First 1000 - 💳 Stripe
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— Let’s start from the very very beginning In 2005, sixteen-year-old Patrick Collison (Patrick is the cofounder of Stripe) did what many high school nerds do and participated in the Young Scientist Of The Year competition. Unlike in other parts of the world, where people build volcanos and stuff, this competition was the shit in Ireland….like many notable tech breakthroughs came out of there. Patrick won the competition, but in retrospect, for someone who built a $95b+ company in his twenties (and early thirties now 👴🏼)…that should come as no surprise. The important bit was that during this competition, Patrick first encountered Common Lisp (a dialect of the Lisp programming language), and one of the biggest Lisp fans on this planet is Paul Graham. Throughout his time in the competition, Patrick spent a lot of time contributing to Lisp. As a young teen, he leveraged it to build his app “Isaac” (his entry to the competition). Isaac is what we would call today a chatbot….in 2005, chatbots weren’t a thing….and building one with some basic machine learning running in the background was enough to grant him the winning Prize. Patrick moves to the US to attend MIT (2007)After winning the competition, Patrick was admitted to MIT at 17, 1.5 years before finishing high school. Moving back to Ireland Getting into YC and moving to Silicon Valley Even though Patrick was 17 and John was only 15, they got accepted into the fourth ever batch of YC (W07). The only reason Patrick and John, two teenagers from rural Ireland knew anything about YC was because of Patrick’s involvement with Lisp during his science competition the year prior. Their app “Shuppa” merged with another YC company as soon as they joined. The combined company was named Auctomatic, and the brothers got back to working hard. Auctomatic and becoming teen millionaires (March 2008)The ambition for Auctomatic was to build the next eBay. Still, they started off with tools that help individual sellers on sites such as eBay, Amazon, Overstock, and others manage their listings. In 2008 eBay was all the rave and within a few months of launching, the Auctomatic team got their first acquisition offer. They were young and naive and thought they “had a much larger vision,” so they didn’t entertain it, but over the next 3 months, they got 4-5 more offers and the teens caved in (I guess everyone has a price). They sold the company 11 months in for $5m 🤑.According to media Gossip from 2008, each of the Collison brothers netted around $1.2m from that deal and overnight became self-made teen millionaires. The return to normal In case you weren’t already feeling bad about yourself (I know I was), let me remind you that John Collison became a millionaire at 15 during his gap year and went back to Ireland to *start* his high school. Patrick, on the other hand, moved to 🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦 to work as the Director of Engineering at “Live Current Media” the public company that acquired Auctomatic. Patrick spent a year in Canada (maybe that was a part of the deal…maybe not…we will never know 🥴). After the year ended, Patrick decided to re-enroll at MIT and officially start his second year. Since he joined the university 1.5 years younger than everyone else…he figured he wasn’t in a real rush to graduate. Stripe…the first lines of code (October 2009)So at the age of 19, after going to MIT, then back to Ireland, then to SF, then to Canada, and finally back to MIT (gotta respect the hustle), Patrick started working on the first version of Stripe. To be fair, though, he was working on SO MANY DIFFERENT THINGS at that time. After going through the rollercoaster of founding and selling a company in less than a year and encountering a sort of normalcy of being a student, the guy just had to tinker away….I guess MIT was too boring for him. Hacking away at Buenos Aires - Winter Break (Jan 2010)In a parallel universe, John completed his high school back in Ireland and received the highest score ever in the country's history. It should come as no surprise that John got admitted into Harvard, and so the duo were both in the US doing boring school stuff and primed for round 2 of building a company together🥂. Leading up to the Winter break, the Collison brothers applied and got into YC (again) and officially received their funding of 20k-30k by January 2010. Instead of going through the program…they decided they wanted to "hack at it" away from all distractions in the beautiful city of Buenos Aires @ Argentina. Getting their first user Bear in mind, Patrick and John, despite their very young success, still had no freakin clue how the financial industry worked…what they knew was how to code. So what they did was … lie (is it lying if no one asks, though ? ). There was no “financial infrastructure” in any way for the first two years of Stripe. Patrick had a friend working at a payments gateway company…the company’s API was pretty horrific to set up and deal with. So Patrick and John created a set of APIs that were a lot easier to use; he abstracted the whole thing to 7 lines of code that any developer could copy-paste in under 1 minute. On the backend, when someone signed up to Stripe, Patrick called up his buddy, gave him the details and his buddy set up a merchant account for that user. Stripe just turned those 🤮 APIs …into something a bit more comprehensible and faster to implement. It wasn’t a payments company or anything at the time. The first customer of Stripe was a friend of Patrick and John from the early YC days, “Ross Boucher.” Ross was the founder of a Web software development company named 280 North. He also became the first employee at Stripe. In my book, it’s a pretty darn good signal when your first customer leaves their company to join yours after only trying the beta version of your half-baked product.
Getting the first 20 users. The subsequent 20 users followed suit...all were other YC companies. There are many arguments about whether you should recruit your first users out of people you know (and risk getting sugar-coated feedback) or recruit people you don’t know (who are just a lot harder to find.) Not only did Stripe lean into people they knew….they were also extremely aggressive about it. As Paul Graham outlined in his essay Do Things that Don’t Scale
The next 50-100 customers. Despite their initial success and raising some money from YC…both John and Patrick went back to school to finish off their sophomore and freshman year, respectively. They looked at Stripe as a side project and it wasn’t until six months after they acquired their first customer that they had enough conviction to pursue this full-time and drop out (yet again).
As the summer started reigning in and the Collison brothers took Stripe more seriously, they did a few things to begin acquiring customers outside the YC circle.
Raising money and actually building the product. By the end of the summer, Stripe accumulated around 1000 signups to their waitlist. It's not clear how many of those were in the beta, given that Stripe had no financial infrastructure. If I am to bet my life on it, I would say something like 50-150 users. After the summer of '09 concluded, John and Patrick decided to go full time on Stripe. They raised $2m from whose who in the tech circles… that includes A16z, Sequoia, Elon Musk, and Peter Thiel. Patrick attributed much of their ability to raise this money to Paul Graham, who facilitated many of these intros and was a grand champion of the company. Over the following 14 months, the team laid low and went full-on building mode. They got the appropriate partnerships in place, dealt with regulatory requirements ..etc..etc On September 29th, 2011….Stripe finally launched to the public. Getting Customers Post LaunchIn the post-launch era, Patrick and the team started pouring more energy into acquisition:
Until we meet next week, |
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