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I Spent 24hrs Working at This $205M Startup

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This is Shane. He's the co-founder and

0:02

CEO of Air, a creative operations

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platform founded in 2017.

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>> Seven years ago, my co-founder Tyler, I

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noticed that every company around the

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globe was becoming a media company,

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creating and scaling a bunch of content.

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And so, we built this company Air to

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help businesses scale the amount of

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images and videos that they work with

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every day.

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>> Think of it as a Dropbox meets frame.io

0:25

meets chatbt. Right now, the company is

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at a turning point. After raising their

0:29

series V of $35 million earlier this

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year, Air has entered go to market fit

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or what Shane calls the second phase of

0:36

building.

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>> We're living through this like 18 to

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24month hellhole where you roll up your

0:41

sleeves and you refine.

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>> They have customers. They know the

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product works, but now it's figuring out

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what actually drives growth and where to

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invest in their salesunnel. But we'll

0:50

get back to that later. Okay. So, we're

0:51

Air and we manage I

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>> You're all good. You're all good. And

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that's me. I'm Payton, a producer on a

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mission to see what it really takes to

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run high growth startups and what

1:01

founders do dayto-day to keep scaling.

1:03

So I spent 12 hours inside air getting a

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front row seat into team meetings,

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product reviews, and how Shane leads the

1:09

company through this critical stage. But

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when I arrived, Shane upped the stakes.

1:13

By the end of the day, I was given one

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job. Pitch the product back to the CEO.

1:23

>> What do you want to do? everything.

1:26

>> Shane ran me through his schedule. My

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day was now packed with back-to-back

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meetings, design reviews, one-on- ones

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with the sales team, all leading up to

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the goal of delivering a full sales

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pitch back to him.

1:36

>> Basically, by the end of today,

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>> okay,

1:38

>> you're going to be able to walk me

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through this deck and give me a sales

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demo of a workspace. And then you're

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coming to the event. So, you're going to

1:46

be smoozing at the event and trying to

1:48

sell some software.

1:50

>> All right. So, I had less than five

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hours to learn the product, pitch the

1:54

product, and try to sell it by the end

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of the night at their social mixer on

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the future of creative work. I feel like

1:59

there's no time.

2:01

>> We'll figure it out. Can you

2:04

do deck demo with Payton at 11:00?

2:08

>> Yeah.

2:08

>> Great. Lovely. Here you go. There's your

2:11

coach.

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>> Okay.

2:12

>> All right. Why don't we give Why don't

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we give Payton the like quick overview

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of the new brand just so she can see it?

2:18

>> Oh, like the brand brand. the brand

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brand.

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>> People didn't love our logo. I think

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>> that's Lou. She walked me through Air's

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rebrand, which was going live in just 2

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weeks.

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>> Here's kind of a summary of what our new

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visual identity will look like. It's all

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very centered on the idea of space to

2:34

breathe, which is kind of trademark

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message.

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>> But the real purpose of this meeting was

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to align with Hector, their brand

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designer, on exactly what needed to be

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done and when to make sure every asset

2:44

was ready for launch.

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>> The thing that's going to take the most

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time is the sales side.

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>> I agree. So that's going to be a work of

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art.

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>> Can you move the rebrand renewal deck

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and expansion deck into planning?

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>> Are you [ __ ] We got to go. Give me

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another meeting.

2:57

>> Hi guys. Thanks for a great meeting.

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>> Lovely.

2:59

>> Can't wait to see the final product.

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>> We've been building this product for 7

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years and we've added so much new

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functionality in the last three. And

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over the last 3 years, we're like

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constantly bolting things on. And so UI2

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gives us the opportunity to like sit

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down, think holistically about the

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experience, and reinvision it from the

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ground up. To explain it simply, Air

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provides search, storage, collaboration,

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feedback, and distribution for its

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users.

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>> This is like a reskinning of the entire

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platform. What do you want? A dare shirt

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or do you want a sweater back?

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>> Yeah.

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>> Okay. Wait, you want me to put it on

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right now?

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>> Correct. Yeah. Yeah. You're becoming a

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salesperson.

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>> Um, okay. I got you an intern for the

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day.

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>> Wow.

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>> All right. All you.

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>> Okay. Well, where are you going?

3:45

>> I got stuff to do.

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We offer you some tin fish, a bone

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broth, hot sauce.

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>> What's a tin fish?

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>> You don't like tin fish?

3:56

>> Eric spent the next 45 minutes walking

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me through their sales strategy. And it

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was a lot, especially for someone like

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me whose only experience was selling

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chocolate bars in the third grade. But

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one thing that stood out to me was how

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soft their sales approach actually is.

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And what I mean by that is unlike most

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SAS companies which rely heavily on paid

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ads and cold outbound, Air generates

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most of its leads through inbound. Now

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let's run through an example of how this

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plays out in real time. Air hosts about

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two networking events a month for

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creatives which gives the sales team a

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chance to ask questions and learn about

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the real challenges potential customers

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are facing. And instead of pushing for a

4:29

sale on the spot, they follow up later

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with messages like, "Hey, it was great

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meeting you. I'd love to grab 20 minutes

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to dig a bit deeper into some of the

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challenges that we talked about." From

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there, the account executives meet with

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the prospects, give their deck and demo,

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and figure out if air can actually be

4:44

the solution to their problems. And the

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strategy is clearly working. According

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to Shane, after a customer talks to one

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of these sellers, they close about 40 to

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60% of deals, which is way above average

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for most SAS companies.

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>> Any questions, concerns, thoughts?

4:58

>> Um,

5:00

I mean,

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I think I'm I think I'm processing.

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>> I mean, you got a demo in 4 hours.

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opportunities back to Shane,

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>> right?

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>> I have a lot of information in my brain

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right now that I don't want to lose.

5:14

Hello,

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>> this is nice to meet you at HubSpot.

5:17

Great to meet you.

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>> She's been following us.

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>> Love it.

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>> She's like an AE for a day.

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>> Amazing.

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>> Alex Lieberman is the founder and

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co-founder of Morning Brew and Story Arb

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along with a bunch of other companies.

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Shane tries to meet with like 12

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founders a month so he can try and learn

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how others approach their business

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strategies and reflect and refine his

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own playbook for scaling air. So, I

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decided to tag along or in this case

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behind.

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>> All right, Peyton, what's your question

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for Alex the guru himself is here.

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>> What's What's

5:46

>> my favorite restaurant in Hoboken?

5:48

>> Yeah. No, actually, I'm curious.

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>> Um, I love Martha's and I love

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margaritas.

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>> How have you built a mindset to be a

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founder of so many different companies?

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>> Um,

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>> wow.

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>> One is I think I'm entirely

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unemployable. I've always been deeply

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creative and like love the feeling of

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invention of going from like I have an

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idea to willing it into existence and it

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