The full conversation.
Shmulik
0:00
Put
yourself
in
the
mind
of
your
client.
He
has
to
pitch
it
to
his
boss
as
well,
and
the
pitch
is
so
much
easier
internally
when
you
can
say
I've
tried
this
new
product.
It's
better
than
the
current
product
we're
using
today.
Here's
the
price
points.
Here's
how
it
works.
I've
done
it
a
hundred
times.
I
can
show
you
it.
I
like
it.
All
of
a
sudden,
you've
made
the
pitch
so
much
easier
for
your
buyer.
Pablo
0:25
Welcome
to
the
Product
Market
Fit
Show,
brought
to
you
by
Mistral,
a
seed
stage
firm
based
in
Canada.
I'm
Pablo.
I'm
a
founder
turned
VC.
My
goal
is
to
help
early-stage
founders
like
you
find
product-market
fit.
Shmulik,
welcome
to
the
show.
Shmulik
0:42
Thank
you
for
having
me.
I'm
excited
to
have
this
conversation.
Pablo
0:45
You've
been
working
on
Argyle
now
for
a
few
years.
You're
a
multi-time
founder.
You'd
started
a
different
company
before
that
and
sold
it.
I
don't
want
to
go
too
deep
into
that
story.
I'm
sure
it'll
have
to
do
with
the
origin
story
of
Argyle,
so
let's
start
there.
How
did
you
come
up
with
Argyle
in
the
first
place?
Shmulik
1:03
Yeah,
The Origins of Argyle
Shmulik
1:04
this
is
one
amazing
accident
to
trace
the
origins
of
Argyle
or
to
go
back
to
2014
in
that
moment
where
there
was
Uber
for
everything.
I
was
living
in
San
Francisco
at
the
time,
and
you
could
click
a
button
and
get
cookies
delivered
or
get
your
groceries
delivered.
The
one
button
that
you
couldn't
click
yet
was
get
your
car
picked
up
and
returned
to
you.
With
a
co-founder,
we
set
out
to
build
Uber
for
parking,
and
it
was
a
smashing
success
from
a
product
standpoint.
Everybody
wants
that
valet
experience.
We
were
quite
lucky.
We
raised
about
$50
million
over
the
course
of
several
years,
but
the
business
was
very
much
from
a
unit
economic
standpoint
not
profitable.
I
think
we
had
that
insight
early
on,
and
we
pivoted
the
business
to
an
enterprise
motion
where
we
were
selling
software
to
large
corporations.
Pablo
2:00
I'm
curious.
What
was
the
model?
What
was
that
valet
model?
That
was
just
like
I
leave
somewhere.
I
just
click
a
button.
Somebody
picks
it
up,
parks
for
me,
gives
it
back.
Was
that
the
idea?
Shmulik
2:08
You
have
it,
you
have
it.
I
know,
it
sounds
fantastic
when
you
hear
it.
The
issue
with
it
will
for
always
be
that
you
need
a
human
on
every
other
block
in
a
city,
and
you
need
parking
spots
everywhere
in
a
city.
It's
just
the
talk
about
fixed
cost,
and
so
the
more
cars
that
you
park,
the
more
money
you
spend
until
you
theoretically
get
to
someplace
where
the
numbers
cross.
We
got
the
closest
in
Seattle,
if
you
must
know.
There
was
a
lot
of
density,
which
was
the
gain
there.
Pablo
2:39
It's
funny
how
these
models
–
I
think
back
2014.
That's
when
I
started
my
company
GymTrack,
which
was
about
tracking
workouts
in
the
gym,
and
it's
also
one
of
those
it
sounds
awesome
when
you
hear.
Doesn't
make
that
much
sense
when
you
try
and
make
it
happen.
All
these
things
get
funded
then.
I
guess,
now
what
gets
funded
is
anything
with
AI,
whether
it
makes
sense
or
not,
but
there's
these
eras,
right?
Back
then,
it
was
these
marketplaces
or
quantified
self.
If
you
said
that,
there
was
money
for
you.
Shmulik
3:05
Yeah.
Since
we're
going
down
the
tangent,
I
also
think
another
thing
that
gets
funded
is
product
that
investors
like
to
use
themselves.
Every
investor
would
love
their
car
picked
up
in
front
of
their
office
and
dropped
off
in
front
of
a
restaurant
in
the
evening,
and
we
had
that.
We
had
a
product
that
our
investors
wanted
to
use.
It
was
so
easy
to
pitch
the
product,
and
that's
what
really
got
us
going.
It's
just
the
underlying
business
model
is
something
I
really
have
become
much
more
focused
on
as
I've
grown
as
a
founder,
and
sometimes
and
I
think
you're
going
to
hear
with
Argyle,
it's
the
boring
stuff
that
makes
money.
Sometimes
the
sexy,
interesting
things
are
really
great
ideas,
fun
to
use
but
aren't
money
makers,
aren't
durable
businesses,
and
I
think
that's
what
we
had.
Pablo
3:56
That's
right.
They
get
you
like
we
won
demo
day.
You
know
what
I
mean?
Shmulik
3:58
That's
right.
Pablo
3:58
They
get
you
that,
but
they
don't
necessarily
get
you
what
you
really
want,
which
is
an
outcome.
The Aha Moment
Shmulik
4:03
We
had
an
aha
moment
in
that
business
in
2016
about
where
–
we
were
like,
hey,
we
don't
want
to
keep
spending
money.
What
is
the
business
inside
of
this
business
that
is
real,
that
people
would
use,
that
has
positive
unit
economics?
What
that
was
was
software,
being
able
to
give
fleet
management
software
to
large
fleet
managers
like
Avis,
like
Enterprise
rental
car.
That
was
a
real
company.
We
pivoted
the
business.
I'm
fast
forwarding
a
little
bit,
but
I
ended
up
in
the
later
years,
around
2018,
spending
an
enormous
amount
of
time
at
airports
because
that's
how
the
fleet
manager
model
works.
You
stick
a
lot
of
cars
in
an
airport.
They
hub
and
spoke
model
out
to
the
city.
I
became
super
interested
in
not
the
cars
at
the
airport
but
the
people
driving
them
around,
and
getting
somebody
to
actually
work
for
four
weeks
or
five
weeks
to
drive
vehicles
around
from
the
airport
to
the
city
is
hard
work.
They're
very
fickle
workers.
Pablo
5:08
This
is
what?
This
is
like
fleet
–
this
is
like
Hertz
or
Avis,
like
fleet
management?
The
cars
end
downtown,
but
they
need
to
be
by
the
airport.
Shmulik
5:14
You
have
it.
Pablo
5:14
Just
a
human
to
go
drive
it,
okay.
Shmulik
5:17
I
didn't
know
it
at
the
time,
but
the
problem
that
Avis,
or
Hertz,
or
Enterprise
has
is
actually
very
similar
to
the
problem
that
Chipotle,
or
Target,
or
Best
Buy,
or
Walmart
have.
It's
high
volume
hiring
with
people
that
don't
last
that
long,
and
so
you're
constantly
having
to
rehire
and
rehire
your
staff.
The
best
way
to
do
that
is
with
software
where
you
don't
have
to
individually
interview
them.
There's
ways
to
take
data
to
understand
what's
the
likelihood
that
they'll
show
up
for
work?
The
gimmick
that
we
had
or
the
trick
that
we
had
with
Avis
was
can
we
get
one
of
these
applicants
to
log
into
their
Uber
account
or
their
Lyft
account,
and
we
would
be
able
to
surface
to
Avis,
hey,
Shmulik
has
driven
a
thousand
miles,
has
driven
on
Uber
for
six
months,
has
a
4.5
rating?
This
is
somebody
that
is
going
to
be
willing
to
drive
cars
for
you.
That
was
the
very
early
stages
of
what
I
would
now
consider
pre-employment
screening
services.
I
know,
a
really
wonky
long
term.
Pablo
6:20
This
was
at
Argyle,
or
this
was
still
at
KAR
Global,
your
last
startup?
Shmulik
6:23
I
had
Lester
Adam.
I
was
fooling
around
with
a
lot
of
different
concepts.
This
was
one
of
them.
I
was
lucky
enough
to
meet
my
co-founder,
Audrius,
who's
now
Argyle's
CTO,
and
we
had
the
luxury
of
time.
We
got
to
play
around
with
ideas,
and
this
was
one
we
were
super
excited
about.
We
knew
contacts
at
Avis.
Pablo
6:46
Was
this
after
the
exit?
You
have
some,
let's
say,
good
stuff
in
the
bank
account
happening.
You
got
some
time.
You
have
the
energy
to
go
at
it
again.
Shmulik
6:52
Yes.
I
know
that
this
is
talking
about
the
journey.
I
do
consider
ourselves
lucky
to
have
an
exit
that
did
give
us
some
cash
where
we
had
the
space
and
the
time
to
think
things
through,
which
I
don't
think
I
had
when
starting
the
fleet
management
company.
Space
and
time
is
a
really
helpful
thing.
It's
always
good
to
think
about
it
before
you
start
building.
That's
what
we
had
there.t
Pablo
7:41
It's
almost
the
reason
why.
Going
back
to
earlier
point,
I
think,
as
a
first-time
founder,
there's
the
hype
that
attracts
you
to
how
do
I
tell
a
story
that
gets
me
money,
and
there's
the
need
that's
like
how
do
I
get
some
money
in
the
door?
I
remember
we
were
obsessed
with
just
how
do
we
–
because
revenue
was
so
far
away
for
us,
the
only
way
to
get
money
was
fundraising.
We
were
obsessed
with
fundraising
for
the
first
couple
of
years.
It's
a
little
backwards,
but
you
understand
where
it
comes
from
having
gone
through
it.
Shmulik
8:11
A
hundred
percent.
I
think
that,
also,
that
desire
to
get
the
first
client,
to
send
the
first
invoice,
to
get
the
first
$100,000
of
revenue,
those
are
great
desires,
and
you
want
to
be
as
efficient
as
possible
at
achieving
them.
You
also
don't
want
to
take
shortcuts,
and
that's
that
dividing
line
of
you
want
to
make
sure
that
you're
onto
the
right
concept
that's
in
a
really
big
market,
that
has
the
right
unit
economics.
You
have
to
guide
yourself
and
be
able
to
listen
to
yourself
and
to
the
market
as
you're
exploring
those
things.
Pablo
8:15
Going
back
to
the
main
storyline,
I
guess
my
question
is
you
have
this
idea
of
using
existing
data,
alternative
data,
let's
say,
about
who
these
drivers
are
through
Lyft
and
Uber.
Avis
and
Hertz
and
Enterprise,
what
were
they
even
doing
at
the
time
to
interview?
What
was
the
before
and
after?
Shmulik
8:29
It's
actually
a
very
frequent
story,
but
people
go
into
an
office
with
their
resume
and
their
driver's
license
and
two
referrals.
You
have
to
call
them
up
on
the
phone,
and
there's
this
huge
phone
bank
to
verify
their
employment.
I
think
that
the
elephant
in
the
room
with
Argyle
is
this
other
business
that
you
might've
heard
of
before
called
Equifax,
huge
credit
bureau,
and
Equifax
has
a
huge
business
line
that
does
pre-employment
screening
for
this
exact
reason.
It's
a
huge
problem
set
across
every
single
vertical
where
you
need
to
hire
a
lot
of
people
at
McDonald's,
or
Target,
or
wherever,
and
you
need
a
service
that
can
verify
their
previous
employment.
It
just
so
happens
that
a
lot
of
this
is
still
done,
frankly,
manually,
but
that
was
the
case
at
Avis
as
well.
Pablo
9:15
Okay.
You
show
up
with
this
idea.
You
have
some
relationships.
What's
Step
1?
Do
you
MVP
it?
Where
do
you
go
from
there?
Shmulik
9:22
I'm
happy
to
report
the
very
first
version
of
the
Argyle
service
was
a
website
that
an
Uber
driver
just
logged
into,
and
they
took
a
screenshot
of
this
fake
resume
we
would
build.
It
would
generate
from
their
Uber
profile
data,
but
it
would
just
put
a
certificate
on
a
page.
It
would
have
their
name
and
the
star
rating,
and
they
would
take
a
screenshot
of
it.
It
would
have
the
Argyle
logo
at
the
bottom,
and
they
would
show
this
screenshot
to
an
Avis
clerk
on
the
other
side.
Because
they
knew
me
and
they
knew
what
Argyle
was,
there
was
a
way
for
them
to
be
like,
oh,
I
know
what
this
screenshot
is,
but
it
was
a
very
retro
first
experience.
We
were
just
trying
to
figure
out
could
we
shorten
the
cycle
times?
Could
we
get
down
to
a
day,
to
one
connection
to
get
hired
for
the
job?
It
was
the
early
winnings.
Pablo
10:12
This
is
a
bit
in
the
weeds,
but
I
think
it's
important.
How
did
you
get
in
–
you
went
to
Avis
and
you
told
them
about
the
service.
How
did
you
get
in
front
of
the
drivers
for
them
to
even
go
into
this
place
and
get
the
certificate?
Did
Avis
tell
them
to
do
it,
or
did
you
market
directly?
Shmulik
10:25
Super
low
tech
again.
Super
low
tech
again,
which
is
when
Avis
sends
out
a
job
posting
–
and
it
still
happens
today.
On
Craigslist,
on
Jobvite,
there's
all
these
requirements
for
what
the
job
is:
print
out
your
resume,
come
with
two
references,
and
so
they
just
added
another
thing.
Get
a
resume
from
this
website.
I
believe
our
first
website
was
actually
applicationprecompletion.com,
a
super
long
URL.
We
just
added
it
in
as
text.
Again,
it's
something
that
completely
doesn't
scale,
but
we're
trying
to
get
the
first
500,
1,000
people
to
try
it.
What
we've
done
over
time,
we're
mapping
the
origin
story
and
where
Argyle
is,
is
everybody
that
needs
income
and
employment
data
needs
different
pieces
of
it.
A
big
part
of
the
service
that
we've
come
to
realize
is
real
important
is
that
everybody
can
build
their
own
resume
now
and
figure
out
what
they
want
to
put
on
the
resume
or
on
the
verification
report.
Pablo
11:17
Are
you
charging
Avis
at
this
point,
or
what
are
you
trying
to
get
out
of
this
first
pilot?
Shmulik
11:21
Yeah,
there's
billing
or
invoicing
set
up
at
that
time,
so
that
was
not
in
place.
This
is
a
company
–
it's
still
the
culture
of
the
company
today,
but
we're
really
building
backwards
because
we're
not
industry
veterans.
I
don't
come
from
an
income
verification
background.
I
have
no
experience
in
credit
bureaus.
I've
never
worked
in
any
of
these
businesses,
and
so
we've
been
so
client
led
from
the
very
beginning.
We've
just
been
getting
feedback
from
each
one
of
our
clients.
The
first
client
that
paid
us
was
a
business
called
Level
Goals,
which
I
–
is
still
around.
They're
a
small
dollar
lender,
and
Level
Goals
only
was
interested
in
doing
lending
to
gig
workers.
We
had
already
built
the
first
integrations
into
Uber
and
Lyft
for
the
Avis
use
case,
but
they
just
wanted
to
use
those
same
data
points
but
to
issue
a
small
dollar
loan
for
$100.
I
believe
they
gave
us
$1
per
verification.
That
was
the
first
paying
client,
and
that
is
a
much
bigger
business
just
for
the
industry,
for
income
verification.
That's
also
become
a
major
business
for
us
as
well.
Pablo
12:35
How
much
time
went
through
from
the
first
pilot
with
Avis
until
you
signed
that
first
paying
customer?
Shmulik
12:40
It
took
a
while.
The
first
year
of
Argyle,
I
believe,
until
the
late
part
of
2019
–
Argyle
was
found
in
2018.
Until
the
late
part
of
2019,
we
had
no
paying
customers.
We
were
just
building,
and
I
think
we
got
our
first
couple
of
customers
in
late
'19,
including
Level
Goals.
Pablo
12:58
What
was
hard
about
it?
What
are
you
building?
From
the
outside
looking
in,
you're
like,
okay,
we've
got
this
resume
builder
thing.
It's
got
the
main
KPIs
on
it.
I
feel
like
somebody
should
pay
for
that.
Shmulik
13:05
What
is
novel
about
Argyle,
what
we
had
to
build
literally
from
scratch
is
connectivity
into
payroll
processors.
Some
history
or
some
stats
to
make
it
interesting,
the
IRS
says
that
there's
about
6,000
registered
payroll
service
providers,
which
is
a
really
wonky
term,
but
basically,
it
just
means
there's
6,000
entities
that
are
allowed
to
submit
payroll
on
another
company's
behalf.
That's
a
super
fragmented
market,
and
in
order
to
provide
income
verification,
Argyle
needs
to
connect
into
every
one
of
those
platforms.
For
any
business
of
value
to
use
a
verification
service,
you
need
to
have
most
of
that
connectivity
built
out.
The
initial
wedge
and,
again,
totally
on
accident
just
because
there
was
this
huge
correlation
between
people
that
worked
for
Avis
and
gig
workers,
we
had
this
natural
wedge
at
the
beginning
where
we
were
building
out
connectivity
just
into
gig
platforms
so
Lyft
and
Uber
and
Instacart
and
DoorDash,
Lugg.
At
the
time,
Postmates
was
still
around,
and
that
is
tough
to
do
if
you're
doing
it
all
by
yourself
in
the
very
beginning.
You're
having
to
build
microservices
into
third-party
applications
that
you
are
not
under
the
control
of,
and
so
you
need
to
build
into
their
spec.
Pablo
14:33
How
did
you
think
about
when
to
charge?
I'm
on
this
question
because
I
think
the
lean
startup
methodology
would
tell
you,
as
soon
as
you
deliver
a
unit
of
value,
try
and
figure
out
what
it's
worth,
especially,
as
a
first-time
founder,
what
you're
going
in
with
or
what
you're
hammered
with,
if
you
go
to
an
incubator
accelerator,
all
those
sort
of
things.
You
didn't
do
that,
and
you
didn't
do
that
with
the
experience
you
had
in
your
previous
company.
It
was
deliberate.
Curious
if
you
could
just
dive
a
bit
more
into
how
you
thought
about
it
back
then
and
where
you
were
trying
to
get
to
in
that
first
year
before
you
started
charging.
Shmulik
15:05
I'm
When to Charge for the Product
Shmulik
15:06
a
big
advocate
for
having
a
pilot
customer
that
you're
giving
the
product
away
for
or
the
feature
away
for
free
for
a
period
of
time.
They're
helping
to
design
the
first
version
of
it
with
you,
and
we
still
do
this
today
when
we
release
new
product.
The
first
couple
of
people
that
use
the
new
feature,
we
give
it
to
them
for
free
for
a
little
bit
because
we
want
them
to
see
value
in
it
and
for
it
to
be
part
of
–
when
it
becomes
part
of
a
general
release,
then
you
should
start
to
charge
for
it.
I
think
it's
important
to
get
people
using
your
product
and
to
be
able
to
get
feedback
on
your
product,
even
if
it's
negative,
and
then
put
the
pricing
part
on
it.
That's
been
a
big
part
of
my
strategy,
and
I
think
it
works
at
different
levels
of
scale
as
well.
Pablo
15:52
It's
funny;
you
talk
about
design
partners.
I
was
actually
just
watching
the
review
of
the
AI
Pin
and
also
the
Rabbit
one
or
whatever,
and
that
was
the
comment.
These
products
are
over
MVPing,
like
the
humane
pin.
It's
just
coming
out
half-baked.
It's
worse
with
the
hardware,
obviously.
You
come
out
half-baked
with
all
these
promises
of
features
in
the
future.
You've
just
taken
the
MVP
thing
too
far,
right?
I
think
what
you're
saying
is,
especially
I
think
with
enterprise,
the
design
partner
helps
you
get
to
figure
out
what
the
real
MVP
is
that
you
can
really
charge
for.
Shmulik
16:26
Yes.
Pablo
16:27
The
risk
is
you're
building
something
that
actually
is
never
a
top
priority,
never
going
to
become
a
top
priority.
You're
getting
stringed
along.
What
signals
are
you
looking
out
for
to
make
sure
that
there's
something
real
here?
When
you
decide
to
charge
for
it,
the
money
will
be
there.
Shmulik
16:42
To
use
your
AI
Pin
as
an
analogy,
I
like
building
tools
that
are
just
a
better
mousetrap
instead
of
something
that
is
actually
new,
and
I
think
the
AI
Pin
is
like
that's
a
net
new
product,
which
makes
it
even
harder
to
extract
value
out
of
or
to
price
around.
Everything
that
Argyle
builds,
even
in
the
early
days,
is
just
a
better,
faster,
cheaper,
more
automated
version
of
something
that
a
business
is
already
paying
for.
Every
lender
already
pays
for
income
verification
services
and
to
know
income
by
year.
We're
just
giving
you
the
next
generation
of
it.
I
think
it's
easier
to
price
around
that
because
there's
already
a
reference
of
value
with
a
client,
but
they're
already
spending
on
it.
They're
not
allocating
new
spend,
or
having
to
get
a
new
PO,
or
get
a
new
approval.
I
like
to
say
that
every
business
spends
on
income
verification
services
already.
You
can
go
to
your
P&L.
We
do
this
as
part
of
our
sales
cycle.
How
much
money
do
you
spend
on
this
today?
We're
going
to
cut
your
cost.
That’s
a
very
different
way
of
communicating
with
a
client,
with
a
prospect
than
trying
to
convince
them
that
they
need
a
widget
that
they're
not
buying
today.
We
just
have
a
better
widget.
Pablo
17:52
I
think
that
makes
a
lot
of
sense,
and
it's
an
important
distinction
if
you're
selling
B2C
or
B2B.
I
think
B2B
is
clearer,
and
there's
already
budget
allocated
and
being
spent
on
something.
It's
not
budget
risk,
it's
not
demand
risk
they
need
to
solve
for,
which
is
really
what
an
MVP
does.
It's
actually
more
product
and
value.
Are
you
actually
going
to
be
that
much
better
than
that
other
thing?
That
just
takes
time.
Shmulik
18:14
Put
yourself
in
the
mind
of
your
client.
He
has
to
pitch
it
to
his
boss
as
well,
and
the
pitch
is
so
much
easier
internally
when
you
can
say
I've
tried
this
new
product.
It's
better
than
the
current
product
we're
using
today.
Here's
the
price
points.
Here’s
how
it
works.
I've
done
it
a
hundred
times.
I
can
show
you
it.
I
like
it.
All
of
a
sudden,
you've
made
the
pitch
so
much
easier
for
your
buyer
or
for
your
client.
Pablo
18:41
I
think
that's
what
–
that's
another
thing
I've
heard
as
many
times
going
through
these
interviews
is
–
in
your
case,
you're
a
repeat
founder,
a
little
bit
different,
but
it's
not
that
different
in
the
sense
that,
as
a
startup,
you
have
no
credibility.
I
think
sometimes
founders
forget
that.
You
have
no
credibility.
The
larger
enterprise
you're
selling
into,
the
less
credibility
you
have.
Shmulik
18:56
Correct.
Pablo
18:57
Unique
ways
to
establish
that
and,
having
worked
with
someone
for
months
as
a
design
partner,
definitely
can
check
that
box.
Shmulik
19:03
A
hundred
percent.
Use
that
lack
of
credibility,
if
you
can,
to
your
advantage.
You're
going
to
be
allowed
to
give
out
product
that's
more
MVP,
to
get
feedback
in
a
way
that
the
big
behemoth
in
your
space
can't
do,
so
there's
a
way
to
have
some
asymmetry
there.
Pablo
19:21
Walk
me
through
this
first
paying
customer.
It
actually
wasn't
in
the
same
vertical.
It's
a
different
vertical,
a
lending
use
case.
How
did
you
find
them?
Why
did
you
find
them,
all
the
story
around
them?
Landing the First Customer
Shmulik
19:31
So
many
of
our
clients
have
found
us
via
Google
search.
SEO
optimization
I'm
a
huge
fan
of,
but
Level
found
us
through
the
internet.
If
you're
trying
to
verify
income
for
gig
workers,
there's
a
lot
of
search
like
verify
Uber,
gig
worker
income.
You
can
run
search
queries
against
that
or
ads
against
that,
and
that's
how
they
came
to
us.
Equifax
doesn't
verify
gig
worker
income,
so
there's
this
cool
whitespace
that
we
completely
fell
into
on
accident
where,
our
gig
integrations,
you
just
could
not
get
that
data
through
a
credit
bureau.
There
was
something
cool
that
was
just
happening
there
organically.
Pablo
20:14
Were
you
optimizing
for
those
keywords
before
you
even
had
a
customer
in
the
space,
or
did
they
find
you
a
different
way
and
then
you
realized
that
was
that
was
a
whitespace?
Shmulik
20:22
Yeah,
gig
income
verification,
those
are
great
keywords.
They
still
work
today.
If
you
type
that
in,
Argyle
comes
up.
Pablo
20:31
How
did
you
turn
that
one
customer
into
a
dozen
customers?
All
inbound
or
did
you
start
going
outbound
as
well?
Shmulik
20:36
Yeah.
We
built
out
a
very
small
sales
team.
I
also
think
that,
the
first
100
clients
that
we
got,
I
was
heavily
involved
in
that.
I
really
do
encourage
founders
stay
involved
in
sales
and
customer
success
for
longer
than
it
feels
comfortable.
I
still
do
a
lot
of
it
today
because
I
think
that
hearing
from
the
customer
about
their
pain
points,
why
they're
buying
your
service,
what
about
your
service
doesn't
work,
you
need
that
to
keep
building,
and
so
a
lot
of
the
early
sales
were
me.
We
kept
on
iterating
on
the
SEO
strategy.
We
found
lookalike
clients.
It
just
also
happens
to
be
that,
in
this
industry,
lending,
it's
a
massive
space,
massive
space,
and
you
can
start
to
go
out
to
the
largest
lenders
that
leverage
Equifax
service
or
a
credit
bureau
service.
You
can
start
calling
on
them
and
say,
hey,
I
have
some
results
to
show
you
with
other
clients.
Would
you
like
to
use
this
service?
It's
having
these
outsized
results.
That’s
how
we
started
–
that's
how
we
kept
on
iterating.
Pablo
21:37
You
mentioned
Staying Close to Customers
Pablo
21:38
staying
as
close
to
your
customers
as
possible,
especially
on
the
sales
and
customer
service
side.
I
couldn't
agree
more.
I
actually
think
that's
one
of
the
most
common
mistakes
is
hiring
this
VP
sales
a
little
too
quickly
because
you
want
somebody
who's
a
pro,
who's
going
create
a
great
sales
organization,
and
all
these
sort
of
things.
In
fact,
there's
this
company
I
saw
not
too
long
ago.
They
bootstrapped
to
two
million
in
revenue,
nine
people,
effectively
break
even,
raised
a
few
million
dollars,
and
the
first
thing
was
VP
sales,
beef
of
the
team,
blah,
blah,
blah.
A
year
later,
they're
still
doing
two
million
in
revenue,
right?
It
just
completely
flatlined
because
it
was
too
early.
This
is
maybe
a
bit
too
specific,
but
just
to
give
some
–
maybe
make
this
point
more
tangible,
do
you
remember
some
of
the
things,
anything
that
you
would've
learned
back
then
because
you
were
so
close
to
these
customers,
because
you
stayed
close
on
sales
or
on
customer
success?
Some
of
the
things
that
customers
might
have
told
you
or
you
might
have
gleaned
from
sales
calls
that
actually
–
because
they're
subtleties,
right?
They're
small
tweaks
that
sometimes
are
the
difference
between
something
that
sells
and
something
that
has
too
much
friction.
Shmulik
22:50
I
think
a
lot
of
why
I
start
–
I
still
stay
so
close
to
clients
is
they
know
more
about
income
verification
than
I
do,
and
so
my
clients
have
been
educating
me
on
this
space
and
how
Equifax
does
it,
how
we're
different,
what
type
of
data
they
need,
how
they
want
it
organized,
how
they
want
it
calculated.
It's
great
to
get
all
of
that
education
from
your
clients
because
you're
hearing
their
challenges.
You're,
able
to
get
from
them
what
they
wish
was
different,
and
then
you
can
just
go
build
against
it.
I
find
myself
really
being
a
product
manager
masquerading
as
a
CEO.
Just
from
a
product
manager's
mindset,
it's
great
to
hear
the
client's
problem
so
you
can
build
the
solution,
and
the
closer
you
can
get
to
the
problem,
the
better.
You
don't
want
to
be
disintermediated
from
that
conversation.
I
think
that's
the
reason
why
we've
kept
our
sales
team
really
lean.
Even
today,
Argyle
does
not
have
a
VP
of
sales.
We
have
this
GM
strategy
where
there's
a
general
manager
for
each
one
of
our
key
verticals
but
all
in
the
purpose
of
keeping
ourselves
as
close
as
possible
to
the
client.
Pablo
23:58
One
of
the
best
ways
I
heard
this
explained
to
me
was
it's
really
a
learning
flywheel,
right?
If
you
think
about,
if
you
have
an
AE
and
then
a
VP
sales
and
then
you,
you
have
to
hope
that
message
goes
through
that
entire
chain
before
it
gets
to
you
and
then
makes
its
way
to
product
versus
if
you're
the
one
that's
touching
all
these
things.
At
the
beginning,
speed
and
adaptability
is
what
it's
all
about.
That's
really
putting
yourself
there
makes
that
flywheel
so
much
tighter
and
everything
move
so
much
faster.
Shmulik
24:29
I
think
this
is
a
podcast
for
tech
founders.
You're
a
tech
company,
right?
You're
not
a
sales
company.
The
thing
that
Argyle
does
better
than
anybody
else
is
build
technology
for
income
verification.
That's
what
most
of
our
team
is
focused
on
all
day.
You
can
have
a
lean
team
that
is
go-to-market
and
still
be
really
successful.
That's
not
the
key
differentiator.
The
key
differentiator
is
the
product,
the
technology
that
you're
building.
Pablo
24:54
Totally.
Walk
me
through
maybe
just
on
the
fundraising
side
because
things
started
happening
pretty
quick.
Bain
led
your
seed.
It
was
two
and
a
half
million
or
so.
Then,
a
year
later,
$20
million
Series
A,
which
is
a
pretty
big
Series
A,
especially
just
a
year
after
a
pretty
normal
size
seed.
Walk
me
through
that
story.
How
did
you
connect
with
them,
and
why
did
they
decide
to
make
such
a
big
investment?
From Seed to Series A
Shmulik
25:16
Yeah.
I
guess
we're
going
to
make
some
news
public,
or
we're
going
to
give
some
inside
takes.
Ajay
at
Bain
reached
out
to
me
on
LinkedIn.
Ajay,
if
you're
listening
to
this,
I
still
–
I
believe
it
was
you
that
reached
out
to
me
personally.
Yeah.
It
was
a
cold
email
on
LinkedIn
where
Ajay
said
that
he
had
heard
that
we
were
building
something
really
interesting,
and
he
wanted
to
come
and
meet
me
in
person.
He
came
to
our
two-person
WeWork
that
was
kitty-corner
to
the
bathroom,
so
you
had
to
look
at
everybody
going
in
and
out
of
the
bathroom
every
day
as
you
sat
in
your
cubicle.
He
came
to
the
office
and
he
sat
down.
He
really
dug
into
the
business,
and
he
liked
it.
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
similarities
between
what
Argyle
does
for
payroll
and
what
some
other
people
like
Plaid
or
Finicity
have
done
for
banking.
There
were
some
corollaries
and
an
investment
thesis
around
it
that
really
worked.
The
learning
there
for
me
is
just
be
really
open
to
every
conversation.
Any
investor
could
be
the
investor
for
your
first
round,
and
some
people
get
picky
about
who
they
want
to
respond
to
or
what
order
to
get
investors
in.
Just
talk
to
everybody.
Don't
be
scared
about
sending
your
deck.
I
certainly
wasn't.
I
think
that's
the
reason
Ajay
found
out
about
me
because
somebody
forwarded
a
deck
that
I
had
sent
to
somebody,
to
somebody,
to
somebody,
then
to
him,
right?
It
was
because
I
was
super
open
with
sharing
and
wasn't
trying
to
guard
the
material,
and
so
I
think
that's
how
it
worked.
Pablo
26:43
It’s
one
thing
to
do
two
and
a
half
million
dollars
or
so.
I
think
that's
they
believe
in
you.
They
believe
in
the
thesis.
Got
it.
What
happens
in
that
year
that
leads
them
to
do
$20
million
check?
That's
a
big
size
check.
They
must
have
seen
some
serious
traction
or
something
that
led
them
to
really
lean
in.
Shmulik
27:00
Two
things.
I
think,
between
the
seed
and
the
A,
we
were
able
to
form
a
real
business
plan
around
the
company
we
were
building.
During
the
seed
round,
we
had
one
or
two
clients.
We
had
this
Level
Goals.
We
had
this
primitive
product.
I
wasn't
able
to
articulate
yet
the
industry
we
were
in.
When
we
had
reached
the
A,
I
had
done
a
lot
of
market
analysis
on
what
is
Equifax,
and
Equifax
is
going
to
do
something
like
$2.7
billion
this
year
in
income
verification
services.
How
big
is
the
income
verification
services
market?
Apparently,
it's
$11
billion
a
year
market.
It's
a
huge
market.
Because
we
were
able
to
articulate
the
market
we're
in,
the
business
plan
we
have
for
that
market,
and
yes,
some
really
good
traction
and
growth
and
a
very
sticky
product
–
once
you
start
using
Argyle,
you
just
keep
using
it.
Those
are
the
set
of
metrics
we
needed
to
get
a
real
investment
check.
I
think
it
also
–
the
other
part
of
the
Argyle
business
and
it's
still
true
today
but
it's
very
true
in
those
days,
this
is
an
expensive
company
to
build.
Building
and
maintaining
payroll
integrations
to
thousands
of
registered
payroll
service
providers
is
not
cheap.
It's
infrastructure,
and
you
have
to
have
the
infrastructure
working
at
very
high
up
times.
That
was
part
of
the
investment
thesis.
Let's
invest.
Let's
build
real
infrastructure
that
does
income
verification.
A
promise
that,
if
people
build
it
–
if
we
build
it,
people
will
come,
and
that
has
been
–
that
has
panned
out
for
us.
It
did
take
me
articulating
to
Bain,
to
the
market
that
there's
a
huge
business
there,
that
this
is
not
just
a
fun
and
games
company.
Pablo
28:45
Do
you
think
that
would've
been
possible
for
you
to
do
as
a
first-time
founder?
I
think
there's
one
thing
with,
hey,
I've
got
two
million
ARR,
five
million
ARR.
Here's
an
ARR
multiple,
and
you
raise
an
A.
It's
another
thing
to
say
I'm
actually
over
here
on
ARR,
but
I
want
a
round
that's
this
big
because
I'm
going
to
build
all
the
staff
and
then
it'll
come.
There's
a
different
level
of
risk
that
the
investor's
taking.
Do
you
think
that's
more
suited
for
a
proven
founder
like
you
then,
or
do
you
think
it
still
would've
been
feasible
as
a
first-time
founder?
Shmulik
29:14
I
think
TAM
is
super
important
and
being
able
to
articulate
what
is
your
TAM?
How
are
you
tracking
against
that
TAM,
or
what
is
your
SAM?
You
need
to
be
able
to
say
those
with
conviction,
and
you
need
to
be
able
to
say
that
your
revenue
is
tied
to
them
and
have
a
good
thesis
around
it.
I
think
that
matters
more
than
what
your
ARR
is
in
the
aggregate,
or
if
you're
a
first-time,
or
a
second-time,
or
third-time
founder,
can
you
articulate
the
business
you
have
and
the
industry
you're
building
it
for?
Can
you
articulate
a
plan
where
you
can
be
50%,
40%
of
that
market?
That's
what
investors
want.
They
want
to
know
that
you're
going
to
be
become
the
winner
in
a
space,
and
they're
going
to
invest
and
give
you
dollars
based
on
that
analysis
because
it's
the
analysis
they're
doing
when
they
write
the
investment
memo.
You're
doing
the
hard
work
for
them.
I
think
that
has
a
lot
more
about
are
you
one
million
or
three
million,
first-time
or
second-time?
Pablo
30:13
I
love
that
answer.
It’s
a
perfect
segue
to
my
second
question,
which
was
what
was
your
story?
What
was
your
plan?
You’re
basically
saying,
Equifax,
they
do
$2
billion
in
revenue.
We
can
take
some
of
that.
At
this
point,
you're
doing
gig
worker
stuff,
which
is
this
little
ignored
niche.
What's
your
plan
to
take
the
rest,
the
kind
of
core
market?
Shmulik
30:31
What
the
analysis
included
is
there's
Equifax,
which
is
this
huge
player
in
this
space,
but
Equifax
itself
is
still
a
small
part
of
the
overall
industry.
It's
an
$11
billion
market.
Equifax
is
less
than
three
billion
of
it.
What
is
the
rest
of
this
market?
The
fun
answer
is
that
the
majority
of
income
verification
services
happen
manually,
so
our
largest
competitor
is
paper,
is
phone
banks,
is
emails,
is
scanners.
That
was
such
a
crucial
part
of
the
analysis
that
to
win
in
this
market
we
–
yes,
do
we
need
to
win
against
Equifax?
Yes,
but
to
win
this
market
is
really
to
replace
paper.
That’s
just
such
a
great
concept
that
your
competitor
is
that
legacy
analog
methodology.
Pablo
31:19
Just
to
be
clear,
these
are
companies
using
paper,
or
this
is
–
who's
using
paper?
How
does
that
generate
8
billion
in
revenue?
Shmulik
31:26
Yeah.
It's
the
cost
of
all
the
staffing
agencies
that
pick
up
phones,
that
send
out
emails,
but
it's
also
a
lot
of
servicing
companies.
There's
a
great
partner
we
have
today.
There's
also
part
of
this
analysis
called
Ocrolus,
and
the
only
thing
that
Ocrolus
does
is
scan
PDFs
and
give
you
the
OCR
data
of
them,
right?
It's
a
huge
business
because
there's
so
much
paper
out
there.
There's
all
these
sort
of
businesses
that
are
just
providing
incomes
verification
for
paper-based
models,
and
that's
what
the
$8
billion
is.
Pablo
31:58
That
was
--
your
story
was,
listen,
if
we
can
just
tie
into
all
the
payroll,
we'll
have
all
the
data,
and
then
we
can
just
automate
the
whole
thing.
No
need
to
call.
No
need
to
email.
It'll
all
be
verified.
Delivering clear ROI
Shmulik
32:06
Just
a
great
formula
is
find
a
better
mousetrap.
Build
a
product
that's
just
a
better
version
of
a
product
that
already
exists.
First,
it's
a
lot
easier
to
sell.
There's
a
bunch
of
people
that
already
buy
the
product.
It's
a
lot
easier
to
invest
in
because
it's
just
like
here
is
the
higher
margin
version
of
something
that's
already
out
there,
and
that's
the
formula
we
were
using.
Pablo
32:28
That's
actually
a
question
for
me
which
is,
when
you're
selling
to
these
companies,
whether
the
lenders
or
whoever
they
are,
are
you
selling
an
ROI
story,
or
are
you
selling
just
a
replacement
story?
Hey,
today
you're
paying
X
thousand
dollars
a
month
for
verification.
Pay
me
half
of
that.
I'll
do
the
same
thing.
Is
that
more
the
pitch?
Shmulik
32:45
It's
both,
but
we
lead
with
the
latter,
which
is
we're
a
way
to
reduce
costs.
We're
a
more
automated
solution.
You're
going
to
need
less
staff.
I
know
some
people
are
worried
about
saying
that
out
loud.
Argyle
means
you
have
to
have
less
personnel
internally
or
externally.
There's
less
manual
review.
You're
going
to
just
spend
less
on
verification
services.
Pablo
33:04
One
thing
that
I
find
is
hard
is
when
you
go
in
and
you
say
you're
going
to
save
X
hours,
right?
Do
you
make
that
a
dollar
value?
How
do
you
get
as
hard
as
possible
on
the
clarity
of
the
savings?
Shmulik
33:15
Again,
with
Equifax,
they
have
a
rack
sheet,
and
we've,
in
a
non-sophisticated
way,
given
pretty
big
discounts
against
the
Equifax
rack
sheet.
We
can
just
articulate
savings
against
your
Equifax
bill.
Another
thing
that
we
would
do
in
the
early
days
and
we
still
do
it
today
is
we
would
ask
our
clients
share
with
us.
What
are
you
spending
on
verification
services
every
year?
You
spend
it
already.
The
reason
why
we're
asking
is
because
we
want
to
reduce
your
cost,
right?
Tell
us
what
you're
spending.
We
want
to
give
you
a
proposal
that's
cheaper,
and
it's
also
a
great
way
to
get
market
intelligence
on
what
price
points
are,
what
people
–
what
businesses
are
spending
on
this
product.
Pablo
33:52
Those
are
the
two
things
and
you're
selling
B2B
is,
one,
find
a
way
to
kind
of
get
credibility,
which
is
this
idea
of,
obviously,
if
you're
from
the
space,
from
the
industry,
but
otherwise,
design
partners,
getting
things
for
free
and
just
being
able
to
get
the
product
to
a
certain
level.
The
second
piece
is
proving
out
clear
ROI,
whether
you're
adding
revenue
to
them
to
–
or
you're
affecting
KPI
of
that
department
or
reducing
costs,
but
the
harder
the
better,
right?
The
softer,
oh,
it's
efficiency.
Oh,
it's
time
saving.
It's
four
hours
a
week,
whatever.
It's
just
hard
to
rise
to
the
top
of
the
list
and
get
the
adoption
you’d
need.
Shmulik
34:23
People
like
analysis
that
has
dollars
and
cents
in
it.
There's
no
reason
to
get
more
fancy.
Pablo
34:28
Let
me
finish
off
on
these
two
questions.
You
raised
a
Series
A.
You
start
building
out
all
these
APIs.
When
do
you
have
a
sense
that
the
–
it's
still
a
bit
of
an
idea?
I
mean,
obviously,
you
have
customers.
You
have
some
revenue,
but
it's
a
bit
of
a
thesis.
I'm
going
to
invest
in
all
this
infrastructure,
and
revenue
will
come
out
the
other
side.
When
do
you
start
to
get
the
feeling,
okay,
know
what?
This
is
actually
working.
My
idea
that
I
had
on
paper
is
becoming
reality.
Shmulik
34:58
Once
SoFi
and
LendingClub
and
Checkr
and
Newrez
and
Fannie
Mae
–
once
we
started
to
get
these
sort
of
logos
just
piloting
with
us
–
and
the
reason
why
we
are
where
today
is
because
of
these
investments
with
clients
we
made
several
years
ago.
It
takes
12
months,
sometimes
24
months
for
a
client
to
really
use
us
for
their
main
verification
flow,
but
once
these
enterprise
names
start
to
use
our
service
and
give
us
positive
feedback,
it
was
happening
in
the
2021,
‘22
timeframe.
That's
when
I
was
like,
okay,
we
have
a
real
business
here.
It's
still
subscale.
In
many
ways,
Argyle
is
subscale
today
if
you're
comparing
us
to
Equifax,
but
I
think,
once
those
logos
started
to
use
us,
it
wasn't
a
–
the
game
got
much
more
serious.
Pablo
35:53
Would
you
say
that's
when
you
felt
like
you
had
true
product
market
fit?
Shmulik
35:57
The
Finding Product Market Fit
Shmulik
35:58
product
market
fit
I
felt
pretty
early,
even
in
the
gig
space,
because
it
just
was
such
an
addictive
product.
Even
with
Level
Goals,
you
just
–
they
just
wanted
to
use
it
for
every
loan
they
transacted
with.
I
didn't
realize
how
big
the
business
was
until
we
exited
the
gig
space
or
until
we
went
to
all
types
of
income.
A
good
way
to
know
product-market
fit
is
if
you
have
a
lot
of
clients
that
are
addicted
to
using
your
product
and
keep
using
it
day
after
day,
and
that
we
had.
Pablo
36:28
Perfect.
Then
the
final
question
we
like
to
end
on
is,
if
you
could
go
back,
whether
at
the
beginning
of
this
startup
or
the
beginning
of
your
first
startup,
with
one
piece
of
advice,
what
might
that
be?
One Piece of Advice
Shmulik
36:38
Gosh.
I
don't
know
if
it's
advice.
I
wish
that
we
did
–
even
as
much
planning
as
we
did,
we've
rebuilt
Argyle
several
times.
I
think
we're
on
API
v3,
and
a
lot
of
that
is
because
we
were
just
–
we
were
so
interested
in
just
tinkering,
building,
getting
feedback,
building
again.
I
do
think
that
that
has
–
at
several
junction
points
has
slowed
us
down.
We've
had
to
convince
clients
to
pivot
over
to
the
new
version
of
our
API
because
we
rebuilt
it
from
scratch
because
we
realized
it
was
wrong,
and
some
of
that
is
just
we
could
have
been
more
strategic
about
the
product
or
the
infrastructure
we
were
building
and
be
more
thoughtful
about
it.
I
encourage
people
to
–
it's
great
to
build
an
MVP.
When
you
build
the
real
version
of
it,
be
super
thoughtful.
It's
okay
if
it
takes
a
little
longer
than
you
want
it
to.
It
will
pay
dividends
later.
Pablo
37:27
We'll
stop
it
there,
Shmulik.
It
was
a
pleasure
speaking
with
you.
Thank
you
for
jumping
on
the
show.
Shmulik
37:32
I
enjoyed
it.
Pablo
37:34
I
just
gave
you
content
that
you
liked
so
much.
You
actually
listened
to
the
end.
Guess
what?
You
didn't
pay
a
single
dollar.
Not
only
that,
I
didn't
even
put
any
ads
in
your
face,
so
you
just
got
a
bunch
of
content
for
free.
Now
that
I've
delivered
that
value,
I'm
asking
for
something
in
return.
Open
your
app,
open
Apple
Podcasts,
open
Spotify,
open
whatever
app
you
use
to
listen
to
this
and
hit
that
Follow
button.
It's
actually
going
to
help
you
because
it's
going
to
help
you
make
sure
you
don't
miss
out
on
the
next
episode,
which
you
like
so
much
that
you
listen
to
the
whole
thing.