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Launching a Marketplace: From Excel to 14K Developers

Episode 97 Published 10Β years, 5Β months ago
Description

Diego Oppenheimer spent five years building Microsoft Excel features used by a billion people. Then he discovered that even Microsoft's $7 billion research center couldn't get algorithms to the teams that needed them. So he set about launching a marketplace to fix that.

Algorithmia connects academics building powerful algorithms with app developers who can use them - and hit 14,000 developers on the two-sided platform far faster than expected. Diego shares the journey of launching a marketplace from scratch, plus the systematic fundraising approach that raised $2.5 million by pitching worst-fit investors first.

The real validation for this marketplace startup came from Microsoft. An algorithm Diego searched months for already existed inside Excel - nobody knew. He ranked 60 investors in a spreadsheet, flipped the list, and pitched bottom-up to polish his answers before reaching top targets for the algorithm marketplace.

πŸ”‘ Key Lessons

  • 🎯 Validate demand before launching a marketplace by finding gaps in existing systems: If even Microsoft's $7 billion research center couldn't connect algorithms to product teams, the opportunity was real.
  • πŸ’° Pitch worst-fit investors first when fundraising for launching a marketplace: Diego started from the bottom of his ranked list. By the time he reached top targets, he had polished answers to every hard question.
  • πŸ› οΈ Do things that don't scale to learn what customers need: First customers were essentially discounted consulting engagements that provided direct access to feedback.
  • ⚑ Compress decision-making speed when leaving corporate for a marketplace startup: At Microsoft, decisions took months. At Algorithmia, you decide in days, be wrong, and never repeat the mistake.
  • πŸš€ Build the platform before scaling when launching a marketplace: Twelve months of stability work paid off when 14,000 developers joined months ahead of the multi-year target.
  • πŸ“‰ Kill ideas quickly when they don't solve a business case: The first iteration was an algorithm competition two-sided platform. Being willing to kill it fast freed the team to build what worked.

Chapters

  • Introduction
  • Diego's background at Microsoft building Excel
  • What Algorithmia does and the problem it solves
  • How the algorithm marketplace works for both sides
  • The origin story - backpacking trip to idea
  • Moonlighting at Microsoft while launching a marketplace
  • Building the MVP and getting first customers
  • Systematic fundraising - ranking 60 investors
  • Growth to 14,000 developers and university partnerships
  • Lightning round begins
  • Passion for STEM education for girls

Resources

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