
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


"Most software companies either get acquired or go out of business. If you start doing really well, they're either going to copy you or buy you."
In today's episode of Bricks and Bytes, we had Geoff Tarrant from Payapps and we got to learn about how a $600 million construction tech exit really happens, why Australian startups must expand globally, and the brutal truth about fundraising timing... and many more!
Tune in to find out about:
✅ Why construction tech companies never IPO and always get acquired instead
✅ The mistake founders make when expanding to new markets too early
✅ How to build relationships with potential acquirers years before selling
✅ Why raising money too late kills more startups than anything else
Geoff shared incredible insights from building PayApps from a CFO's monthly nightmare into a tens-of-millions revenue business that Autodesk couldn't ignore. His investment banking background gives him a unique perspective on what really drives acquisitions and why timing everything wrong can destroy even great companies.
Listen now on Spotify to discover the real playbook for construction tech exits and what founders get dangerously wrong.
=============
Chapters
01:41 – Intro & Acquisition Overview
04:34 – How Claims Are Evolving in Construction
07:41 – Market Dynamics & Competitive Landscape
10:30 – The Role of Independent Players in ConTech
13:45 – Inside the Acquisition: Strategy & Timing
16:49 – What Happens After: Post-Acquisition Integration
19:37 – Winning Customers: Acquisition Strategies That Work
22:31 – Going Global: Expansion & Market Entry
36:58 – Hard Truths: Challenges in New Markets
42:13 – Product-Market Fit: Why It Matters More Than Ever
47:58 – Team Building at Scale
52:55 – Raising Capital & Managing Dilution
01:00:39 – What’s Next: AI & The Future of ConTech
01:03:59 – Where the Opportunities Are: Shifting Construction Markets
By Bricks And Bytes5
33 ratings
"Most software companies either get acquired or go out of business. If you start doing really well, they're either going to copy you or buy you."
In today's episode of Bricks and Bytes, we had Geoff Tarrant from Payapps and we got to learn about how a $600 million construction tech exit really happens, why Australian startups must expand globally, and the brutal truth about fundraising timing... and many more!
Tune in to find out about:
✅ Why construction tech companies never IPO and always get acquired instead
✅ The mistake founders make when expanding to new markets too early
✅ How to build relationships with potential acquirers years before selling
✅ Why raising money too late kills more startups than anything else
Geoff shared incredible insights from building PayApps from a CFO's monthly nightmare into a tens-of-millions revenue business that Autodesk couldn't ignore. His investment banking background gives him a unique perspective on what really drives acquisitions and why timing everything wrong can destroy even great companies.
Listen now on Spotify to discover the real playbook for construction tech exits and what founders get dangerously wrong.
=============
Chapters
01:41 – Intro & Acquisition Overview
04:34 – How Claims Are Evolving in Construction
07:41 – Market Dynamics & Competitive Landscape
10:30 – The Role of Independent Players in ConTech
13:45 – Inside the Acquisition: Strategy & Timing
16:49 – What Happens After: Post-Acquisition Integration
19:37 – Winning Customers: Acquisition Strategies That Work
22:31 – Going Global: Expansion & Market Entry
36:58 – Hard Truths: Challenges in New Markets
42:13 – Product-Market Fit: Why It Matters More Than Ever
47:58 – Team Building at Scale
52:55 – Raising Capital & Managing Dilution
01:00:39 – What’s Next: AI & The Future of ConTech
01:03:59 – Where the Opportunities Are: Shifting Construction Markets

30,609 Listeners

8,801 Listeners

536 Listeners

4,420 Listeners

1,993 Listeners

9,724 Listeners

82,252 Listeners

2,342 Listeners

2,660 Listeners

10,254 Listeners

5,576 Listeners

16,525 Listeners

475 Listeners

34 Listeners

0 Listeners