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SaaS Interviews with CEOs, Startups, Founders

EP 549: Propeller CEO on Why He'll Win CRM Space After Exit to Samsung with Eric Bouck

SaaS Interviews with CEOs, Startups, Founders

Nathan Latka

Ceo, Entrepreneurs, Founders, Software, Business, Entrepreneurship, Saas, Startups

4.6683 Ratings

🗓️ 24 January 2017

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Eric Bouck. He’s the CEO and founder of Propeller, a CRM that lets you sell from gmail. Prior to Propeller, Eric was the co-founder and CEO of Zigzag Software which was eventually sold to Samsung. He also spent some time working as a director for Samsung. He also worked as a Group Product Manager at Dell EMC and spent 4 years with this company.

Famous Five:

  • Favorite Book? – Inspired
  • What CEO do you follow? –  N/A
  • Favorite online tool? — Webflow
  • Do you get 8 hours of sleep?— Yes
  • If you could let your 20-year old self, know one thing, what would it be? – “Marry the right person”

 

Time Stamped Show Notes:

  • 01:26 – Nathan introduces Eric to the show
  • 02:05 – Propeller is the CRM that creates daily tools that salespeople can use to set their meetings, do their email and phone calls, share presentations and documents, and research etc.
  • 02:31 – Propeller is a SaaS business and they have monthly and annual subscriptions
  • 02:50 – Average revenue per customer monthly
    • 02:54 –$50 per month
  • 03:15 – How does Propeller win on a very crowded market?
    • 03:24 – There’s a lot of companies who try to make their own niche
    • 03:42 – Propeller has a unique mix of deep integration with Gmail combined with the ability to do multiple step campaign
  • 04:45 – Propeller is an all-in-one CRM – you won’t be needing another product
  • 05:10 – Propeller was launched September 1st
    • 05:15 – Growth is 21% month over month
    • 05:22 – A little over 50 customers at the moment
  • 05:26 – Propeller is bootstrapped
  • 05:39 – Eric got decent money from the exit
  • 06:23 – No revenue churn at the moment
  • 07:00 – Team size, they are also remote
  • 07:36 – Eric is not open to acquisition talks at the moment
  • 08:00 – The leading companies in the CRM space are Salesforce and Dynamics
    • 08:35 – Pipeline and Hubspot are getting positive feedback as well
  • 09:00 – Eric shares his opinion of Outreach
  • 09:25 – Eric mentions Propeller having an AI
  • 09:55 – The core differentiator of the products
    • 10:04 – An example of how Propeller makes getting your emails done easier
  • 11:00 – Nathan’s acuity to batch schedule
  • 11:20 – CRM pricing
    • 11:42 – Deliver the VALUE
    • 12:00 – Eric shares their vision as a company to make salespeople more effective
  • 12:12 – Eric shares how he got their first 5 customers
  • 12:46 – Eric has also spent for paid marketing
  • 12:58 – LTV is $1500
  • 13:30 – CAC LTV ratio
  • 15:10 – The Famous Five

 

3 Key Points:

  • If your market is crowded, you have to work HARDER to differentiate yourself.
  • The value is not in losing sales or making more sales—the value is found in whether or not you provide an effective product. 
  • Don’t live with regrets—it’s gotten you to where you are now.

 

Resources Mentioned:

  • Acuity Scheduling – Nathan uses Acuity to schedule his podcast interviews and appointments
  • Drip – Nathan uses Drip’s email automation platform and visual campaign builder to build his sales funnel
  • Toptal – Nathan found his development team using Toptal for his new business Send Later. He was able to keep 100% equity and didn’t have to hire a co-founder due to the quality of Toptal
  • Host Gator – The site Nathan uses to buy his domain names and hosting for the cheapest price possible.
  • Audible – Nathan uses Audible when he’s driving from Austin to San Antonio (1.5-hour drive) to listen to audio books.
  • The Top Inbox  – The site Nathan uses to schedule emails to be sent later, set reminders in inbox, track opens, and follow-up with email sequences
  • Jamf – Jamf helped Nathan keep his Macbook Air 11” secure even when he left it in the airplane’s back seat pocket
  • Show Notes provided by Mallard Creatives

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is the top, where I interview entrepreneurs who are number one or number two in their industry in terms of revenue or customer base.

0:09.0

You'll learn how much revenue they're making, what their marketing funnel looks like, and how many customers they have.

0:16.0

I'm now at $20,000 per talk.

0:18.0

Five and six million.

0:19.0

He is hell-bent on global domination. We just broke our 100,000 unit sold mark Five and six million. He is hell bent on global domination.

0:21.2

We just broke our 100,000 unit sole mark.

0:23.9

And I'm your host, Nathan Latka.

0:27.8

Okay, Top Tribe.

0:28.9

This week's winner of the hundred bucks is Dustin Goodwin.

0:32.3

He's in the HR industry, specifically in the software, the service space, looking to increase

0:37.1

his revenue. So

0:38.4

congratulations, Dustin. For your guys' chance to win 100 bucks every Monday on the show to build

0:44.8

your idea, simply subscribe to the podcast on iTunes now, and then text the word Nathan to 33444.

0:52.8

Again, text the word Nathan to 33444. Guys, if you want an easy tool to use

0:58.6

to book your meetings back to back, to batch your calls, to make sure people actually show up when

1:03.6

they schedule, you want to use acuity scheduling. It's what I use for all my podcast interviews at

1:07.9

Nathan Latka.com forward slash schedule. I'll tell you more about how I use it later on in the episode.

1:13.4

This is episode 549. I'm Nathan Latka and coming up tomorrow morning you'll learn from Daniel of attentive.

1:19.4

They've raised 150 grand in Portugal to solve a very unique sales problem.

1:24.8

Top tribe. Good morning. Nathan Latka here. Our guest this morning is Eric Bauk, and he is the CEO and founder at a company called Propeller. It's a CRM. Now, before that, prior to Propeller, Eric was super involved at Samsung. He was co-founder and CEO at ZigZag Software, which again, he sold to Samsung. Prior to to that back in September 2008 he was

1:45.0

group product manager at Dell EMC and worked his way up there again before founding

1:51.1

zigzag selling to Samsung and then leaving to found propeller CRM Eric are you ready

...

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