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i've used pullrequest a bunch and had great experiences with the product and company.

mostly used it in small companies with 1-2 devs where it helps to get another pair of eyes on it. also, helpful as career development / learning for a junior dev.

happy to answer any questions.


very cool.

how did you settle on the positioning as being for marketplaces?

sounds like this would be useful for any company that has a feed, search or recommendations like any retailer or publisher.


Thanks! Marketplaces have the hardest and most valuable matching problem in search. We target mobile-first marketplaces with unique inventory and mature search systems because if we can solve that, then we can solve any matching.


big fan of flow club here. happy to answer any questions from the user perspective.


How many session do you do per day? Is it for powering through particularly hard work? Do you enjoy the company, or is it more of a discipline thing?


love to see the barriers to building fintech continually coming down.

if it used to be 6-12 months and $500k+ to start issuing cards, what does it look like now with a product like lithic?

would love to hear from any devs who have been building in the card space.


I think “software is eating the world” has evolved into “software is eating barriers to entry.” All these fintech startups are entering a market that software already penetrated years ago--but those first gen tools are clunky, or have so much so much bureaucracy that it’s not cost efficient to work with them. What's interesting about these dev-first fintechs (Stripe, now Lithic) is that they can grow the overall market demand by stripping all that away (and not just extract market share from the first gen software companies).


pry is an awesome product that i use in several companies that i run. feel free to ask me any questions about it.


the instrument is called a crowd SAFE: https://republic.co/learn/investors/crowdsafe

republic is an angellist spinoff: https://republic.co/help/how-is-republic-part-of-a-family-of...


Thanks, that's cool. I see Gumroad capped investments to $1000 once they saw the demand. That's not that interesting. It's great to have the opportunity to invest in private companies. I will keep an eye on it.


a plug: we did a research report on gumroad's financials to give potential investors a deeper look at the company: https://sacra.com/research/gumroad-android-creator-economy/

here are 3 key points:

1. gumroad experienced major covid tailwinds. whereas the company's five-year compound annual growth rate is 37%, it grow 94% from 2019 to 2020. they've been profitable since 2017.

2. gumroad's core customer base is creators making less than $10k/yr. gumroad is best positioned as an entry point for novice creators to start selling quickly and easily online. as creators cross the $10k/yr threshold, they become a churn risk because all-in-one products like kajabi and podia offer a more fully-featured product at the same price.

3. at the campaign's $100m pre-money valuation, gumroad will need to grow 40% yoy for 10 years to return double digit IRR.

check out our report for a full breakdown of financials, competition and more: https://sacra.com/research/gumroad-android-creator-economy/


Sounds like a terrible investment at a $100mm valuation. Probably worth closer to $35mm or $40mm tops.


great timing, doji just launched today too https://twitter.com/ianmendiola/status/1364974427419598851

trydoji.com


Thanks for the link, we'll definitely check them out.


a lot of questions in the discussion on what problem this solves . . . rather than thinking about cartaX as a 'private stock exchange'—which is pretty abstract—i think it's easiest to think of it as a solution to the problem of employee, founder and investor illiquidity in private companies.

problem: let's break down this problem of shareholder illiquidity generally.

- hiring: it's hard for private companies to hire against FAANG because the latter offers liquid stock comp. we created a calculator that shows the impact of this https://sacra.com/research/startup-recurring-liquidity-calcu...

- retention: employees bear the financial burden of illiquid stock because they often have greater liquidity needs than early investors and founders (who are able to take some off the table earlier). employees are the last to get liquidity because they're farthest from the money. check out our report on this https://sacra.com/research/tender-offer-pricing-data/

- admin: i've talked with CFOs who have to deal with one-off requests for secondary sales and it's an admin pain.

solution: companies have taken to running tender offers, often bundled into the latest round of financing. you could say that the tender offer is the incumbent in the 'liquidity solution' space that cartaX is trying to dethrone (though to be clear, carta has its own tender offer product).

what's different about cartaX? 2 things: (1) it has a market dynamic with competitive pricing and (2) T+0 settlement because carta has write access to the cap table.

there are a few important players in the 'liquidity solution' space otherwise that are big players as well:

- angellist recurring transfers: https://angellist.com/blog/recurring-transfers

it doesn't have competitive pricing, but angellist has made it a quick and simple process which puts 1 line item on your cap table (angellist)

- nasdaq private markets: https://www.nasdaq.com/solutions/nasdaq-private-market

companies like asana and coinbase ran auctions via npm. they have market-driven pricing but they do not have T+0 settlement. also, they mainly use npm as a feeder into listing on nasdaq, so they are less incentivized to promote the growth of the private markets generally (contra angellist and carta).

- forge: https://forgeglobal.com/solutions/companies/forge-company-so...

taking more of a services oriented approach as a liquidity solution by working with companies.

for more on this stuff, read https://sacra.com/research/the-privately-traded-company-seco...

the upshot: cartaX is a liquidity solution for private companies, but because the solution comes through a competitive pricing in an auction, it creates this additional risk around not being able to know and control the price. this giving up control is hard for private companies who are used to controlling their cap table, price, scarcity of their stock, etc.


How big of a deal is T+0 settlement?


a new app where you can trade high short interest stocks as a fund

https://sqze.trydoji.com/


If they actually explained what their exit strategy was I would be more inclined to consider investing. But interesting idea.


product is super early so lacking features, but sounds like getting a one pager from the fund creator would be useful?


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