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Hugo Pereira didn’t build Ritmoo chasing hypergrowth. The product emerged from real operating experience inside scale-ups, where goal management often looked structured but repeatedly failed in execution.
Ritmoo was designed for simplicity, visibility, and lighter progress tracking. Teams valued the platform. Still, adoption exposed a deeper constraint. Alignment challenges rarely live in software alone.
To improve outcomes, Hugo introduced services. This strengthened customer success and stabilized revenue, yet it also increased complexity and limited scalability, ultimately shaping Ritmoo’s path toward a successful acquisition on Acquire.com.
You’ll hear:
3 Lessons from Ritmoo
For founders navigating the tension between traction, complexity, and scalability, this episode offers a grounded perspective on timing, fit, and strategic exits.
Follow the guest:
X (Twitter)
Ritmoo
By Acquire.comHugo Pereira didn’t build Ritmoo chasing hypergrowth. The product emerged from real operating experience inside scale-ups, where goal management often looked structured but repeatedly failed in execution.
Ritmoo was designed for simplicity, visibility, and lighter progress tracking. Teams valued the platform. Still, adoption exposed a deeper constraint. Alignment challenges rarely live in software alone.
To improve outcomes, Hugo introduced services. This strengthened customer success and stabilized revenue, yet it also increased complexity and limited scalability, ultimately shaping Ritmoo’s path toward a successful acquisition on Acquire.com.
You’ll hear:
3 Lessons from Ritmoo
For founders navigating the tension between traction, complexity, and scalability, this episode offers a grounded perspective on timing, fit, and strategic exits.
Follow the guest:
X (Twitter)
Ritmoo