Lenny's PodcastHow to price your product | Naomi Ionita (Menlo Ventures)
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
105 min read · 21,144 words- 0:00 – 6:21
Naomi’s background
- NINaomi Ionita
Do not set it and forget it. I see companies do this where they labor over designs and features, and they build this perfect product that's delightful to use, and then pricing sort of plucked out of thin air, and then they don't revisit it. This was Evernote. It was many, many years before we went back and, and overhauled the pricing. So think about your pricing just like you do your roadmap. So every six to 12 months, there's probably something meaningful that you're launching for users, so treat that as an opportunity to revisit your monetization strategy and making sure you're compensated appropriately.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(instrumental music) Welcome to Lenny's Podcast. I'm Lenny, and my goal here is to help you get better at the craft of building and growing products. Today my guest is Naomi Ianita. Naomi was one of the first early leaders in product-led growth and monetization, having built early teams and infrastructure over a decade ago at Evernote. She was also an early contributor to Reforge when it was just getting started and helped create some of their early programs. She was also VP of growth at Invoice2Go, and currently she's a full-time VC at Menlo Ventures. In her work as a full-time investor, she gets to see what works and doesn't work across many companies, and one area that she spends a lot of time on is monetization, when it's best to start charging for your product, how to decide what to charge, and how to evolve your pricing. And that's what we spend the bulk of our conversation around. We also touch on a really interesting framework Naomi has been developing that she calls the modern growth stack, which is essentially all the areas that new startup products can help take load off your plate and help your product grow. Naomi is awesome, and I'm excited to share this episode with you. With that, I bring you Naomi Ianita right after a word from our wonderful sponsors. Today's episode is brought to you by Miro. Creating a product, especially one that your users can't live without, is damn hard, but it's made easier by working closely with your colleagues to capture ideas, get feedback, and being able to iterate quickly. That's where Miro comes in. Miro is an online visual whiteboard that's designed specifically for teams like yours. I actually used Miro to come up with the plan for this very ad. With Miro, you can build out your product strategy by brainstorming with sticky notes, comments, live reactions, voting tools, even a timer to keep your team on track. You can also bring your whole distributed team together around wireframes, where anyone can draw their own ideas with the pen tool or put their own images or mockups right into the Miro board. And with one of Miro's ready-made templates, you can go from discovery and research to product roadmaps to customer journey flows to final mocks. Want to see how I use Miro? Head on over to my Miro board at miro.com/lenny to see my most popular podcast episodes, my favorite Miro templates. You can also leave feedback on this podcast episode and more. That's m-i-r-o.com/lenny. This episode is brought to you by Notion. If you haven't heard of Notion, where have you been? I use Notion to coordinate this very podcast, including my content calendar, my sponsors, and prepping guests for launch of each episode. Notion is an all-in-one team collaboration tool that combines note-taking, document sharing, wikis, project management, and much more into one space that's simple, powerful, and beautifully designed. And not only does it allow you to be more efficient in your work life, but you can easily transition to using it in your personal life, which is another feature that truly sets Notion apart. The other day, I started a home project and immediately opened up Notion to help me organize it all. Learn more and get started for free at notion.com/lennyspod. Take the first step towards an organized, happy team today, again, at notion.com/lennyspod. Naomi, welcome to the podcast.
- NINaomi Ionita
Thank you.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Did you know that you're one of the very few VC that I've ever had on this podcast? And so you're basically representing VC kind here. How do you feel about that?
- NINaomi Ionita
Wow. Well, um, thank you. I'm... You know, I think early growth folks like us have a unique bond and a lens on startups and investing, so my operating background is something I lean on every day and has actually informed a lot of the thesis, thesis areas where I spend time now as an investor, so, um, hopefully we'll bring it all together in that capacity.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Awesome. That's exactly what I was just gonna say, so I'm glad that you covered that. And so that's a good segue just to, let's get into your background briefly. Can you talk about some of the wonderful things that you've done in your career, both at Reforge, which you'll touch on, and growth stuff and then your VC life now?
- NINaomi Ionita
Perfect. So I'm a partner at Menlo Ventures. I focus on early stage SaaS from seed to series B. I started my career in engineering and consulting before getting into tech back in '06. Fell in love with product, did some new product development at a big media company before business school, and while at business school, I spent time at the Design Institute at Stanford. So this was an opportunity to kind of bridge my analytical background with this refreshing view on human-centered design and, and learning from the founder of IDEO. So brought that with me, then to Evernote back in 2011, early days over there. It was there from about 10 to 100 million users. And over that arc, I shifted from more of a core product role to starting our growth product function. This was super organic. I started just collaborating with colleagues from across the business, come up with hypotheses, do user research, run experiments, drive metrics. This was a new way of building product back then. This was, um, a decade ago, so the acronym PLG had not been coined yet, and I, uh, really just thought of myself as a user and data-driven product person. After Evernote, I joined a bootstrapped mobile SMB company called Invoice2Go. It was the top grossing business app at the time. There, I built teams across product, data, growth engineering, design, and research, and again, focused on product-led growth and monetization. Over those two jobs, I found myself doing a lot more advising and speaking on the side on these topics, and my board members used to farm me out to their companies to help their founders think through things around product growth and, and pricing and, and various topics like that.And Reforge came together at, at the same time, so I would come in and, and speak on, on topics through that community. So, that really accelerated my transition into venture. I, uh, realized how much I love having that portfolio view of the world and helping founders look around corners, so I think it's an incredible privilege
- 6:21 – 8:06
Why Evernote wasn’t able to leverage the kind of growth that Notion did
- NINaomi Ionita
to get to do the work that I do.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
One thing, uh, you mentioned is Evernote. I don't know how much you can talk about this, but they just got sold, right? Someone bought Evernote. And if I think back to Evernote, it feels like they could have been Notion, which is killing it right now.
- NINaomi Ionita
(laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Any, any thoughts on what maybe they missed and didn't turn into Notion along the way?
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah. Uh, we're gonna clear some cobwebs here. Um, it's been a while, but one challenge Evernote really struggled with was this evolution from single player to multi-player, to team, to enterprise. It's a chasm that a lot of bottom ups ass businesses struggle to cross. Evernote was philosophically antisocial. You know, it was meant to be your second brain, kind of your personal tool. And I think that capped the company's growth potential. You know, I always used to say, "You can't retrofit collaboration. You have to be collaboration first." And a lot of companies now really take that for granted. But back in mid-2000s, this was kind of a new way of building product. And so we missed that bridge. If companies do that well, it benefits every metric. That bridge from single player to multi-player. You know, acquisition goes up, you grow organically through referrals and shared workflows. Retention goes up because now you have these shared workflows that are incredibly sticky. You know, employees are accountable to each other to say, "This is how work gets done," like design in Figma, you know, roadmap planning and ticketing in, like, Jira or Linear. It just becomes the default platform. And monetization goes up, right? You know, revenue scales with usage. And so the more people using it, the more they use it, you start tripping the wire on paying more and more over time. And so Evernote really struggled in crossing that chasm from the prosumer tool of choice that employees wall-to-wall were using, but never became this larger, you know, high ACV contract from a, a sales
- 8:06 – 12:34
What founders get wrong when it comes to monetization
- NINaomi Ionita
perspective.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah. It's always easy in hindsight to see what could have been better or could have worked out, but didn't work out. So what are you gonna do? So you-
- NINaomi Ionita
(laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... you mentioned monetization, and I know that you spent a lot of time with founders working on pricing, monetization, especially using monetization as a lever for growth. And so I want to spend some time there to kind of pick your brain about what founders and growth teams can do and how they should think about monetization in terms of growth. And then-
- NINaomi Ionita
Perfect.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... and then you also have this cool concept that you've been developing that you call the modern growth stack, which is kind of this play on modern data stack, and so I want to spend some time there.
- NINaomi Ionita
Perfect.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Cool. So, to dive into that first topic of monetization, if you think about when you're starting a company, what are some of the biggest challenges you face? Start building a product, especially a B2B product. I always think about pricing and trying to figure out how much to charge, how to charge, your pricing model, how to evolve your pricing, when to charge, all these things. And so I know that you work with founders helping them figure these sorts of things out. And so maybe our first question here is just what do you find startups most often miss or get wrong when they're starting to think about monetization?
- NINaomi Ionita
There's a lot to cover here. I'll, I'll cover, um, a few missteps that I think are most common. One is, uh, waiting too long to monetize. Another one is underpricing, and this isn't just setting the base price too low, but it's also leaving money on the table by not offering different plans to cater to different segments. And the third one is all too often with pricing, people set it and forget it. So this idea that when your product development work is never done, neither is your pricing, and you need to combat that along the way. So, uh, those are three areas I, I think we can cover here. Maybe starting with one, I can jump right in. I think, um, waiting too long to monetize. So, the beginning of a startup's journey is all about creating something of value, right? That's, that's the whole, the whole point. Hopefully founders have some unique market insight or some, you know, authenticity around a pain point and some novel solution that's gonna change the world. So that business value is really critical. But the other side of the same coin is being properly compensated for that value as a business. So, I understand the vulnerability of being a new startup. You just want people to use your product, and I view that, you know, early kind of free beta user feedback loop as an R&D cost to make sure you're building the best possible product and that they're deriving a lot of value. But I see companies way too long to make that shift from building a product to building a business, and I think that's the true signal of product market fit is ultimately having people open up their wallets and pay you. So looking for people to get to that, to that end goal. And so again, like these things aren't mutually exclusive. You're gonna create business value, but you're gonna be compensated for it and prioritize your roadmap over time so that you're building based on what people actually want and are willing to pay you for. So when you don't monetize, I think you're doing yourself a disservice. The, the things that I see is, you know, the, the pain of leaving money on the table, you're inadvertently cheapening your product. People attribute a lower dollar value or a zero dollar value to what you've built. You're missing out on critical feedback loops to understand what people are willing to pay, and you're shooting your future self in the foot because this is the other problem is at some point you're gonna start charging and you're gonna experience some backlash. So it's nice to get ahead of that. So a few, a few things to think about and a food for thought around delaying and sort of kicking the can down the road from a monetization standpoint.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
So just to reinforce that, your general piece of advice is if you're building a B2B product, start charging immediately. Don't give it away for free. At least have some... Like, you can probably give it away for free, but make it clear, "We're gonna charge you this much soon." How do you, how do you think about that?
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah. I don't think those are mutually exclusive.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- NINaomi Ionita
So this isn't to say that I don't like freemium models. Evernote was the darling of freemium over a decade ago. So I'm, I'm still a, a big believer in that. It's more a question of where you put the paywall. How much do you give up for free? And then how do you price and package a paid version of your product? So freemium is all about getting that top of funnel excitement, getting people to build habit formation.You're collapsing time to value, you're building habit formation, you're building all these champions to use your product. But the idea is to shepherd them along into a paid version of your product and to, again, like not delay the idea of, like, what should our premium features even be? What should that paid plan even look like? Again, going back to the misstep at Evernote, I think, uh, there was always a premium plan, but it, it didn't really bridge into enterprise, so we can
- 12:34 – 13:22
Which features to include in a freemium product
- NINaomi Ionita
talk more about that.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
This is kind of a tangent I know, 'cause you have, um, these two other pieces of underpricing and setting it and forgetting it, been talked about, but do you have any advice for deciding what goes into- into freemium and what-
- NINaomi Ionita
If it gets you through the aha moment, like that- that path to habit formation, that has to be free. That's the core utility of your product. And so the idea is that in that first session or first day someone's getting to see the delight and saying, "Oh my God, I'm not, I'm never going back to the old way. This is how X gets done." If you're looking for some virality or network effect, that's the other thing. Your free users you might not be getting revenue from, but the idea is that they help you manage CAC. So these are folks that are driving organic growth for you and, and helping reduce the incremental cost of, of your next set of users. So that's another part of the math equation to think about in, um,
- 13:22 – 15:35
Day one vs. day one-hundred premium features
- NINaomi Ionita
sort of giving up revenue.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
You also have this model that you didn't mention, that you mentioned in a previous chat we were having offline of this idea of day one versus day 100. Like stuff people need on day one versus what they need down the road. Do you still believe in that and what should people know about that?
- NINaomi Ionita
I do believe in that. That was tied to... We had done this experiment at my last company, Invoice2Go, where, um, you know, typically on the demand curve, the higher you raise the price, so average revenue per user, ARPU, the, um, lower the conversion rate. So these things are inversely correlated. And we were able to do this rebalancing of our pricing and packaging so that we actually doubled our upgrade rate from our starter plan to our pro plan while also increasing the price of the pro plan. So to actually get twice as many people to upgrade while paying something like 30% more for that new plan is pretty rare to get the compounding benefits of that. And what we did was thought a lot about what is a day one premium feature. What is a premium feature that you can get value from the very first time you engage with a product? That's different than your day 100 features. Those are the ones that represent more advanced functionality, maybe they're ones where the value is derived from having a certain scale of data in the platform, and so those you shouldn't waste cognitive load for your users to have to even understand or try to appreciate when they're first getting going. Push those into a more advanced pro version of your product and monetize them down the road through an upsell. So big believer in how do you really keep pricing simple, and we've all seen those SaaS pricing pages where there's a laundry list or just like a gnarly matrix of features and functionality. So do what you can to think about that journey for a user and how they're gonna continue to increase value with your product over time and how you can map your pricing and packaging against that journey.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I really like that framework because it's so straightforward and simple. Like, hm, as you use it, you'll need more enterprise features innately because you're sharing it more widely. Your head of security is gonna be like, "What are you doing with this thing?" Your finance team is gonna be like, "Oh, how do we pay for this thing?" And so that's a really nice simple way of thinking about what to put in freemium, in your free plan versus not. So glad we touched
- 15:35 – 18:50
Matching price to value for optimal segmentation
- LRLenny Rachitsky
on that.
- NINaomi Ionita
Great.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Okay. So we were going through the three things that companies and founders do wrong when they're starting to price. And so the first you said was they go too late. And I've tangentized us-
- NINaomi Ionita
(laughs) .
- LRLenny Rachitsky
And so I'll give it back to you-
- NINaomi Ionita
Undercharging.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... to keep going through this.
- NINaomi Ionita
This is, this is by far the most common issue, and so one framework I like to use here is matching price to value. So when you do that, you create alignment with your user. So this entails picking the right value metric. So this is the unit of value that, you know, they derive from using your product, and it creates this natural escalator because as people use it more, you get paid more over time. So SaaS was historically built on a seat-based model. That's been sort of historical SaaS pricing, and now with the rise of PLG we've seen more of these usage-based approaches, uh, gaining speed. So that's pretty, pretty exciting to see. So whether it's number of API calls or messages sent or terabytes of storage used or words written, this usage-based approach really matches price to value over the lifetime of a customer. The other thing that happens when you match price to value is it helps you understand who you're building for and it lets you target different customer segments. So in doing that you're able to better serve each segment, but you're also able to maximize revenue for the business. Evernote always had a business model from, from its beginning. It had a $45 a year for an annual subscription and this set the foundation for the company and tens of millions in revenue, you know, early revenue growth. But the approach was suboptimal. So as a growth team, we started doing surveys. I was really curious to understand why people converted from our free version to our premium subscription and one of the most popular answers without fail was, um, "Well, I just feel guilty. I use it so much, I get so much value from it that I just feel obligated to pay." And like, take that in for a second because if guilt is one of the main reasons why people are paying you, then your free version is too good and you are leaving money on the table. So a single premium tier is often a mistake and you're gonna be leaving money on the table for specific segments and it's important to drill down and understand who those are. So our additional research helped us understand that brand new users with low perceived value of Evernote looked at it like their Apple Notepad app that was, you know, pre-installed on their device. And so they couldn't understand the idea of paying $45 for- for Evernote. But then we talked to avid users and these were people that were cross client, using it on desktop and mobile, you know, every device they had. They were using it for work and personal.They were leveraging OCR capabilities and the Web Clipper, and it was truly their second brain. They could not imagine life without it. And these people were floored that they were only paying $45 a year. They told us that they were getting hundreds of dollars of value from Evernote. So here the perceived value for avid users was far outpacing what we were asking from them, and, um, this intuition and research really led to a bifurcated strategy of having different plans for different personas based on what they actually, you know, the value they got from the product and, and the willingness to pay.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
That makes sense. When I heard you say that it cost $45 for a year, that sounds way too
- 18:50 – 19:38
When pricing should be revisited
- LRLenny Rachitsky
low. (laughs) And so I could see how that sets the, like, the pattern for Evernote just not making enough money-
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah. Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... over the long term. Cool. And then third was that you don't, uh, evolve your pricing, right?
- NINaomi Ionita
Yes.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
That's, like, the third biggest mistake.
- NINaomi Ionita
Yes. So do not set it and forget it. I see companies do this where they labor over designs and features, and they build this perfect product that's delightful to use and then pricing sort of plucked out of thin air, and then they don't revisit it. This was Evernote. It was many, many years before we went back and, and overhauled the pricing. So think about your pricing just like you do your roadmap. So every six to 12 months, there's probably something meaningful that you're launching for users. So treat that as an opportunity to revisit your monetization strategy and making sure you're compensated appropriately.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
What advice do you have for founders around just, like, how to decide on your initial price?
- 19:38 – 23:06
How to determine price, and why it’s a good idea to have a cross-functional pricing team
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Clearly Evernote didn't get that correct, and I'm sure you've learned a lot from that and then other companies you've worked with. How do you actually decide what to start charging?
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah. There's a full pricing process here, so I'm, I'm happy to walk through it. So the, the idea here is understanding-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Let's do it.
- NINaomi Ionita
... who your customers are, why they pay you, what is it that they want or value, and how much are they willing to pay you. I'd encourage you to put together a, um, pricing committee. This is not a single threaded exercise that lives in one department or another. This very much is a cross-functional exercise. If you are a PLG company, like companies I worked at, this was the project growth org that I ran, so it's a combination of PMs and data scientists, folks like that, to iterate on pricing. If you are an enterprise SaaS business, of course sales and, and finance and rev ops play a role. So think about who that committee should be at your company and commit to being that cross-functional team that really owns and, and, and iterates on pricing over time. Then they are responsible for talking to customers. This is, like, by far and away the, the most basic thing you can do to just increase those feedback loops and understand how much you can push the envelope on pricing. You do that with surveys, with interviews. There's some questions that we like to use around understanding the relative prioritization of features. Going back to that laundry list of, of features and, and kind of matrices on a pricing page, it's very rare that people convert, you know, equally across all of those features. There's typically one or two that are the main carrots for conversion, so it's good for you to understand the relative rank there and how to reconcile some of your pricing and packaging accordingly. So we would make a list of our features that we had and maybe new things we wanted to build and have people rank them as a must-have, nice-to-have, or not necessary that help us understand the relative prioritization. You can also get at it with, like, a 100-point question where you give users 100 points and say, "Spend them across these different features," and the more points you give a feature, the more value you're assigning to it. This is to get to, like, the demand for the, the features and functionality that you've created. So that's sort of first, step one, is understanding, like, what people will actually want and, and making sure that, you know, they're not just saying everything but the kitchen sink, but they're actually getting a good sense for what's most important to them. And then the other side is understanding their willingness to pay. I'd say the easiest on-ramps here for companies to start digging into that is to use Van Westendorp's method here. I don't know if, uh, you're familiar with that. You're nodding a little bit.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- NINaomi Ionita
But, um...
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah, yeah. Comes up, comes up a bunch on this podcast.
- NINaomi Ionita
Oh, great. So I'll... I might be repeating myself here, but...
- LRLenny Rachitsky
No, this is great.
- NINaomi Ionita
It-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
This is how we learn-
- NINaomi Ionita
(laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... if we hear it again. And, yeah. Please talk about it.
- NINaomi Ionita
If you take the, the packages that users designated as, um, nice-to-have and must-have and you, you make that collection of, of features in the survey. Then ask them, what's such a cheap price that you start to question the quality of the product? Ask them what's a good deal or sounds like the right price for this package. Ask them what's expensive, but they would still pay. So you're starting to get to that, you know, level of, of discomfort. And then ultimately, what's, uh, prohibitively expensive? What would people just say, "Okay, that's it. You've, you've crossed the line of how much I'm, I'm willing to pay here." And by plotting those four curves, you start to get a sense of how to inform your pricing. That's a great way to marry the questions around demand, and then the questions around willingness to pay.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Awesome. I wish that survey name was simpler to say, 'cause I can never remember (clears throat) exactly to pronounce it, but you got it.
- NINaomi Ionita
(laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
So Van Westendorp. Okay. This time-
- NINaomi Ionita
You got it.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
So say that you got a price. You launch with something. How do you think about
- 23:06 – 25:58
How to restructure pricing holistically
- LRLenny Rachitsky
and how do you suggest folks experiment with pricing changes? And then just what impact have you seen from making a pricing change, either in terms of revenue or growth? What kind of... 'Cause I know you work with a lot of startups on these sorts of things, so I'm curious-
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... what's like... Like, how big of an impact can you see from pricing changes?
- NINaomi Ionita
Oh, it can be huge. Our friends at OpenView do a really good job of pumping out content and doing these great, you know, sort of SaaS benchmarking surveys. So they did something recently that showed that roughly half of companies that instituted a pricing change saw at least a 25% increase in ARR. So that's a pretty massive step function improvement in your revenue from something that doesn't require massive technological overhaul.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah.
- NINaomi Ionita
I find that most companies regret not doing it sooner. ProfitWell is another group that I've, I have friends at and I have a lot of respect for them and the content that they've put out. They did a survey once on, I think it was over 500 SaaS companies, and they looked at for a 1% improvement on acquisition, retention, and monetization, how did it impact a company's bottom line? And they found that the impact with an improvement on monetization was 4X that of acquisition. So this idea of, like, how can you efficiently improve your business? Monetization is really underappreciated as a growth lever.So, definitely something people should be thinking about. That's part of my goal of doing this podcast, is making sure founders are, are compensated in a way that they deserve. So, um, let's hope everyone makes a little more money after today.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(laughs)
- NINaomi Ionita
And I've seen, I've seen a lift upwards of 10X on revenue, but it's, it's sometimes hard to parse just the pricing change-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Wow.
- NINaomi Ionita
... 'cause usually it can be coupled with big product changes, a rebrand, a lot of PR. You know, the launch of a new plan, like a team or an enterprise plan. So, um, it's hard to sometimes understand the, the, just the pricing change in isolation, but it really can be pivotal for a company.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
And when you think through the pricing change is that you've seen, is the impact often from raising the price just broadly? Is it like segmenting more intelligently? Is it changing freemium versus paid? Is there like a bucket you think of like here's generally where the biggest impact ends up being?
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah. It comes from doing it holistically. I think it's, it's very rarely as impactful if you just, you know, pick a, pick a new price or, um, just, just launch a new plan. I really think of it as rebalancing pricing and packaging overall. So it's doing this whole exercise of understanding what people actually want, what their willingness to pay is, and mapping it to that user journey like we talked about from single player mode to multiplayer. You know, that first other person you connect with and have a workflow with, spreading it to your whole teams, and ultimately spreading it wall-to-wall across an organization. So it's, it's a longitudinal view of the user life cycle and thinking about your whole business model holistically.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I don't know if you can talk about any of these, but is there a company or an example that comes to mind where you did a pricing
- 25:58 – 28:39
How Envoy learned that they were undercharging
- LRLenny Rachitsky
change and just talking about what they changed just to make this even more concrete?
- NINaomi Ionita
I have a specific story there with one of our companies, Envoy.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- NINaomi Ionita
This is, this is a fun one. So he was just getting started. This is Envoy, the visitor registration tool that I'm sure a lot of people have used, uh, you know, especially before COVID.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Probably mostly in SF. So I imagine folks in other countries don't know about it, maybe describe it.
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah. So it is, um, if you visit an office, instead of just signing into that, you know, piece of paper in the lobby with your, your name and your email address and what time you checked in, it is a digital kind of iPad-based way of checking in and, and sharing information with the, the person you're visiting. And so in talking to Larry and, and getting a feel for how he, uh, sort of his evolution around pricing, he, he tells a story that I love. So he was, uh, meeting with a big hospitality company and the conversation was going really well. This, this pros- prospect was really leaning in and excited about, about using Envoy. And the conversation shifted to pricing. So in that moment, because Larry was feeling some good vibes, he decided to 10X the price that he was typically charging people. So just in the moment, he decided just go for it, go out on a limb and, and ask for a 10X the typical price. And in that moment, the exec said, "Okay, sure. Sounds good." Like not, not a minute of hesitation, not a second of hesitation. And what he learned in that moment was that, one, he was wildly underpriced. It was, it was very clear that he hadn't even thought about what the ceiling was. But the truth was he probably could have pushed it even further, considering there was no hesitation. So what I encourage users to do in, um, especially in like these enterprise conversations, is to continue to ask for more, to understand where the upper bound might be and to understand that it's okay sometimes to lose some deals due to price. Something on the order of 20 to 30% is, is reasonable, so that you can get a sense for where, where the limit might be. The vast majority of companies are, are definitely undercharging, like we discussed. So go out on a limb like Larry at Envoy and, um, you can see that sometimes you can 2X, 4X, even 10X your price.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
That's an awesome story and it touches on exactly what you said, where people often underprice. I imagine it's strategically smarter not to go straight to 10X and maybe go 2 or 3X until people start pushing back 'cause you lose a lot of data there, but that's one way to just zoom to the (laughs) to an answer.
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah. They're all feedback loops, right? So I think there's some incrementality to it, but, um, you gotta understand who these different segments are and if you don't have enough data points, it's hard to really understand how to continue to optimize.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Any other tips that you wanna leave listeners with around pricing or monetization
- 28:39 – 32:19
The importance of experimentation
- LRLenny Rachitsky
or even testing pricing? Anything there before we shift to our second topic?
- NINaomi Ionita
Yes. So we talked a bit about research methods and different surveys you can do, um, to help inform your pricing. And with enterprise, it's all about continuously asking for more. But if you're a PLG company and you have a public-facing pricing page, I'd encourage you to experiment. This is something people shy away from. And frankly, there haven't historically been great tools for companies and sort of infrastructure to be able to do this work. So at Invoice2Go, we invested very heavily in, um, some internal tooling. We had, uh, a whole metering and SKU management and experimentation system in-house. It was a big growth engineering undertaking. And with that, we tested different value metrics, we tested different quota limits, price points, promotions, you name it. We tracked the consumption of our pay-as-you-go model and, you know, looped that back into the product so we can nudge users along the life cycle to get them to convert or upgrade or renew once quota limits were reached. So, um, there's a lot there. I'm excited about this new wave of, of modern tools to actually help you do this and not sink a bunch of engineering time into building something in-house. So that's something we can talk about in a bit. But that investment was very worthwhile. We had, we had huge revenue gains by being able to iterate in a way that was more streamlined. There's some things to, to watch out for though. It's, it's, it's hard to test pricing. There's a lot of different variables to isolate, so you've gotta make sure you're bringing a consistent test experience to the end product experiment, experience, your pricing page, maybe mobile app stores or life cycle emails that you're sending. One trick you can do is we would segment these tests by geo. So we would do some tests in Canada or Australia before rolling out in the US. That was a nice way to, um, just put some constraints around our experimentation.And the other thing you really have to think about is the long-term nature of pricing experimentation. So knowing if you've succeeded or failed often requires understanding the implications on, um, churn. Let's say part of your test is, like, year one discount. You need to understand how do users perform in year two and have a sense of the trade-offs around user growth, retention, or poo. So all of these things are different levers that you wanna optimize over time.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
(instrumental music) This episode is brought to you by Vanta, helping you streamline your security compliance to accelerate growth. If your business stores any data in the cloud, then you've likely been asked, or you're gonna be asked, about your SOC 2 compliance. SOC 2 is a way to prove your company's taking proper security measures to protect customer data, and builds trust with customers and partners, especially those with serious security requirements. Also, if you wanna sell to the enterprise, proving security is essential. SOC 2 can either open the door for bigger and better deals, or it can put your business on hold. If you don't have a SOC 2, there's a good chance you won't even get a seat at the table. But getting a SOC 2 report can be a huge burden, especially for startups? It's time-consuming, tedious and expensive. Enter Vanta. Over 3,000 fast-growing companies use Vanta to automate up to 90% of the work involved with SOC 2. Vanta can get you ready for security audits in weeks instead of months, less than a third of the time that it usually takes. For a limited time, Lenny's Podcast listeners get $1,000 off Vanta. Just go to vanta.com/lenny. That's V-A-N-T-A.com/lenny to learn more, and to claim your discount. Get started today. There's a question I wanted to ask you, and maybe it's too big of a question to answer simply. But it's this
- 32:19 – 35:12
How to balance growth with revenue
- LRLenny Rachitsky
question you just raised, of trading off revenue versus growth. That's one of the most common trade-offs founders have to make. Do you have any just general thoughts, advice there? Is there one you should generally index on? What have you seen works best? Which kind of direction should you lean, growth or revenue, for a, let's say B2B company, like early stage?
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah. If you know that you have a bridge to move up market, then giving up the long tail of individual users can be very worthwhile. So I think Figma is a great example of that. This is a company that took a while to monetize. And, you know, even having free usage at the individual level, that was the way to just drive insane community and love for this product. You know, designers around the world were just, just fell for this product overnight. But this idea that once they were using it in a more corporate setting, once they were collaborating with more people across the business, they were tripping a wire to paid. And so what happened there was you had this massive top of funnel of individual users, but knowing that design is inherently collaborative, you're interfacing with engineers, you're interfacing with PMs, with marketers, with researchers, with execs. You know, more than half of Figma users weren't even designers, once it was embedded in the enterprise. And so this idea of these compounded gross loops that you got by interfacing with so many different parts of the company and, and making design truly collaborative and in the browser, um, they were able to just have this exponential curve on, on monetization once they shifted into more of a, a team or, or enterprise-based package. So that's a good example of saying, like, they were willing to trade off on monetizing the individual because they knew that it would be so sticky and would go so wall to wall within a company.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Got it. So your feeling is if it's a multiplayer, PLG-ish product, you probably wanna optimize for growth, don't let it just take over and not go charge as much as you can immediately. Versus, say, like a sales-led B2B enterprise-y product. Maybe their focus on revenue immediately versus making it just feel cheap. Does that about right?
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah. And I think if you do have a few free users, crafting it as more of a sweetheart discount, like more of a year one discount, but, you know, getting paid over time... I mean, again, I am a big believer in having some, some early users being your design partners and really giving you that tight feedback loop to make sure you're building the right product. So it's not that you should really optimize for revenue on, on day one. I mean, it, it is a journey, but I just oftentimes see companies just take too long. Or in Evernote's case, I mean, the free version was just too good. So that's just something to consider where, where to put the paywall and be really, really strategic about that.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Just don't, don't optimize for guilt-
- NINaomi Ionita
(laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... being your pay driver. So you're talking about pricing testing, and I was gonna ask what tools you found that are useful
- 35:12 – 36:45
What is the modern data stack?
- LRLenny Rachitsky
for testing pricing. And that's probably a good segue to talking about the modern growth stack. Would that fit into this concept of modern growth stack, testing your pricing?
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah, let's do it.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Okay, let's do it (laughs) . So just to set it up, there's this term modern data stack that I think it'd be useful for you to explain, 'cause not everyone is aware of that. And you've kind of been thinking more about this adjacent idea of a modern growth stack. So can you just talk about these two things and then-
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... we'll lead to some questions there.
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah. So the modern data stack is basically a collection of cloud-native tools to more easily move and manage data. It consists of a fully managed ELT data pipeline, a destination for that data, so a cloud-based data warehouse like a Snowflake or Redshift, a data transformation tool like DBT, and then finally, a platform for visualization on top so people can, can access the data. This is a... You know, the play on modern data stack was, was very intentional. I think of the modern growth stack, or my core thesis area right now at Menlo, as the evolution of what you do with the data. So these are the workflows that the data enables to drive the business forward for product growth and revenue teams, like I used to run. It's the modern replacement for infrastructure that, uh, you know, teams like mine built or bought. When you're responsible for driving things like activation or monetization or retention, there tends to be a lot of these internal tools that are built, 'cause, uh, you're really powering cross-functional teams to, to do this work. It's not, um...... sort of map easily into legacy departments.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Awesome. And the, the general idea here, right, is there's so many more tools now to help you grow.
- 36:45 – 42:22
The modern growth stack
- LRLenny Rachitsky
With the data stack, there's just all these tools now that make it so much easier to collect data, use data, make decisions off data, and you're finding the same things happening with growth. What are some of the tools that you've found to be super helpful? I know you're invested in some, you're not invested in others.
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
It'd be good to just talk about here's just, like, a bunch of cool tools, and how do they fit together as much as possible to help you grow your startup.
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah, and I wanna reinforce some different themes before I get into some layers of the stack, 'cause I think it's important to, to frame the benefits of, of the modern growth stack. So one is, um, data, two is workflow, and three is impact. So starting with data, the modern growth stack companies really are powered by these smart integrations and the automation that you get as a result. So with this proliferation of SaaS, it's created this need for more data access and interoperability. We've all felt that pain of, of siloed data. Modern growth stack companies leverage reverse ETL companies like Hightouch or Census to break down these silos and help companies, or employees across the, the company access data and be more productive. So that's... There's a big data theme with modern growth stack companies. The other theme that they unlock is around workflow. Uh, here, it's really the enablement of people and process. So rather than employees sitting in their departmental silos, uh, modern growth stack companies build bridges between them. So by unlocking data access, the business side can often self-serve and be more self-sufficient without relying on, uh, an engineer or a data scientist to run queries or stitch together datasets for them. The other thing here is, um, lots of growth work is inherently cross-functional, so the efforts to drive growth requires new tools and collaborative workflows like we're discussing. Without purpose-built software, many teams like mine felt no choice but to build in-house. So we spent sacred hours building and maintaining tooling for experimentation, uh, personalization, billing, monetization. These were resources that could've been reallocated to building proprietary features for the business had we been able to buy something purpose-built. And finally, these products really drive impact. So the idea here is driving hard ROI in the form of cost reduction. So automation means time savings, and oftentimes that can be mapped directly to cost reduction for a company. But they also help product and, and growth and go-to-market teams better engage and monetize customers. So they're driving hard ROI in the form of revenue impact too. I'm really compelled by companies that can drive hard ROI, both across cost savings and revenue generation, and I think that ROI's story is even more compelling now in a softer macroeconomic climate. You just have to be able to continue to retain sales and pricing power, and I think that's derived from, from a strong ROI story like I described. So those are, those are general themes and sort of consistencies across the companies that I get particularly excited about. So happy to talk about a few layers in the stack, and I think you might be familiar with a few of these as well, um, especially based on your growth background at Airbnb and-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah.
- NINaomi Ionita
... tools they-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah, let's-
- NINaomi Ionita
... use, you probably built yourself.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah, exactly. That's what I was gonna say, that so many of these things are just coming out of startups that have built these in-house, and then they're just like, "Hey, I could start a company doing this and provide it to all these other companies." And so, I just love that there's all these tools coming out that just make it easier to build startups, and grow startups, and do less work, and have less people. It just reminds me of the number one app in the App Store at this point, I don't know if it still is, Gas, which, uh, is, is just, like, four people, and it's bill- it's, like, higher than TikTok and, and, uh, YouTube, and all the things, and Facebook, and it's four people.
- NINaomi Ionita
Yep.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
And so it just shows you the power of what tools can do for you to build new startups and disrupt people that, and companies that have been around for a long time.
- NINaomi Ionita
And you have to help companies do more with less now. There's a lot of, of, you know, frozen budgets, and that's a good way to break through. So I love, I love that these companies can, can do that for the buyer. Um-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- NINaomi Ionita
... so one that's, that's come up a bit and gotten a lot of airtime recently is product-led sales. This idea of companies that serve PLG businesses and harness the power of all that product usage data to inform the customer-facing team around which accounts are most upgradable. It's really free money when you shine a light on an account that nobody was paying attention to and, you know, some, some inside sales team can drive a large account expansion. So I don't know what better ROI you get than that. And, um, there's a bunch of companies that are doing this. Endgame happens to be one that, that I work with. They have customers like Figma, Loom, Calendly. There's other players too. I think Pocus has done a phenomenal job of building content and community to help inform the market around the power of product-led sales. So there's just a lot of goodness about all the players in this space really sort of, uh, waking everyone up to this, this opportunity of, of layering on sales to a product-led motion, and how to maximize revenue along the way.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I'm an investor in both of those actually, and I'm gonna just, in the show notes, note the one I'm an investor in, 'cause I'm investor in a lot of these companies, it turns out, and we've co-invested in a few, so I'm just gonna keep it simple and I'll write in the show notes, "Here's ones I'm an investor in," just to avoid-
- NINaomi Ionita
I love that.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
... ads and disclaimers.
- NINaomi Ionita
Double dipping means you're a believer in the category as well.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I am. I love it. There's so much cool stuff happening there and, and I'm really excited. Yeah.
- NINaomi Ionita
Yep. Cool. I think another layer in the stack is experimentation. So this is really critical infrastructure, in my opinion, for these cross-functional product data growth teams to A/B test hypotheses and understand their impact on the business. How do you
- 42:22 – 42:59
The importance of experimentation in the growth stack
- NINaomi Ionita
know if you make a change in the product or your pricing whether you succeeded or failed without having infrastructure like this along the way? Category creators like Optimizely really paved the way. I was a, an early buyer of, of Optimizely, and they targeted marketing personas, and it was just game-changing to be able to start to-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Hmm.
- NINaomi Ionita
... A/B test things and bring hypotheses to life.I'm also biased as an investor, but some of the modern tools here like Epbo, which offers experimentation for the modern data stack. So unlike Optimizely, which focused on more kind of click-through metrics, Epbo ties directly to the metrics in your data warehouse.
- 42:59 – 46:13
Platforms for billing and monetization
- NINaomi Ionita
So tying an experiment result to things like subscriptions or revenue or margins, um, really like, you know, board level metrics that you're trying to move. They make that full trip really convenient and understand the impact on those business KPIs directly. So it's a lot of automation around the experimentation results and analysis that used to live off to the side in Excel or, or Jupyter Notebooks now is automated away with Epbo. Um, I think you're familiar-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Awesome.
- NINaomi Ionita
... with, with them.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Yeah, I am. Uh, I know, we definitely didn't plan this, but Epbo's both a happy sponsor of this podcast, I'm also an investor in Epbo. Go Epbo. But this was not planned.
- NINaomi Ionita
Well, this is Airbnb roots.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Love it. It is, yeah.
- NINaomi Ionita
Chet Barse-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
That's my colleague.
- NINaomi Ionita
... the founder of Epbo, was an early data scientist at Airbnb, so I'm-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Exactly.
- NINaomi Ionita
... sure-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I worked with him at Airbnb and he was amazing and I had to invest in anything that he built. He built an awesome thing.
- NINaomi Ionita
Yeah.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
So yeah.
- NINaomi Ionita
Exactly like you described. I love these founders that have steep authenticity around the problem 'cause they built it internally and now they're commercializing it for the masses. And so the story of Chet and Epbo is a good one on that dimension. And there's other players too. You know, I'm a, I'm also a big fan of Amplitude, uh, been a buyer of that tool as well and I love a lot of the team there. So if you do not have a data team or a data warehouse and you still wanna leverage, you know, being able to do behavioral kind of ad hoc analysis or experimentation, that's a great tool for you as well. So a lot of different ways to solve this problem in the market.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Also, a happy sponsor, Go Amplitude.
- NINaomi Ionita
(laughs) Cool.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I love it. This is great. Hitting on all my favorites. Okay, let's keep going. (laughs) What else, what else we got?
- NINaomi Ionita
Well, I talked a lot about billing and, and monetization, so I'd, I'd have to talk about that one. I think, uh, platforms for managing billing and iterating on your pricing and packaging, this is just such a big need. I think these will transform business models for SaaS in particular. Most companies have been seat-based like we described, so, uh, you know, the, the historical incumbents like a Chargebee or a Zuora really serve that model. But, um, in the shift to more usage-based, there's new entrants that are, that are servicing companies in that dimension. And there's also lots of, um, sort of clunky workflows when you think of bridging from engineering to product and growth to, to finance or rev ops. So there's a lot of just like streamlined workflow that, that these new tools can offer. Some early breakout players in the world of, um, usage-based billing are, uh, Metronome and Orb. There's also more room to handle the, the full like monetization infra layer. So for example, I like how Orb marries the billing component with the data infrastructure to actually inform what your pricing and packaging iteration should be and help you forecast and, and optimize revenue. So there's, there's other players that are, that are doing different components from this journey of the, you know, the metering piece all the way through to the experimentation piece. And, uh, it's been really, really fun to, to get to know players in that space and I wish I could have been a buyer of them many moons ago.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Not an investor in these yet, so that's cool. Quick tangent. Do you have a strong opinion on pricing models, usage-based versus seed-based for something else? What's your guidance to founders? Like is this the way to go usually one of them or is it super dependent? What do you recommend?
- NINaomi Ionita
Yes. This is
- 46:13 – 49:01
Why a hybrid model of pricing tends to be most used in SaaS companies
- NINaomi Ionita
a, a similar answer I had before. I don't think that they're mutually exclusive.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- NINaomi Ionita
And so if you look at all the companies that, um, you know, in, in different pricing models in SaaS, a small sliver, less than 10%, around roughly 5% have just pure natural escalator kind of usage-based model. The, the vast majority have a hybrid approach. And so what I mean by that is they're typically some good, better, best subscription model where there's some consumption component across each tier, like some quota limit for your given value metric. So in Slack that might have been number of messages sent or Dropbox number of terabytes of storage, Invoice2go might be number of invoices. There's some dimension that's been sort of packaged in with a given pricing plan. And once you reach that limit, it is a trigger to get you to upgrade to the next plan over or sometimes there's overages that you can pay for. So, um, I don't believe that, you know, you should just be seat-based or just be usage-based. I think one challenge with purely usage-based models is that's not always how CFOs wanna buy. I think buyers sometimes want predictability. They wanna be able to budget for your tool. And I've lived that. I remember using tools like Mixpanel and Segmentin and even Jira to an extent where, you know, I was paying a cheap amount to get going and all of a sudden I realized we'd grown quickly and I looked at all of our SaaS spend and I was like blown away by how much more we were paying. So it's the other side of this, you know, I'm, I'm advocating for people getting paid and, you know, compensated for the value that they're delivering, but there can be a breaking point. And so how do you think about packaging a fixed and variable component so that people can more predictably buy your software?
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Any other layers of the stack that you wanna touch on/which would you be most excited about in the future do you think people should be paying more attention to that maybe they're not paying attention to?
- NINaomi Ionita
I mean, I wouldn't be doing my job as a VC if I didn't mention generative AI right now. Um, it's really having a moment. So there's a bunch of breakout applications there that sit within the seam of the, the modern growth stack.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- NINaomi Ionita
When you think of using AI to create images or texts or code or audio or video, these capabilities change the way teams work. So writing a blog or write, writing copy for an ad, SDRs doing their work and kind of outbound sales efforts. There's just a lot of these touch points where it's humans kind of tinkering and iterating and, and laboring over every word. And if the machine, if AI can tell you what's gonna be a more performant version of something, uh, that's a very, very hard ROI exercise there. You save time and hopefully you've, uh, improved your performance across the various, you know, marketing or sales campaign.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Where do you think AI will be the most help on growth, in terms of growth? Do you have a idea there?
- NINaomi Ionita
I think what I described around marketing and sales, just 'cause they really-
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Mm-hmm.
- NINaomi Ionita
... uh, you know, touch the dollars. It can be this ROI
- 49:01 – 49:52
Leveraging AI
- NINaomi Ionita
story around saving time, but also driving revenue. There'll be plenty of really effective examples within things like customer support. I mean, the cost savings potential there is gonna be massive. Um, we'll see what happens in engineering with generating code. I think there's a lot of areas where it's gonna touch the enterprise, but from a modern growth stack standpoint, I think something that's really revenue generating and can point to attributable ROI on that dimension is gonna be pretty relevant to where I'm spending time right now.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I'm excited. Any last thoughts before we get to our very exciting lightning round?
- NINaomi Ionita
I'm happy to hand it over to the lightning round here.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Well, we've reached the very exciting lightning round. (laughs)
- NINaomi Ionita
(laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I'm only gonna have four questions for you. I'm gonna ask them pretty quick, we'll go through 'em fast.
- NINaomi Ionita
Okay.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Whatever comes to mind, no pressure. Question one,
- 49:52 – 53:16
Lightning round
- LRLenny Rachitsky
what are a couple books that you've recommended most to other people?
- NINaomi Ionita
My buddy, Manivann from Simon-Kucher's, wrote a book called Monetizing Innovation. This is a great read. Uh, he and others there have done pricing engagements with hundreds of tech companies, so there's a lot of stories and practical tips there. I often gift that one to founders. So I would, uh... I can't do this whole talk without giving a nod to my friend, Manivann, and his, his bible.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Awesome. I just recorded an episode with Manivann, and so that's a great pick. Question number two, favorite recent movie or TV show that you really enjoy?
- NINaomi Ionita
I have little kids, so, uh, I don't know if, um, if it's gonna be as interesting for, for folks, but we like StoryBots on Netflix. They're these little cartoon characters that answer kids' questions, so people sort of call in and ask questions, and they do a whole episode on, "Why is the sky blue?" Um, "How do airplanes fly? How do I see?" And, uh, I inevitably learn something from, from watching those, so those are very kind of playful and educational shows. Um, I, I clearly need a new... (laughs) A new outline.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
No, those are... I don't know the answer to any of those questions.
- NINaomi Ionita
(laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I need to watch this. Okay, so question three. I'm looking at my notes and I've never asked this question before, so I don't know where this came from, but I love it. Who's been the biggest inspiration to you in your life?
- NINaomi Ionita
Whoo. (laughs)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Uh-huh.
- NINaomi Ionita
I mean, this one's pretty easy for me. Um, it's my parents. They're from South America originally and lived on three different continents before immigrating to the US for graduate school. It's a pretty cliche American dream, but they came here with nothing, just this idea of building a family and taking advantage of the educational and professional opportunities in America. They progressed through school and, and building their career in three different languages with no financial support, no entrenched kind of resources or networks to lean on, and I just can't imagine doing that. Just the stress or, or cognitive load of kind of restarting your life in, in whole new geographies and cultures and languages and, um, and just, you know, betting on yourself and, and figuring it all out along the way. So my drive has always been rooted in their story, and I'm forever indebted to them.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
I need to ask this question more often. That was an amazing answer on the spot. Naomi, we have reached the end of our chat. Two final questions. Where can folks find you online if they wanna learn more, maybe pitch you startup ideas, uh, contact you if they wanna ask you questions, and then finally, how can folks be useful to you?
- NINaomi Ionita
I'm a partner at Menlo Ventures, so you can find more about me and the firm at menlobc.com, or else on LinkedIn or Twitter. My DMs are open.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Amazing. Naomi, thank you so much for being here.
- NINaomi Ionita
My pleasure. I look forward to talking to more folks who are building things across workflow automation, data, AI, and, um, the modern growth stack. So, thank you. It's always a pleasure.
- LRLenny Rachitsky
All right. DMs are coming in as we speak.
- NINaomi Ionita
Thanks, Lenny.
- NANarrator
(instrumental music)
- LRLenny Rachitsky
Thank you so much for listening. If you found this valuable, you can subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Also, please consider giving us a rating or leaving a review, as that really helps other listeners find the podcast. You can find all past episodes or learn more about the show at lennyspodcast.com. See you in the next episode.
Episode duration: 53:16
Install uListen for AI-powered chat & search across the full episode — Get Full Transcript
Transcript of episode xvQadImf568
Get more out of YouTube videos.
High quality summaries for YouTube videos. Accurate transcripts to search & find moments. Powered by ChatGPT & Claude AI.
Add to Chrome