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Peruvian Entrepreneur, Bootstrapping to $200 Million: Belisario Rosas, CEO of WEI (Part 3)

Posted on Sunday, Dec 13th 2015

Sramana Mitra: Let me actually probe each of those points a bit. Did you, at this point, become an e-commerce site? Were people ordering online?

Belisario Rosas: No. We barely, to this date, do any type of e-commerce. All of it is solution-based and face-to-face selling.

Sramana Mitra: Talk to me about solution service infrastructure that you put in place that allowed you to do that level of business in the 1998 time frame.

Belisario Rosas: It was more of adding value to the products we were selling. At that time, we were one of the only few that could power-convert products. We specialize in foreign voltage computer parts. We set up a testing facility so that we were able to test and convert certain products to run under 220 V, which was European power. We specialized in that. There were only three or four capable facilities in the US >>>

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Bootstrap First, Raise Money Later: Wrike CEO Andrew Filev (Part 3)

Posted on Sunday, Dec 13th 2015

Sramana Mitra: What state was Wrike at when you came to Silicon Valley? Did you have something? Did you have an MVP that you started to work on?

Andrew Filev: It was a very early prototype. I think we launched a beta version at a conference in Paris. Then right after that, I moved to the Valley. The first official launch happened when I was already in the Valley at a conference called Silicon Valley launch. There are many more conferences these days but I vividly remember those early days. That was around 2007.

Sramana Mitra: What happened after the launch? I assume that you are using the proceeds from your consulting company to get the Wrike product off the ground?

Andrew Filev: We self-funded it first. Then we bootstrapped it. Then we got venture fund. By the time we got to our first investment, we already had thousands of paying customers. When we started, I always focused on customers first. >>>

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Peruvian Entrepreneur, Bootstrapping to $200 Million: Belisario Rosas, CEO of WEI (Part 2)

Posted on Saturday, Dec 12th 2015

Sramana Mitra: You were doing, more or less, the same thing that the company you were working for was doing?

Belisario Rosas: Yes, very much. We just continued accepting clients that we were dealing with or looking for new clients.

Sramana Mitra: How did that ramp?

Belisario Rosas: Like I said earlier, we started with a large debt because we had just done a large trip in Europe visiting customers with several orders. We had about $300 in the bank and we just bought and sold parts on a day to day basis.

Sramana Mitra: How much revenue did you generate at the end of the first year?

Belisario Rosas: $250,000 from July 1989 to December. >>>

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Bootstrap First, Raise Money Later: Wrike CEO Andrew Filev (Part 2)

Posted on Saturday, Dec 12th 2015

Sramana Mitra: Let’s do this a bit chronologically. You finished college in what year?

Andrew Filev: A little bit more than a decade ago, I think.

Sramana Mitra: The Internet was in full swing in 2005. You were still in Russia at this point?

Andrew Filev: Yes, I was still in Russia. I was eager to move. I was passionate about moving to Silicon Valley since my teenage years, long before I started my own company. I actually delayed it because I couldn’t’ just leave the company in its infancy. I’m not the kind of guy who drops things midway. The fact that I had a company delayed it a little bit, but since my teenage years, I was passionate about moving to the Valley.

Sramana Mitra: What year did you move?

Andrew Filev: I moved around 2006. >>>

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Peruvian Entrepreneur, Bootstrapping to $200 Million: Belisario Rosas, CEO of WEI (Part 1)

Posted on Friday, Dec 11th 2015

We hear a lot from Indian and Chinese entrepreneurs. We hear some from Europeans. But thus far, not as much from Latin American entrepreneurs. Belisario Rosas is Peruvian, and is also interested in fostering further entrepreneurship in Latin America.

Sramana Mitra: Let’s start at the very beginning of your personal journey. Where are you from? Where were you born, raised, and what kind of background?

Belisario Rosas: I was born in Lima, Peru.

Sramana Mitra: Did you grow up in Lima?

Belisario Rosas: Yes, I did. I went through elementary, middle school, and high school in Lima. When I left, I wanted to study Medicine. So I went to McGill University in Montreal, Canada to study Medicine. In the second year, I felt that it wasn’t my call. I had a liking >>>

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Bootstrap First, Raise Money Later: Wrike CEO Andrew Filev (Part 1)

Posted on Friday, Dec 11th 2015

Andrew has built a company with a rigorous data-driven approach. Learn how!

Sramana Mitra: Let’s start at the very beginning of your journey. Where are you from? Where were you born, raised, and in what kind of background?

Andrew Filev: I was born in St. Petersburg in Russia. I got interested in computers pretty early. I spent a lot of my childhood playing with computers, building and programming, and designing. I also had a big interest in other sciences as well. I competed in different math, physics, and chemistry competitions.

Part of my heritage and the reason why I did a lot of that was that if I go back in time and compare my upbringing with what I see today for my kids, there was very little entertainment. Everything was pretty scarce. I spent my childhood summers mostly reading books and playing chess >>>

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An Emerging Success Story from Indiana: Fathom Voice CEO Cameron Weeks (Part 4)

Posted on Monday, Dec 7th 2015

Sramana Mitra: From whom did you raise $500,000?

Cameron Weeks: We got lucky. We say that this company is very blessed. One of the partners that came in was actually a VC firm from California called Small World Group.

Sramana Mitra: Is this Frank Levinson?

Cameron Weeks: Yes, you know Frank?

Sramana Mitra: Very well, actually. How did Frank find out about you? >>>

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Building a Sustainable, Capital-Efficient Business: Backblaze CEO Gleb Budman (Part 4)

Posted on Monday, Dec 7th 2015

Sramana Mitra: You started this in 2007?

Gleb Budman: Exactly.

Sramana Mitra: You self-financed it with your colleagues?

Gleb Budman: We did. It was definitely a long, crazy journey. Five of us committed to a year without salary. That would be the seed round. We then had two more people who joined us. We call them demi-partners. They weren’t complete co-founders but they did join very early on. They also committed time without salary, and they also put a little bit of money into the company.

Sramana Mitra: All of you had worked together before? >>>

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