Episode Details

Back to Episodes

First Customers: He Lived in His Customer's Basement

Episode 467 Published 1Β month, 1Β week ago
Description

He wore a Stanford sweatshirt to a conference. Five minutes later, he had his first customer. Nate Baker found his first customers through network selling, not cold outreach - then lived in that customer's basement for a year. That relationship set the foundation for Qualia's growth to $100M ARR.

Nate reveals why the first 25 Qualia employees rotated through Barry's basement to learn the industry, the multi-year upfront contracts that brought forward $100K in cash at just $45K ARR, and the wake-up call when a VP of Sales said: "I've never seen such a gap between great product and incompetent sales execution."

Qualia is a title software platform generating over $100M in ARR with 600 employees and $200M+ raised. Nate started building at 21 with zero real estate experience and found his early customers entirely through network-based relationships.

This episode is brought to you by:

πŸ’– Gearheart β†’ Book a free consult and get the first 20 hours free

πŸ”‘ Key Lessons

  • 🀝 First customers must come from network selling: Nate says your first 10 customers have to be in-network sales. Barry introduced Qualia to his competitors, building the foundation for initial traction.
  • 🏠 Embed yourself with first customers to learn their world: Nate and the first 25 Qualia employees rotated through living in Barry's basement. "To actually understand what your customer does, you just have to be so in it."
  • πŸ’° Use multi-year upfront contracts to align early incentives: Qualia offered 5-year contracts at 80% discounts, collecting $100K upfront from early customers when they had just $45K ARR.
  • πŸ—ΊοΈ Geographic focus beats national expansion for first customers: Qualia stayed in Massachusetts for the first year, building density and network effects in one state before expanding.
  • πŸ”§ Hire sales leadership before you think you're ready: At $45K ARR, Qualia's VP of Sales exposed the gap between great product and incompetent execution. Within 12 months they hit $3.5M ARR.

Chapters

  • Introduction and what Qualia does
  • How Nate picked the title software market at 21
  • Finding first customer Barry Feingold at a conference
  • Living in Barry's basement for a year
  • When Barry's vendor shut him off overnight
  • Why narrow geographic focus beats national expansion
  • How to get first customers to pay before building
  • The multi-year upfront contract strategy
  • Network selling vs cold outreach for first customers
  • The wake-up call: "Great product, incompetent execution"
  • Moving upmarket and geographic expansion
  • How AI is changing the opportunity
  • Lightning round

Resources

Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us