How we got high-ticket beta customers for our HR SaaS platform

Richard Lear, CEO of ApolloFactor talks about how they got high-ticket (1000s of employees) beta customers. We also talk about how the talent management platform stops employees from churning out & how he intends to grow the company going forward.

  • How ApolloFactor helps companies detect employee satisfaction using AI & stops them from leaving
  • How they got the first 3 beta customers
  • How they built a pipeline for 20 more beta customers
  • How they are working with consulting partners as part of their GTM strategy
  • How they demonstrate ROI for their platform
  • Team, external funding & future vision

Transcript
Upendra Varma:

So Richard, talk about these beta, beta customers that you have.

Upendra Varma:

How did you manage to convince them?

Upendra Varma:

How does that story look like?

Upendra Varma:

So

Richard Lear:

we have a number of beta customers who have looked at the platform.

Richard Lear:

Um, three are in, uh, participation.

Richard Lear:

One is, um, uh, a series C company in Austin.

Richard Lear:

They, um, they have only a hundred, uh, employees, but they, um, But they

Richard Lear:

are actually 200 million in funding.

Upendra Varma:

Hello everyone.

Upendra Varma:

Welcome to the B2B SaaS podcast.

Upendra Varma:

I'm your host of Paint.

Upendra Varma:

Today we have Richard Le with us.

Upendra Varma:

Richard here is the c e o of the company called Apollo Factor.

Upendra Varma:

Hey, Richard, welcome

Richard Lear:

to the show.

Richard Lear:

Uh, great being here.

Richard Lear:

Thanks, SAPRA for

Upendra Varma:

inviting us.

Upendra Varma:

All right, Richard, so let's get started and let's try to understand

Upendra Varma:

what your company does and what your how, why do customers pay your.

Richard Lear:

So poly factor, um, our key product is Comp Edge.

Richard Lear:

It's competitive edge for talent intelligence and

Richard Lear:

it's a platform in itself.

Richard Lear:

Uh, the platform really targets the key pieces of talent

Richard Lear:

management or talent intelligence.

Richard Lear:

Uh, retention is a big piece of the platform.

Richard Lear:

Pay equity is the other big piece, and we're breaking new ground in both areas.

Richard Lear:

So, And the retention side, we're creating a retention score and we're, we're

Richard Lear:

actually, uh, uh, using 30 factors of retention in order to calculate for each

Richard Lear:

employee how likely they are to leave.

Richard Lear:

. Interestingly, the retention score is also a performance passion score.

Richard Lear:

So when an employee is, um, not passionate about what they're doing, then

Richard Lear:

they're likely to leave at some point.

Richard Lear:

They're likely to listen to offers and, uh, those kinds of things, but it's also

Richard Lear:

sometimes impacts their performance.

Richard Lear:

So we're creating a unique score that's, uh, patent pending,

Richard Lear:

and the score basically shows a manager in a snapshot who is at.

Richard Lear:

. And the idea is if you know who's at risk, then you can do something about it.

Richard Lear:

And you know, it was not too long ago that, um, that, uh, research came up.

Richard Lear:

Uh, Gallup research saw that retention is a 1 trillion cost to US businesses,

Richard Lear:

and they found out that more than 50% of the people left said that the

Richard Lear:

company could have done something about.

Richard Lear:

Another 50% said no one talked to them in the three months that before they left.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

. So our tool looks at that and says, okay, we're going to show a manager

Richard Lear:

who's at risk and then we're going to nudge them, nudge them to con talk.

Richard Lear:

And even a conversation in itself can improve the, the prospects.

Richard Lear:

So the retention tool does that.

Richard Lear:

Uh, the retention platform is built on other factors like engagement.

Richard Lear:

People use the word engagement.

Richard Lear:

We actually use the word employee experience.

Richard Lear:

So we have a personalized engagement or personalized experience with

Richard Lear:

every individual in the company.

Richard Lear:

It's a confidential tool.

Richard Lear:

It captures the key drivers of their satisfaction, of their alignment with

Richard Lear:

their role, their boss, the company, their team, and how it all works in with career.

Richard Lear:

So we're using a lot of the, uh, the tools that are built by

Richard Lear:

executive recruiters to understand why people are leaving a company.

Richard Lear:

And those come together with a compensation platform,

Richard Lear:

which we built in technology.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

and the compensation platform basically.

Richard Lear:

, what would you make in the market at any given, uh, company, uh,

Richard Lear:

tomorrow if you were hired?

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

. So it's a new tool that looks at market metrics.

Richard Lear:

Today's job market versus salary surveys, and together the market predictions, the

Richard Lear:

employee experience and the factors of.

Richard Lear:

, uh, you know, the, the factors of how long you've been at a company,

Richard Lear:

the tenure and your performance all come together into a score.

Richard Lear:

So the platform looks like a retention platform, but it

Richard Lear:

also captures other things.

Richard Lear:

Yeah.

Richard Lear:

Like

Upendra Varma:

pay equity.

Upendra Varma:

Yeah.

Upendra Varma:

So, I, I, I wanna understand this from a perspective of a customer, right?

Upendra Varma:

So, so, uh, who exactly are you selling this particular platform to?

Upendra Varma:

So maybe can you walk us through one of the example and how they're using.

Upendra Varma:

You don't have to name the customer if you're not comfortable with, but just

Upendra Varma:

explain how exactly they're using you.

Richard Lear:

Yeah.

Richard Lear:

And head of hr, uh, head of HR, C H R O, VP, people director of, uh, hr.

Richard Lear:

That, that, that's the typical first client that's a buyer, but the

Richard Lear:

platform actually serves employees, managers, executives, and hr.

Richard Lear:

Okay.

Richard Lear:

So.

Richard Lear:

HR is typically responsible for a lot of, or, or feels like they're

Richard Lear:

responsible for talent intelligence, talent management, and they're the buyer.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

and, uh, you know, they're also a user.

Richard Lear:

So the platform allows them visibility into this, but the person who's the most,

Richard Lear:

the most active actor is the manager.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

. So the tools actually a platform from continuous management improvement

Richard Lear:

because all the employees give their feedback and it comes back to the

Richard Lear:

manager, and the manager sees how they're

Upendra Varma:

succeed.

Upendra Varma:

And how many paying customers do you have on your platform?

Upendra Varma:

As of today, we are

Richard Lear:

just, we're just entering the market now.

Richard Lear:

Paying customers will be a q1.

Richard Lear:

We have betas, we have three betas going, and we have another 15 betas

Richard Lear:

that are, uh, in process of signing.

Richard Lear:

Got

Upendra Varma:

it.

Upendra Varma:

So, so, so what's been, what's the journey like?

Upendra Varma:

So, so when did you start the company, uh, and when exactly did you sort

Upendra Varma:

of, you know, start, you know, when exactly would you call yourself,

Upendra Varma:

you know, an official release?

Richard Lear:So really, uh, beginning of:Richard Lear:

to, uh, to do the heavy r and d.

Richard Lear:

We built a compensation platform first.

Richard Lear:

In fact, we thought we were gonna build a marketplace for compensation and tech.

Richard Lear:

We did, uh, as we built it and we went to customers, customers, uh,

Richard Lear:

said to us, we like what you're doing.

Richard Lear:

You're using a lot of ai.

Richard Lear:

But we would love to see, what we're most interested in is retention.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

. So we stepped back and we said, well, we can use our compensation

Richard Lear:

platform as an element of retention.

Richard Lear:

We can use it totally for retention.

Richard Lear:

Some compensation companies do.

Richard Lear:

But we said, let's find out a deeper, uh, you know, like a deeper model.

Richard Lear:

And we began that this year.

Upendra Varma:

So Richard, talk about these beta, beta customers that you have.

Upendra Varma:

Right?

Upendra Varma:

So, so who are they and where did you manage to, you know, sort

Upendra Varma:

of get them talk about, since they are just very few, right?

Upendra Varma:

I think you've got it on three at this point.

Upendra Varma:

More in the pipeline.

Upendra Varma:

Yeah.

Upendra Varma:

So just help me understand where you got these customers from.

Upendra Varma:

How did you manage to convince them?

Upendra Varma:

How does that story look like?

Upendra Varma:

So

Richard Lear:

we have a number of beta customers who have looked at the platform.

Richard Lear:

Um, three are in, uh, participation.

Richard Lear:

One is, um, uh, a series C company in Austin.

Richard Lear:

They, um, they have only a hundred, uh, employees, but they, um, But they

Richard Lear:

are actually 200 million in funding.

Richard Lear:

Um, and so they're very excited about it.

Richard Lear:

They've had the deepest look at the entire platform and they were the first,

Richard Lear:

we have another 4,000 person company, uh, that's a private equity company.

Richard Lear:

And, um, that company is in process of deploying the platform.

Richard Lear:

And so we're, we're early on, uh, that cus that came through one of our key advisors.

Richard Lear:

And then we have one more company that's, um, I think about 300 million in revenue.

Richard Lear:

and they are, uh, in process of deploying as well.

Richard Lear:

That company has, I think 750 employees and, uh, it's in

Richard Lear:

the, um, monitoring space.

Richard Lear:

Um, but all three are.

Richard Lear:

Into the beta, and then we have just a number of betas that, um, companies

Upendra Varma:

that are willing join.

Upendra Varma:,:Upendra Varma:

one of your advisors, you know, maybe pointing them towards you.

Upendra Varma:

Right.

Upendra Varma:

But what about the rescue companies?

Upendra Varma:

Who, what exactly like that does that first touchpoint look like?

Upendra Varma:

How did they discover you?

Richard Lear:

Well, often the ci I came from the executive search business.

Richard Lear:

I worked there for 20 years.

Richard Lear:

Um, I have 4,000 or plus contacts at the C level as c e o, and I've

Richard Lear:

got, uh, probably a thousand in hr.

Richard Lear:

So a lot of them came through my own network.

Richard Lear:

Um, so we didn't go out and actively market.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

And we will start marketing next year, but right now it's basically through

Richard Lear:

LinkedIn, through email, through.

Richard Lear:

Catching up with people.

Richard Lear:

Um, we've also been to a bunch of conferences this year in HR and

Richard Lear:

I've met a lot of people there.

Richard Lear:

So, uh, and then there's partners too who, who know about us.

Richard Lear:

So, um, it's just a variety of sources, but we haven't gone

Richard Lear:

into a full scale marketing

Upendra Varma:

campaign yet.

Upendra Varma:

Sure, sure.

Upendra Varma:

I mean, you've got a variety, but I guess you still have around 20 odd, you know,

Upendra Varma:

beta betas lined up in your pipeline.

Upendra Varma:

Right.

Upendra Varma:

So if I were, if I were to ask you one channel that's really

Upendra Varma:

been working for you as of.

Upendra Varma:

, is it your network?

Upendra Varma:

Is it your partners that bringing, that's bringing in you, bringing them to you?

Upendra Varma:

What's, what's really working for you at this point of time?

Richard Lear:

Yeah, it's really the, um, my, uh, the network of the company.

Richard Lear:

Uh, but we also are now moving into a new phase where we're including consulting.

Richard Lear:

So h we have a couple HR consultants, top HR consultants that are working with us.

Richard Lear:

So we can go in with a company and we can say, we can do an engagement, uh, uh,

Richard Lear:

consulting engagement or, and we can back it with software or we can do software.

Richard Lear:

And then we'll have a, an expert in, uh, in compensa in compensation or retention.

Richard Lear:

Or an engagement that can support it.

Richard Lear:

So that is also bringing us out.

Richard Lear:

We're starting to do webinars.

Richard Lear:

Our first webinar will be what about these

Upendra Varma:

consultants?

Upendra Varma:

Are they independent consultants or are they on your payroll?

Richard Lear:

They're independent cons, uh, consultants that

Richard Lear:

are working in partnership

Upendra Varma:

with us.

Upendra Varma:

Yes.

Upendra Varma:

And they do bring you clients.

Upendra Varma:

You end up sort of packaging your software along with their consultancy

Upendra Varma:

experience, and that's how you end up.

Upendra Varma:

That's

Richard Lear:

the idea right now we're just, we're, we have our very, uh, first

Richard Lear:

couple consultants that have signed up.

Richard Lear:

They're going up onto our website now.

Richard Lear:

One's up already up there.

Richard Lear:

And, um, we're actually doing a webinar on December 7th with,

Richard Lear:

uh, with, uh, Charles Ashworth.

Upendra Varma:

Got it.

Upendra Varma:

So, so what's, what's the future gonna look like?

Upendra Varma:

What's gonna happen from now, right?

Upendra Varma:

So how exactly are you gonna sort of convert these data customers into, you

Upendra Varma:

know, paying customers and how exactly are you planning to build your pipeline?

Upendra Varma:

Because it's gonna, because you're just gonna start all of those

Upendra Varma:

marketing initiatives, right?

Upendra Varma:

So what's, what's that vision look like at, at this point

Richard Lear:

of time?

Richard Lear:

Yeah.

Richard Lear:

It really is all about critical mass.

Richard Lear:

Uh, people in the HR space who are looking at new products

Richard Lear:

are overwhelmed with products.

Richard Lear:

They have too many HR products and, uh, something like our product, if,

Richard Lear:

if you don't look at it carefully, the company will conclude, well,

Richard Lear:

we already have a retention tool.

Richard Lear:

We already have a engagement tool.

Richard Lear:

Our compensation.

Richard Lear:

So breaking through, that's the hard part.

Richard Lear:

Um, I've got 15 blocks written.

Richard Lear:

I'll start, uh, delivering them in the next week or two.

Richard Lear:

And, um, we'll talk about transformation.

Richard Lear:

So we're, we're, we're actually taking, um, the talent

Richard Lear:

intelligence to a new level.

Richard Lear:

We're using the idea of transparency.

Richard Lear:

to actually create transformation.

Richard Lear:

And what's happened is, uh, individuals, uh, 87% of uh, individuals, employees

Richard Lear:

say they want more transparency.

Richard Lear:

Companies are willing to give more transparency, and as employees give more

Richard Lear:

transparency, then we're able to pull that information and anonymize some of it.

Richard Lear:

And then bring more metrics to, to four.

Richard Lear:

So we're transforming metrics and retention.

Richard Lear:

We're transforming, uh, metrics and pay equity.

Richard Lear:

Our pay equity tool is world class, and it's using market data.

Richard Lear:

So pay equity is a big, you know, the, the number two, one and two,

Richard Lear:

uh, initiatives next year for HR are pay equity and retention.

Richard Lear:

These are our best two, uh, platforms and both of 'em are revolutionary,

Richard Lear:

so we need to get that word.

Richard Lear:

And it's really gonna be a critical mass.

Richard Lear:

You need to get five or six or eight customers singing your praises before

Richard Lear:

the rest of the market follows.

Richard Lear:

So Richard,

Upendra Varma:

would you consider yourself, you know, building something

Upendra Varma:

very novel and interesting that's, that's nobody, that nobody has done so far?

Upendra Varma:

Or do you, do you, do you think that there are competitors out there

Upendra Varma:

who are sort of doing something similar to what you're doing?

Richard Lear:

It we're, we're doing something that is quite different.

Richard Lear:

We're creating a, a retention monitor metric, and we're creating a pay

Richard Lear:

equity platform that leverages market compensation, not internal compensation.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

. And that's a big difference because if you don't use market

Richard Lear:

compensation, you're introducing bias into your pay equity model,

Richard Lear:

which is the last thing you wanna do.

Richard Lear:

Yeah.

Richard Lear:

Using your current customers or your current employees and

Richard Lear:

comparing them to each other.

Richard Lear:

Is not accurate because if you're looking at the VP of marketing and

Richard Lear:

VP of engineering, they're gonna make different numbers anyway.

Richard Lear:

But I'm looking at a VP of marketing at your company, VP of engineering.

Richard Lear:

I'm comparing them to the market.

Richard Lear:

So each of them have a level playing field.

Richard Lear:

So that is, that's, uh, it's patented.

Richard Lear:

, you know,

Upendra Varma:

so, yes.

Upendra Varma:

Mm-hmm.

Upendra Varma:

. So, yeah.

Upendra Varma:

The, my, my follow up question here is that, so now, now that you

Upendra Varma:

know, I mean, what I would assume is a, a typical HR team would be

Upendra Varma:

using a bunch of softwares, right?

Upendra Varma:

To solve a whole bunch of things around, you know, the company and people, right?

Upendra Varma:

How exactly are you gonna fit there?

Upendra Varma:

So, I mean, this also needs a, a bit of market education as well, right?

Upendra Varma:

Because nobody understands that something like this could be done, and this would

Upendra Varma:

lead to something like employee retention.

Upendra Varma:

I mean, these are brand new concepts, right?

Upendra Varma:

So how exactly are you managing to convince these people that,

Upendra Varma:

hey, this is gonna work for.

Upendra Varma:

And this is how we are gonna add roi.

Upendra Varma:

I mean, that part is going to be very critical, right?

Upendra Varma:

I mean, it's not like, Hey, this is a software, just buy it.

Upendra Varma:

I mean, like, it's gonna be useful, right?

Upendra Varma:

You, you wanna do something more than that because you are a novel product, right?

Upendra Varma:

So, so how does that journey look like?

Upendra Varma:

So are you gonna invest a lot of your time and energy into educating people

Upendra Varma:

that something like some, a product like this is needed and then, you

Upendra Varma:

know, convincing them that, hey, we are one of the best in this space.

Upendra Varma:

How does a journey.

Upendra Varma:

. Richard Lear: Right.

Upendra Varma:

And it's, and it's a combination of things.

Upendra Varma:

It's, um, you know, first of all, you, you've got this credit market space

Upendra Varma:

debate chart tech, and we're just saying, don't, we're not replacing anything.

Upendra Varma:

We're actually creating two new metrics that you can't find at any other vendor.

Upendra Varma:

Mm-hmm.

Upendra Varma:

, right?

Upendra Varma:

Yeah.

Upendra Varma:

And so if you want them, it's easier to deploy.

Upendra Varma:

You can deploy in 24 hours.

Upendra Varma:

It, it's easy to use and you're gonna have metrics that can

Upendra Varma:

save you money immediately.

Upendra Varma:

Mm-hmm.

Upendra Varma:

. So think of it as a very easy to use platform that you can put

Upendra Varma:

alongside your other vendors.

Upendra Varma:

And it will actually augment those other vendors.

Upendra Varma:

And so it's a different kind of thing that's going to be, uh, painless and it's

Upendra Varma:

going to be Sure, sure.

Upendra Varma:

So how, how about demonstrating the ROI or value, because that's

Upendra Varma:

going to be a bit tricky, right?

Upendra Varma:

So because it's, it's, it really takes a lot of time and I mean, I.

Upendra Varma:

I can't even imagine how you would end up saying, Hey, I've ended up,

Upendra Varma:

you know, stopping this, use this, you know, employee of yours from

Upendra Varma:

leaving your company and, cause it's pretty hard to demonstrate that value.

Upendra Varma:

So how do you deal with conversations like those when you

Upendra Varma:

are sort of pitching your product?

Richard Lear:

Yeah, and, and we are creating a, uh, r ROI

Richard Lear:

calculator that will be up on the website in the next month or two.

Richard Lear:

The, um, basically when any employee leads, especially high value

Richard Lear:

knowledge worker, right when they.

Richard Lear:

, it's gonna cost you between one and 300,000 to replace them.

Richard Lear:

That's in tech?

Richard Lear:

Yeah.

Richard Lear:

Okay.

Richard Lear:

So the, the easy way to do it is to, I mean, you could deploy our platform in

Richard Lear:

a trial for, for 90 days, and let's see, you could save one or two employees.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

, you've now saved two to 600,000.

Richard Lear:

You

Upendra Varma:

know, the other thing is, can, can you really do that?

Upendra Varma:

Can you really quantify that?

Upendra Varma:

Hey, I actually ended up stopping this employee to leave by doing

Upendra Varma:

some things on your platform.

Upendra Varma:

Can you actually

Richard Lear:

do that?

Richard Lear:

. Yes.

Richard Lear:

Because the, uh, we create a score.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

, and, um, you know, let's say the employee's score is today 65, high risk.

Richard Lear:

We show this high risk.

Richard Lear:

It's, you know, re they're ready to leave.

Richard Lear:

The, the, you know, and then we nudge the manager to talk with that person.

Richard Lear:

And that person has four things on their mind.

Richard Lear:

One teams aren't collaborating.

Richard Lear:

I'm feeling frustrated.

Richard Lear:

One, teams aren't executing.

Richard Lear:

I'm feeling frustrated.

Richard Lear:

Two, I don't feel empowered.

Richard Lear:

I'm not having autonomy in my role.

Richard Lear:

Three, I'm worried about the d.

Richard Lear:

We're gonna let raise a D round.

Richard Lear:

Now the manager talks to that person.

Richard Lear:

The conversation in itself, we found will probably improve that score from 65 to 75.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

, just the conversation.

Richard Lear:

Even if nothing happens, let's say the manager says, look, I'm gonna

Richard Lear:

grant you more autonomy, give you a little more broader responsibility.

Richard Lear:

Now the score's at 83.

Richard Lear:

right now.

Richard Lear:

You talk to them and, and you, the D round.

Richard Lear:

You say, I want you to talk to the CEO O.

Richard Lear:

They'll have the CEO e talk to the company about the D Round.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

. We're talking to Sequoia.

Richard Lear:

We're talking to Norwes.

Richard Lear:

We're gonna get our D round.

Richard Lear:

We're feeling good.

Richard Lear:

Now.

Richard Lear:

The entire employee base moves up eight points.

Richard Lear:

Now you're up into the high eight, mid to high eighties.

Richard Lear:

That person is no longer at risk.

Richard Lear:

Now they could leave still because the next Google comes along and recruits them.

Richard Lear:

Yeah.

Richard Lear:

But they may not, and you can see that, but in their attitude.

Richard Lear:

And so you can actually see the score change, you can see the longevity happen.

Richard Lear:

And then when you see people leave at with a 65 score, you don't even

Richard Lear:

have to, you know, use the plat.

Richard Lear:

You don't even have to talk to your people.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

, just watch the score.

Richard Lear:

Because you're, you know, we will show your top 10 people that are ready to

Richard Lear:

leave, and you can say, I would say, you know, in the next six months,

Richard Lear:

you're gonna lose a, a chunk of those.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

. And so what we're hoping to do is quantify people's emotions, their

Richard Lear:

sentiment, their satisfaction, communicate that quantification, take action.

Richard Lear:

, see the quantification change, and then you can see actual results.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

, it's, you know, it's actionable analytics and then that at the end of

Richard Lear:

the year, I mean obviously it takes time.

Richard Lear:

You can see your, your, uh, retention went from, you know, 25% attrition to 20%, and

Richard Lear:

now you can do the calculation, right.

Richard Lear:

So the platform will pay for itself and show very, uh, concretely the.

Richard Lear:

. Upendra Varma: Got it.

Richard Lear:

So did you raise any external funding so far to sort of build the company?

Richard Lear:

Yeah, we, we've raised funding through friends

Richard Lear:

and family and angels so far, and we'll be doing an institution

Richard Lear:in:Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

. Upendra Varma: Got it.

Richard Lear:

Alright, so, so yeah.

Richard Lear:

So I mean, typically what, so since you are, you know, you claim yourself to be

Richard Lear:

category leader and you're sort of in this new, brand new space that you're

Richard Lear:

sort of trying to create for yourself.

Richard Lear:

You would require a lot of investments into educating and creating

Richard Lear:

a market for yourself, right?

Richard Lear:

Because, so if you are, if you are a competitor of an existing product,

Richard Lear:

you really don't have to do that.

Richard Lear:

Somebody else might have already done it for you.

Richard Lear:

It's just about convincing anybody, right?

Richard Lear:

Who understands the value of a product like yours to just, you know, switch.

Richard Lear:

But now you really have to sort of educate the market as well.

Richard Lear:

So, so what's, what's your thought process on that?

Richard Lear:

Are you gonna take a lot of funding and you sort of, you know, educate the

Richard Lear:

market and build a market for yourself?

Richard Lear:

Or are, how does the vision look like?

Richard Lear:

I don't think it's gonna be about edu.

Richard Lear:

I, I don't think the education piece it, it's important.

Richard Lear:

If you can pull that off, it's great.

Richard Lear:

If I can have an audience to go up the HR tech can talk, you know, in front of,

Richard Lear:

you know, hundreds of people, then I can make a big difference and that's great.

Richard Lear:

Um, it's a combination of things, but my sense is, Five to 10, uh, happy customers

Richard Lear:

with testimonials will create enough buzz.

Richard Lear:

Then we can go to, um, you know, venture capital funds and we can say

Richard Lear:

to a company like Norwest mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

and say, Hey, we've got this tool.

Richard Lear:

You've got 250 companies in your portfolio.

Richard Lear:

It's ideally suited for startup companies.

Richard Lear:

It's a full platform.

Richard Lear:

Yeah.

Richard Lear:

Why not introduce this to your portfolio companies and leverage the fact.

Richard Lear:

That, you know, Norwest wants to have a better outcome for their companies and

Richard Lear:

they wanna reduce retention and they wanna increase engagement and they wanna

Richard Lear:

see compensation properly administered.

Richard Lear:

Yeah.

Richard Lear:

So we can create a platform.

Richard Lear:

Startups, the larger companies are a little different.

Richard Lear:

They're gonna take a little bit longer to adopt.

Richard Lear:

But once all that is going, we will be, we'll be moving.

Richard Lear:

The other thing is partners, we have no problem with partnering

Richard Lear:

with some of the big players.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

, uh, we have tools.

Richard Lear:

We've already talked to four or five, um, major players with lots

Richard Lear:

of, uh, capital and they've looked at our platform and go, wow.

Richard Lear:

, this would fit our platform.

Richard Lear:

We're not doing this right now.

Richard Lear:

Maybe they'll go and try to do it, but we have patents on, you

Richard Lear:

know, four of the key features.

Richard Lear:

So for them to just, you know, jump in and try to do it, it's taken two and a half

Richard Lear:

years to build a compensation platform.

Richard Lear:

Some of the, the math, so it's not an easy thing.

Richard Lear:

But yeah, with one or two big, um, partners, we feel like we

Richard Lear:

can, uh, penetrate the market too.

Richard Lear:

We have

Upendra Varma:

no problem with that.

Upendra Varma:

Got it.

Upendra Varma:

So Richard, how does your pricing look like?

Upendra Varma:

So are you priced on a per employee basis?

Upendra Varma:

It's per employee?

Upendra Varma:

Yes.

Upendra Varma:

Yeah.

Upendra Varma:

And how, how, what's the average value, like average cost that you sort

Upendra Varma:

of charge an employee in a company?

Upendra Varma:

Yeah.

Upendra Varma:

The

Richard Lear:

platform, uh, would, would typically be $5 per month or $50

Richard Lear:

per year if they do a, your contract.

Richard Lear:

Okay, got it.

Upendra Varma:

I just was trying to estimate your annual contract

Upendra Varma:

value for a typical, you know, a hundred percent company.

Upendra Varma:

That makes a lot of sense.

Upendra Varma:

Yes.

Upendra Varma:

So, so, so did you manage to close any of these beta use beta customers?

Upendra Varma:

You, you manage, you three of them have already onboarded, right?

Upendra Varma:

So did they actually sign a contract as a paying customer

Upendra Varma:

or that's still in pipeline?

Upendra Varma:

We have,

Richard Lear:

we don't have paying customer, uh, Uh, BETOS, but we

Richard Lear:

have a POV that we're, uh, going to be administering in about a month,

Richard Lear:

and the POV will basically say, use the platform for up to 90 days.

Richard Lear:

It converts to a paying contract.

Richard Lear:

And so that will be, uh, that's our next step.

Richard Lear:

We've just finished, uh, the.

Richard Lear:

, the basic platform is just being finished.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

for all the way through retention right now, so Sure.

Richard Lear:

The companies are just getting up to speed on it.

Richard Lear:

It's going to be an aversion 1.0 and q1 right now it's, you know,

Richard Lear:

it's sort of MVP to beta all the way through, but it's usable and it's

Richard Lear:

also, it's already predicting, so it's

Upendra Varma:

good.

Upendra Varma:

Uh, and, uh, just talk about the team, right.

Upendra Varma:

How many folks do you have on your team as a today?

Upendra Varma:

So it's 11 people.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

and how many engineers?

Richard Lear:

software engineering.

Richard Lear:

We have four in software engineering and we've got some, uh, data science folks.

Richard Lear:

Uh, and then we have data management and um, you know, we've got some part-time

Richard Lear:

people doing different parts of marketing.

Richard Lear:

Our BIS dev.

Richard Lear:

Mm-hmm.

Richard Lear:

. Upendra Varma: Got it.

Richard Lear:

It's primarily engineering folks because you've been focusing

Richard Lear:

a lot on building the product.

Richard Lear:

Right.

Richard Lear:

Exactly.

Richard Lear:

Got it.

Richard Lear:

Alright.

Richard Lear:

Uh, alright Richard, thanks for taking the time to talk to me.

Richard Lear:

Hope you scale, you know, the company to much, much greater

Richard Lear:

heights in the coming days.

Richard Lear:

We

Richard Lear:

look forward to it.

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