The Syndicate One Podcast

From a shoebox of receipts to Visma: Alexis Eggermont on building Accountable

21 min · 15 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio From a shoebox of receipts to Visma: Alexis Eggermont on building Accountable

Descripción

"To ship our first prototype, I had to show up unannounced at our Serbian dev agency's door. Today? I'd vibe code the whole thing."  Alexis Eggermont co-founded Accountable. If you're a freelancer in Belgium or Germany, you probably know it. Visma owns it now, but Alexis has been with Syndicate One since day one. He sat down with Robin Wauters and walked through eight years of building from zero. Here's what jumped out.  * Alexis and Nicolas decided to start a company first, then came up with the idea later. They worked backward through three questions and landed on Accountable. * Exits aren't a single moment. The Visma deal took four years to pull off. After the sale? Same team, same product, just a bigger family. More gradual than sudden.  * And while AI is melting software moats, Alexis sees it growing the market, not killing it.

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15 episodios

episode From a shoebox of receipts to Visma: Alexis Eggermont on building Accountable artwork

From a shoebox of receipts to Visma: Alexis Eggermont on building Accountable

"To ship our first prototype, I had to show up unannounced at our Serbian dev agency's door. Today? I'd vibe code the whole thing."  Alexis Eggermont co-founded Accountable. If you're a freelancer in Belgium or Germany, you probably know it. Visma owns it now, but Alexis has been with Syndicate One since day one. He sat down with Robin Wauters and walked through eight years of building from zero. Here's what jumped out.  * Alexis and Nicolas decided to start a company first, then came up with the idea later. They worked backward through three questions and landed on Accountable. * Exits aren't a single moment. The Visma deal took four years to pull off. After the sale? Same team, same product, just a bigger family. More gradual than sudden.  * And while AI is melting software moats, Alexis sees it growing the market, not killing it.

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