Revenue Engine Masters
In 2011, three co-founders from Missouri walked into Y Combinator with a simple observation: every SaaS help forum had the same unanswered thread. "When will you integrate with X?" Nobody was building the infrastructure to close that loop. They did. Paul Graham told Wade and every YC batch the same thing: be a cockroach. Don't raise money. Survive. Adapt to whatever comes next. Almost nobody listened. Zapier did. Fourteen years, $1.3M raised, bootstrapped to a $5B valuation. Every time a funding opportunity came up, they asked one question: what is actually holding us back right now? The answer was never the balance sheet. Then the SaaSpocalypse arrived. SaaS stocks cratered. Every software company started asking: what part of what we built actually survives this? Wade's answer is specific. Not the 8,500 integrations. The governance layer, the auth infrastructure, the background automation reliability stack. And then Wade, in this episode of Revenue Engine Masters podcast, says something incredible. They built their entire business on drag and drop. It made them. And they're already moving past it. Natural language builders outperform it on activation. They measured it. They called it "yap to zap" and didn't look back. For Wade, this adaptability applies to humans too, not just companies. The best operators today aren't the ones prompting AI and moving on. They're the ones staying in the loop, iterating on context, pushing until the output is actually good. That's the human role now. In the outer loop around it. Paul Graham's advice was about never optimizing for the conditions of today at the expense of your ability to adapt to whatever comes after. Zapier understood that in 2011. They still do.
23 Episoder
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