Sramana Mitra: You were doing service contracts basically? Andrew Plato: Yes. I did technical writing. I did a little bit of software development and website design. In 1999, I switched my company and became a security service provider. I was reselling other people’s security tech.
If you haven’t already, please study our Bootstrapping Course and Investor Introductions page. We’re big fans of unfair advantage derived out of deep domain knowledge. Read how Andrew played his. Sramana Mitra: Let’s go to the beginning of your journey. Where are you from? Where were you born, raised, and in what kind of background?
Sramana Mitra: What metrics can you provide about how you’ve built your business from 2016 to 2020? How has your business grown? Lily Stoyanov: Exponentially. Our business grew through very strong partnerships. We have usually more than 100% growth per month. This is happening because we identify the right partners.
Sramana Mitra: What is the PR angle to this? Lily Stoyanov: We have an HR suite. The freelance marketplace is just one of the modules. We have freelancer/contingent workforce management software, which is something that comes after you hire freelancers from the freelance marketplace to manage the relationship with them over time and to use
Sramana Mitra: We are a completely remote company and we’ve been completely remote since 2010. When you started in 2016 as part of Virgin’s startup program, what were you going to do? Lily Stoyanov: In 2016, we already had a product. We already had customers.
Lily Stoyanov: At that time, I already had an idea about Transformify. It started when I was still at Coca-Cola. When you lead a business transformation project, you know that processes need to be optimized and costs need to be cut. Inevitably, people lose their jobs. Many companies were going through business transformation. The moment
Neal Taparia: Then we acquired the next biggest site in the space which was called CitationMachine. Later on, we acquired the biggest international site in UK and Australia following that same playbook of building relationships to eventually lead to an acquisition. By 2016, we were reaching 30 million students across the globe, primarily in Western-educated
Sramana Mitra: In terms of the monetization strategy, it sounds like you needed advertisers through the ad networks who were going after the student demographics. Neal Taparia: That’s correct. Sramana Mitra: Were there ad networks specifically focused on that demographic or were you just working with various ad networks and finding the segment match with