
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Most SaaS founders obsess over raising capital and building large teams.
Yasser Elsaid took a different approach.
In this episode of the ProductLed 100 series, Wes Bush and Esben Friis-Jensen sit down with Yasser Elsaid, the first-time founder who built Chatbase from zero to $8 million ARR in just 2.5 years with only 18 people (11 of them engineers).
Yasser reveals how he caught the AI wave at exactly the right moment, why he's moving his entire team to New York to be closer to customers (98 of his top 100 target accounts are there), and why product quality is the only moat that matters when features are easy to copy.
They also explore the "minimum viable first strike" philosophy for onboarding, why bootstrapped founders need to stop thinking small, and how Chatbase is now transitioning from pure product-led growth to an enterprise sales motion.
Key Highlights:
Resources:
By Wes Bush4.6
2121 ratings
Most SaaS founders obsess over raising capital and building large teams.
Yasser Elsaid took a different approach.
In this episode of the ProductLed 100 series, Wes Bush and Esben Friis-Jensen sit down with Yasser Elsaid, the first-time founder who built Chatbase from zero to $8 million ARR in just 2.5 years with only 18 people (11 of them engineers).
Yasser reveals how he caught the AI wave at exactly the right moment, why he's moving his entire team to New York to be closer to customers (98 of his top 100 target accounts are there), and why product quality is the only moat that matters when features are easy to copy.
They also explore the "minimum viable first strike" philosophy for onboarding, why bootstrapped founders need to stop thinking small, and how Chatbase is now transitioning from pure product-led growth to an enterprise sales motion.
Key Highlights:
Resources:

180 Listeners

1,101 Listeners

2,658 Listeners

10,268 Listeners

10,984 Listeners