David Sacks - How to Operate a SaaS Startup - [Invest Like the Best, EP. 234]

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My guest today is David Sacks, General Partner at Craft Ventures and founding COO of PayPal. During our conversation, we explore what differentiates Enterprise SaaS from DTC subscriptions, what makes for a magical product launch event, and what key growth metrics David uses to measure success. David has written extensively on his idea of operating cadence, and we explore how that applies to the various functions within an organization. As time goes on, I am more and more impressed at the talent that existed within the original PayPal mafia, and I couldn’t help but ask David to highlight the superpowers for a few of his early partners. This was an incredibly informative conversation with fun threads throughout. Please enjoy my conversation with David Sacks.   For the full show notes, transcript, and links to the best content to learn more, check out the episode page here. ------ This episode is brought to you by Canalyst. Canalyst is the leading destination for public company data and analysis. If you've been scrambling to keep up with the deluge of IPOs and SPACs these days, Canalyst has models on Robinhood, Marqeta, Grab, and everything in between. Learn more and try Canalyst for yourself at canalyst.com/patrick.   ------   This episode is brought to you by Eight Sleep. Eight Sleep's new Pod Pro Cover is the easiest and fastest way to sleep at your perfect temperature. Simply add the Pod Pro Cover to your current mattress and start sleeping as cool as 55°F or as hot as 110°F. To embrace the future of sleep and get $150 off your new mattress go to eightsleep.com/patrick or use code "Patrick".   ------   Invest Like the Best is a property of Colossus, Inc. For more episodes of Invest Like the Best, visit joincolossus.com/episodes.    Stay up to date on all our podcasts by signing up to Colossus Weekly, our quick dive every Sunday highlighting the top business and investing concepts from our podcasts and the best of what we read that week. Sign up here.   Follow us on Twitter: @patrick_oshag | @JoinColossus   Show Notes [00:03:30] - [First question] - Defining what it means when a company can explode [00:05:39] - What it would look like if a company didn’t have what it takes to explode [00:06:17] - Key factors that make for a strong product hook [00:08:51] - Whether or not there has been a divergence at the early stage of B2B investing compared to B2C [00:11:36] - Reasons why products that make people collaborate are always stronger [00:14:14] - Nuances between team subscriptions and team product use [00:15:37] - Describing the burn multiple metric and how it can be applied to companies [00:18:18] - The gross margin problem and issues for businesses in this area writ large [00:22:34] - Common practices amongst sales programs that have and haven’t worked [00:24:22] - What about new founders makes him most excited [00:25:58] - Explaining cadence and why he groups product and marketing as one bucket and sales and finance as another [00:30:44] - The anatomy of a great product launch  [00:32:17] - Ways in which external dependencies can be landmines for growing companies [00:34:06] - Whether or not he’s willingness to invest in a business with regulatory variables [00:36:59] - What he’s seen in company culture that breaks a company as they scale [00:39:55] - Things a founder actually does in order to reign in and tame their culture [00:42:08] - Unique traits of founders who are both investors and operators [00:44:12] - Peter Thiel’s superpower  [00:44:57] - Max Levchin’s superpower [00:45:38] - Elon Musk’s superpower [00:46:07] - Roelof Botha’s superpower [00:47:15] - Reid Hoffman’s superpower  [00:47:43] - Keith Rabois’ superpower  [00:48:41] - What zones of change in the world have his attention writ large [00:51:43] - Why teams want to be pushed and how we can apply that to business [00:55:25] - The kindest thing anyone has ever done for him