similar to agency sales is 47:56 where I felt it was the closest uh um the closest analogy there and then 48:03 you know the contract like when you build a big website or a big contract for a website it's a contract you get 48:10 that out of the way but the getting there is is is was the more challenging 48:16 part really absolutely yeah that's that's related to my best advice is get your books in 48:22 order um a lot of Wordpress shops that I've um uh interacted with over the years 48:29 um they're you know they're they're kind of you know running loose uh and just trying to focus on building and um and 48:35 selling and uh not so much on uh the fine details of the business and um the 48:41 truth is uh investors or potential uh acquisition folks are either going to 48:46 just walk away if your books aren't in order or they're gonna tell you that you have to get your books in order so it's 48:53 one way or the other you're gonna have to do it um and the truth is um it just is better business when you 48:59 when you do that uh you start it small because then when like you're like oh once I'm big I'll get it no once you're 49:06 big it's too late once you're big it's so much more books it's so much more paperwork it's so much more work like 49:12 start it now immediately as quick as you can and get things in really like impeccable shape because then it gets 49:18 easier to maintain over the long term um and then when somebody's like hey what do you think about a little bit of 49:24 an investment then you're like I've got like 20 25 spreadsheets I could show you right now that will tell you why you 49:29 should invest um it's it gets a ton easier under those circumstances I I love that and I think 49:35 he was looking next to Nathan's uh he pushed another mainly looking for to learn what the actual Logistics are and 49:43 the materials so very much like you're saying Matt knowing all the numbers having projections in place uh even 49:49 building those sheets takes some time yes or even coming up with how they're how does how does these projections are 49:56 going to make sense so I just opened um like my folder here that that I 50:02 prepared for it and there's a few assets here like the executive summary uh users results our existing users growth and 50:10 ARR growth projections for the upcoming year uh product feature showcase which 50:16 is a deck the pitch deck itself three years execution plan and then you have the yearly Financial reports and things 50:23 like that but these are basically the documents awesome awesome just doing the numbers 50:29 is a really interesting experience actually when I um applied and then didn't even go ahead just being asked 50:35 things like what is your customer lifetime value and things that don't necessarily come out of these digital 50:41 downloads as a click you realize the problems with your data and that you should know this stuff so that's a 50:48 useful exercise on its own yeah yeah well now considering who owns Easy Digital downloads I feel like lifetime 50:55 value is going to be coming to those reports at some point or another I hope so at least um 51:00 internally but will we get the benefits I hope so I hope so I need them too 51:05 still so um cool well this was great Vito thank you so much for being here I learned a 51:12 ton myself um Katie I adore your perspective on this whole question and this whole 51:17 subject I know how independent I am I think it's great and I like I I mean 51:23 for as much as we talk about these things and like that whole like experience of like all these product 51:28 shops getting Acquired and whatnot I feel like folks were like oh crap why can't I get acquired don't get acquired 51:34 don't worry about it like do your business run what you're doing like I love what what Katie and Andy are doing 51:41 I love what uh Kim and Jason that uh paid memberships Pro is doing um like uh 51:46 folks are doing great work out there um next week uh we're going to be talking about using SEO to grow your 51:53 WordPress business uh we're bringing on Lindsay Halsey uh I'm excited uh I met Lindsay several years ago at a word Camp 52:00 um and uh she really knows her stuff on this front uh I think she has some really good insights for us for all the 52:07 product shops who are dependent on uh SEO for driving traffic and conversions so I'm excited to talk about it and 52:14 we're switching up posts uh we're rotating around next week Amber and Zach are coming up together they're on their 52:21 own we're like letting them loose they're gonna run the show we're going to see how it goes um I'm excited Katie are you nervous I 52:28 don't know they're going to be fine they'll be fine they're both great so they'll be fine they're Pros I'm like 52:34 you know I'm feeling all like Dad right now like we're talking about letting go of 52:40 control that's next week exactly I gotta let go it's gonna be great 52:46 well thanks again to post status and hit like subscribe all the helpful and nice 52:51 things for us and don't forget to tune in next week thanks everyone