
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In 2005 most people didn't even have cellphones yet. Those who did used flip phones. That's when Noah started Olo, a webapp to let people pre-order coffee from nearby shops. Users had to login on web, add a credit card, create pre-made orders and then send a text to a preset number when they wanted to pre-order. It was way, way ahead of its time.
Noah and his team 7 years to hit $1M in ARR. In the meantime, they raised a round with 50% dilution the week before the financial crisis, went on live TV to an audience on 6M viewers and had to pivot from a marketplace to B2B SaaS.
But overtime smartphone penetration increased, on-demand ordering became a trend, and then, one day, Starbucks launched their app. All of a sudden, every single restaurant in the world wanted a way to let their users pre-order.
And there was Noah and his team at Olo.
Today, Olo is a public company worth over $1B and generating nearly $300M in sales. Here's the story of how it happened.
Why you should listen:
Keywords
Olo, Noah Glass, entrepreneurship, product-market fit, restaurant technology, mobile ordering, startup journey, business challenges, marketing strategies, innovation
Timestamps:
(00:00:00) Intro
(00:02:20) Building an app in 2005
(00:13:20) The Burn the Boats Moment
(00:16:31) Building A Network Business
(00:26:08) The Cold Start Problem
(00:30:33) A Happy Accident
(00:36:55) Going through the 2008 Financial Crisis
(00:51:20) Finding Product Market Fit
(00:57:20) Blueprint of Values
(01:05:11) Best Piece of Advice
(01:06:08) A Big Milestone
Send me a message to let me know what you think!
4.9
7878 ratings
In 2005 most people didn't even have cellphones yet. Those who did used flip phones. That's when Noah started Olo, a webapp to let people pre-order coffee from nearby shops. Users had to login on web, add a credit card, create pre-made orders and then send a text to a preset number when they wanted to pre-order. It was way, way ahead of its time.
Noah and his team 7 years to hit $1M in ARR. In the meantime, they raised a round with 50% dilution the week before the financial crisis, went on live TV to an audience on 6M viewers and had to pivot from a marketplace to B2B SaaS.
But overtime smartphone penetration increased, on-demand ordering became a trend, and then, one day, Starbucks launched their app. All of a sudden, every single restaurant in the world wanted a way to let their users pre-order.
And there was Noah and his team at Olo.
Today, Olo is a public company worth over $1B and generating nearly $300M in sales. Here's the story of how it happened.
Why you should listen:
Keywords
Olo, Noah Glass, entrepreneurship, product-market fit, restaurant technology, mobile ordering, startup journey, business challenges, marketing strategies, innovation
Timestamps:
(00:00:00) Intro
(00:02:20) Building an app in 2005
(00:13:20) The Burn the Boats Moment
(00:16:31) Building A Network Business
(00:26:08) The Cold Start Problem
(00:30:33) A Happy Accident
(00:36:55) Going through the 2008 Financial Crisis
(00:51:20) Finding Product Market Fit
(00:57:20) Blueprint of Values
(01:05:11) Best Piece of Advice
(01:06:08) A Big Milestone
Send me a message to let me know what you think!
1,284 Listeners
694 Listeners
1,043 Listeners
184 Listeners
522 Listeners
180 Listeners
1,932 Listeners
228 Listeners
199 Listeners
187 Listeners
128 Listeners
72 Listeners
100 Listeners
464 Listeners
31 Listeners