Startups

5 failure points between $5M and $100M in ARR

Comment

Tennis ball hitting the net on red court.
Image Credits: Javier Zayas Photography (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

Tracy Young

Contributor
Tracy Young is the co-founder and CEO of TigerEye, the go-to-market platform that helps companies make strategic decisions and is currently offering early access.

More posts from Tracy Young

I had the privilege of leading PlanGrid to $100 million in ARR before I stepped down as CEO and passed the baton to Autodesk Construction. I’ve had years to dissect the mistakes I made with my first startup.

Regardless of which industry you build in, or where you are at in your startup’s journey, there are many things that will likely fail.

This post breaks down PlanGrid’s key failure points and what I’ve learned from them. If these reflections help even one founder make one less mistake, I would consider this effort worthwhile.

Organization structure and communication failure

As first-time founders, we were too creative with our organizational structure. We had a flat management hierarchy in the early years, and we bragged that we ran our startup like “Star Trek” — you were either in engineering or operations, and everyone reported to a founder.

This was cute until it quickly stopped working. People care about titles and career paths, and if you want to retain great people, you have to care about these things too.

In Year 3, we tripled from 30 to 90 people, then doubled the team to 180 a year later. Those were the most painful years, because we went from a high-execution team to one that felt like it was stuck in molasses. We didn’t know how to hire giants, so we recruited several mediocre managers, who in turn recruited more mediocre people.

Meanwhile, communication gets a lot harder with more people, and I did a poor job communicating the direction of the company. We had a first-mover advantage in a category we created but lost our position during these years of slow execution.

Takeaways: Be creative about how you’re solving problems for your customer and not about organization structures. Hire a great HR leader as a business partner to help recruit and retain the right team and design a good communication flow. Remember that A players can recruit other A players, but B players can only recruit C players.

Internal conflict

Our trickiest inflection point was hitting Dunbar’s number — at 150 people, everything went to chaos.

Hierarchy is a factor. At 10, 20 or 30 people, everyone can report to a founder. At 150, just based on basic management ratios, the frontline team member is now separated by three to four degrees from the founders.

Not feeling like a unified team becomes dangerous when you don’t hit revenue targets or product milestones. When there is a mismatch on velocity and performance, it’s easy for those who feel like they’re performing to blame any slowdown on everyone else. There are natural tensions between sales and marketing teams, support and product, and product and engineering. Everything becomes magnified with more people simply because communication gets harder.

Another heartbreaking side-effect of growth is that the people who helped get the company to where it is may not be the right people to take it farther in the next five years.

Takeaways: Fight for your company’s core values. If you don’t like the ones you’ve written, rewrite them so you can live by them. Hire and fire by these core values. Anything less will send the signal that it’s all bullshit.

An executive not working out

My biggest mistake was hiring a big-public-company tech executive with a fancy resume who had never worked at a startup. Although everything in my gut told me they were the wrong fit, I felt so underwater with work that I convinced myself my life would suck less if they were just in the building.

The Big Tech exec came from a sweet life with an established brand, big budgets, unlimited perks and fully built recruiting, engineering, marketing, sales and customer success teams. The only way a Big Tech exec can be successful at a small startup is if they’ve been at one before and volunteer to roll up their sleeves and get in the trenches again.

As we grew to nearly 500 people, we had several versions of the executive bench. The best indicator of an executive’s success is that they have already done what you want them to do at exactly the same stage that you are in and want to grow to. Working on a startup is hard in a way that is almost indescribable to anyone who hasn’t experienced it. That said, I do believe a first-time executive with raw talent and a growth mindset can be successful. In my case, at my first startup, it felt risky to be learning on the job as a CEO and be surrounded by other leaders who were learning on the job as well. Luckily, it worked out for us.

Another good indicator of how execs will be to work with is what their former colleagues, bosses and direct reports say about them. After hiring and firing several wrong VPs, I tripled the number of reference calls on any serious candidate. With over 10 references across the board — people who they have reported to, people who reported to them and their peers — you start to see a good picture of who they are and what it would be like to work with them.

Here is a brief list of red flags for an executive who isn’t working out:

  1. They frequently use the wrong pronoun: “I” followed by “[contribution to the company].”
  2. You dread having 1:1s with them.
  3. They blame you or their peers.
  4. They complain laterally and downward.

When executive red flags show up, try to fix them quickly.

Takeaway: Always trust your gut with people.

Losing product-market fit

Construction people used our software because they loved us. If construction folks were using our competitors’ software, it was because they were told to do so. In enterprise software, the best product doesn’t necessarily win, and there is a long trail of great enterprise software under tombstones.

Although we skipped the corporate buyer completely in our early years to much success ($50 million in ARR), in order to get to the $100 million mark, we would need new levers for growth. We’d need to go upstream toward the enterprise segment and build products for the corporate buyers who would never use our core product.

As more VCs came up with predictions around mobile technology disrupting the construction industry, they poured hundreds of millions of dollars into our competitors. Copycats showed up across the board. Within a few years, the category we created became one the corporate buyer cared about. Our product was not built for this buyer — we were a point solution competing against platforms.

Selling to the enterprise requires a series of features and products that have nothing to do with making the end user happy. There is security red tape that the non-user buyer cares about: RBAC, SOC2 Type 2, ISO270002, admin consoles, SSO and more.

Prior to PlanGrid’s acquisition, in my last years of leading the company, our growth slowed to double digits while our competitor’s growth was rumored to be triple digits. We needed additional levers. We pushed to internationalize our product and launched two new product lines with two scrum teams and slim budgets. Concurrently, we were knee-deep in technical debt and our vice president of engineering quit with no notice.

Those were rough years, but through hard work and great people who continued to pour their heart and soul into the company and customers, we hit almost all our milestones and secured the attention of Autodesk, our future acquirer.

Takeaways: It is completely possible to have product-market fit one year and lose it the next because the world, the market and the competition have changed. Always go where it hurts the most. Looking back, it was obvious we needed to launch more products and build for the enterprise, but we were too slow to execute that strategy.

Life happens

I’ve come to believe that a big part of our jobs as founders is to manage our own emotions through the rollercoaster that is building a startup. It doesn’t matter how well we were doing; it never got easier, because life continues.

I remember how excited we were to be accepted into YC’s Winter 2012 batch. As we were launching our product, living the entrepreneurial dream, sleeping and working out of our Silicon Valley hacker house, we were also experiencing the cruelty of life. Between demos and code commits, we greeted hospice care at our doorsteps. We watched our co-founder battle and succumb to cancer at age 29.

As our team grew to hundreds of people worldwide, it felt like sad stuff was a constant: family getting cancer, partners and parents dying suddenly and children getting terribly sick. This is the human condition. It bleeds into our startup journey because it’s impossible to separate our personal lives from our professional lives. The best we can do is to be as generous as we can to our teammates. Sometimes, just being by their side and witnessing their loss is enough.

Takeaways: Life is short and hard even for the most fortunate. That’s why, whatever you have chosen to work on, it has to be worthy of your time. If you have any success at all, it will take up at least a decade of your life.

More TechCrunch

iOS 18 will be available in the fall as a free software update.

Here are all the devices compatible with iOS 18

The tests indicate there are loopholes in TikTok’s ability to apply its parental controls and policies effectively in a situation where the teen user originally lied about their age, as…

TikTok glitch allows Shop to appear to users under 18, despite adults-only policy

Lhoopa has raised $80 million to address the lack of affordable housing in Southeast Asian markets, starting with the Philippines.

Lhoopa raises $80M to spur more affordable housing in the Philippines

Former President Donald Trump picked Ohio Senator J.D. Vance as his running mate on Monday, as he runs to reclaim the office he lost to President Joe Biden in 2020.…

Trump’s VP candidate JD Vance has long ties to Silicon Valley, and was a VC himself

Hello and welcome back to TechCrunch Space. Is it just me, or is the news cycle only accelerating this summer?!

TechCrunch Space: Space cowboys

Apple Intelligence features are not available in the developer beta, which is out now.

Without Apple Intelligence, iOS 18 beta feels like a TV show that’s waiting for the finale

Apple released the public betas for its next generation of software on the iPhone, Mac, iPad and Apple Watch on Monday. You can now test out iOS 18 and many…

Apple’s public betas for iOS 18 are here to test out

One major dissenter threatens to upend Fisker’s apparent best chance at offloading its unsold EVs, a deal that would keep the startup’s bankruptcy proceeding alive and pave the way for…

Fisker has one major objector to its Ocean SUV fire sale

Payments giant Stripe has delayed going public for so long that its major investor Sequoia Capital is getting creative to offer returns to its limited partners. The venture firm emailed…

Major Stripe investor Sequoia confirms $70B valuation, offers its investors a payday

Alphabet, Google’s parent company, is in advanced talks to acquire Wiz for $23 billion, a person close to the company told TechCrunch. The deal discussions were previously reported by The…

Google’s Kurian approached Wiz, $23B deal could take a week to land, source says

Name That Bird determines individual members of a species by identifying distinguishing characteristics that most humans would be hard-pressed to spot.

Bird Buddy’s new AI feature lets people name and identify individual birds

YouTube Music is introducing two new ways to boost song discovery on its platform. YouTube announced on Monday that it’s experimenting with an AI-generated conversational radio feature, and rolling out…

YouTube Music is testing an AI-generated radio feature and adding a song recognition tool

Tesla had internally planned to build the dedicated robotaxi and the $25,000 car, often referred to as the Model 2, on the same platform.

Elon Musk confirms Tesla ‘robotaxi’ event delayed due to design change

What this means for the space industry is that theory has become reality: The possibility of designing a habitation within a lunar tunnel is a reasonable proposition.

Moon cave! Discovery could redirect lunar colony and startup plays

Get ready for a prime week of savings at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 with the launch of Disrupt Deal Days! From now to July 19 at 11:59 p.m. PT, we’re going…

Disrupt Deal Days are here: Prime savings for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024!

Deezer is the latest music streaming app to introduce an AI playlist feature. The company announced on Monday that a select number of paid users will be able to create…

Deezer chases Spotify and Amazon Music with its own AI playlist generator

Real-time payments are becoming commonplace for individuals and businesses, but not yet for cross-border transactions. That’s what Caliza is hoping to change, starting with Latin America. Founded in 2021 by…

Caliza lands $8.5 million to bring real-time money transfers to Latin America using USDC

Adaptive is a platform that provides tools designed to simplify payments and accounting for general construction contractors.

Adaptive builds automation tools to speed up construction payments

When VanMoof declared bankruptcy last year, it left around 5,000 customers who had preordered e-bikes in the lurch. Now VanMoof is up and running under new management, and the company’s…

How VanMoof’s new owners plan to win over its old customers

Mitti Labs aims to transform rice farming in India and other South Asian markets by reducing methane emissions by 50% and water consumption by 30%.

Mitti Labs aims to make rice farming less harmful to the climate, starting in India

This is a guide on how to check whether someone compromised your online accounts.

How to tell if your online accounts have been hacked

There is a general consensus today that generative AI is going to transform business in a profound way, and companies and individuals who don’t get on board will be quickly…

The AI financial results paradox

Google’s parent company Alphabet might be on the verge of making its biggest acquisition ever. The Wall Street Journal reports that Alphabet is in advanced talks to acquire Wiz for…

Google reportedly in talks to acquire cloud security company Wiz for $23B

Featured Article

Hank Green reckons with the power — and the powerlessness — of the creator

Hank Green has had a while to think about how social media has changed us. He started making YouTube videos in 2007 with his brother, novelist John Green, at a time when the first iPhone was in development, Myspace was still relevant and Instagram didn’t exist. Seventeen years later, posting…

Hank Green reckons with the power — and the powerlessness — of the creator

Here is a timeline of Synapse’s troubles and the ongoing impact it is having on banking consumers. 

Synapse’s collapse has frozen nearly $160M from fintech users — here’s how it happened

Featured Article

Helixx wants to bring fast-food economics and Netflix pricing to EVs

When Helixx co-founder and CEO Steve Pegg looks at Daisy — the startup’s 3D-printed prototype delivery van — he sees a second chance. And he’s pulling inspiration from McDonald’s to get there.  The prototype, which made its global debut this week at the Goodwood Festival of Speed, is an interesting proof…

Helixx wants to bring fast-food economics and Netflix pricing to EVs

Featured Article

India clings to cheap feature phones as brands struggle to tap new smartphone buyers

India is struggling to get new smartphone buyers, as millions of Indians don’t go for an upgrade and continue to be on feature phones.

India clings to cheap feature phones as brands struggle to tap new smartphone buyers

Roboticists at The Faboratory at Yale University have developed a way for soft robots to replicate some of the more unsettling things that animals and insects can accomplish — say,…

Meet the soft robots that can amputate limbs and fuse with other robots

Featured Article

If you’re an AT&T customer, your data has likely been stolen

This week, AT&T confirmed it will begin notifying around 110 million AT&T customers about a data breach that allowed cybercriminals to steal the phone records of “nearly all” of its customers. The stolen data contains phone numbers and AT&T records of calls and text messages during a six-month period in…

If you’re an AT&T customer, your data has likely been stolen

In the first half of 2024 alone, more than $35.5 billion was invested into AI startups globally.

Here’s the full list of 28 US AI startups that have raised $100M or more in 2024