Episodios

  • ChartMogul, AI, and the Future of SaaS Growth
    Apr 3 2026

    In this episode of the ProductLed Podcast, Wes Bush and Esben Friis-Jensen sit down with Nick Franklin, founder and CEO of ChartMogul, to talk about what is really happening in SaaS right now.


    Nick shares what he is seeing across 3,000+ subscription businesses and why the last three years have been the most disruptive period in SaaS history. He explains why AI startups are still buying traditional SaaS tools, why subscription pricing is far from dead, and how customer expectations have changed fast. Faster time to value, more functionality, and lower prices are now the baseline.


    The conversation also gets into how ChartMogul is adapting. Nick talks about their move into CRM, why combining revenue analytics with customer context creates new opportunities, and how AI can unlock deeper insights from complex subscription data. He also responds to the big question facing analytics companies today: if LLMs can query data directly, what role does a platform like ChartMogul play?


    Beyond strategy, Nick shares a grounded view on moats, competition, and what actually matters most in building a durable SaaS company. His answer is refreshingly simple: build a great product, charge fairly, support customers well, and keep improving every day.


    It is a thoughtful conversation on SaaS survival, product strategy, and what it takes to stay relevant in an AI-first world.


    Key Highlights:

    • 02:43 - AI Startups Are Still Buying SaaS

    Nick shares one of the more surprising trends from ChartMogul’s customer base. A big share of new customers are AI startups, and many of them are still using classic subscription pricing.

    • 03:53 - Why SaaS Has Had Its Hardest 3 Years

    Nick explains why the last few years have been so tough for SaaS, from the post-COVID reset to higher interest rates and tighter funding.

    • 08:03 - More Value, Less Money, Faster Delivery

    Wes and Nick unpack how buyer expectations have changed. SaaS products now need to deliver more value, reduce friction, and help customers get results much faster.

    • 10:45 - Why ChartMogul Went Multi-Product

    Nick breaks down the move into CRM and why bringing together revenue analytics, customer history, and interactions creates a much stronger product.

    • 12:35 - How AI Can Unlock Deeper Analytics

    Rather than replacing analytics tools, Nick sees AI as a way to help customers get more value from complex data through more natural questions and faster insight discovery.

    • 15:25 - Can LLMs Replace Subscription Analytics Tools?

    Wes pushes on the biggest threat facing analytics platforms, and Nick explains why clean data, normalized metrics, domain expertise, and strong tooling still matter.

    • 21:25 - Why Vibe Coding Won’t Replace SaaS

    The team talks about why most founders should use AI to speed up their own roadmap instead of trying to rebuild products like Slack, Notion, or HubSpot internally.

    • 26:28 - Moats, Benchmarks, and the Bloomberg of SaaS

    Nick shares how ChartMogul thinks about defensibility through benchmarking data, expert-led content, partner networks, and long-term trust.

    • 33:39 - The New “Wow” for Analytics Products

    Nick talks about why basic metrics are no longer enough, what customers expect now, and how ChartMogul is thinking about creating more signal and insight.

    • 46:16 - What Keeps Nick Building After 10+ Years

    To close, Nick reflects on why he is still building, what gives the work meaning, and why creating something lasting matters more than chasing an exit.


    Resources:

    • 🚀 ChartMogul: Subscription analytics platform
    • 💼 Connect with Nick Franklin on LinkedIn:
    • 💼 Connect with Wes Bush on LinkedIn
    • 💼 Connect with Esben Friis-Jensen on LinkedIn:
    • 🧠 Sign up for the ProductLed Newsletter
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    50 m
  • The GPU Gold Rush: How Vast.ai Scaled With AI Demand
    Mar 27 2026

    In this episode of the ProductLed Podcast, Wes Bush and Esben Friis-Jensen sit down with Travis Cannell, CEO and first employee at Vast.ai, the marketplace for on-demand, low-cost GPUs powering AI workloads around the world.

    Travis breaks down one of the biggest shifts happening in AI right now: the rise of inference. He explains why inference demand is exploding, how that shift is fueling Vast.ai’s rapid growth, and why more teams are looking for flexible, affordable GPU access outside of traditional cloud platforms.

    The conversation also gets into how Vast.ai built a two-sided GPU marketplace with 20,000 GPUs, why its pricing model creates powerful marketplace dynamics, and what makes its software-first approach difficult to replicate. Travis shares how the company thinks about competition, customer support, GPU hosting economics, and why winning in a fast-growing marketplace depends on much more than just low prices.

    They also explore how AI is changing org design inside high-growth companies. Travis talks candidly about pausing hiring, using AI to accelerate engineering work, and why Vast.ai has leaned into an in-office culture while staying extremely lean.

    If you want a clearer picture of where AI infrastructure is heading, and how one company is scaling quickly with a software-first model, this episode is packed with insight.

    Key Highlights:

    • 02:34 - Why Inference Is Fueling the Next AI Boom
    • 04:15 - Inference Explained in Plain English
    • 06:15 - The Moment Vast.ai Hit Hypergrowth
    • 10:04 - Why Teams Choose Vast Over AWS
    • 12:34 - Building a Two-Sided GPU Marketplace
    • 17:03 - Competing on More Than Just Price
    • 18:52 - The Real Economics of Hosting GPUs
    • 25:21 - The Network Effects Behind Vast.ai
    • 31:31 - Building a Lean Team During Hypergrowth
    • 36:09 - Why AI Changed Their Hiring Strategy


    Resources:

    • 🚀 Vast.ai: Marketplace for low-cost GPUs: https://vast.ai
    • 💼 Connect with Travis Cannell on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/traviscannell/
    • 💼 Connect with Wes Bush on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wesbush/
    • 💼 Connect with Esben Friis-Jensen on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/esbenfriisjensen/
    • 🧠 Sign up for the ProductLed Newsletter: https://www.productled.com/newsletter


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    42 m
  • The Evolution of Product-Led Growth: PLG x AI
    Mar 21 2026

    In this episode, Wes breaks down how PLG is evolving and why the fastest-growing AI companies are still using it, just with a completely different playbook. The old model was about reducing friction. The new model is about doing the work for the user.

    It starts with Shutterstock, a company that had PLG nailed for years. But once AI image generators arrived, everything changed. Users no longer wanted to browse and compare endless options. They wanted to type what they needed and get the result instantly. That same shift is now reshaping software everywhere.

    You’ll also hear examples like Google Slides vs. Gamma, Stack Overflow vs. Cursor, and Westlaw vs. Harvey, where AI-native products are not just easier to use. They are taking on more of the actual work.

    The episode also breaks down the three versions of PLG. PLG 1.0 is built for builders. PLG 2.0 is powered by AI and built for editors. PLG 3.0 goes even further, with agents completing work on the user’s behalf. As products move through these stages, time to value drops and market potential grows.

    If you are building a product-led company, this episode will challenge how you think about growth, user expectations, and what it takes to win in an AI-first market.

    Key Highlights:

    0:00 - Why PLG is evolving

    0:19 - The Shutterstock example

    1:24 - From reducing friction to doing the work

    1:32 - Google Slides vs. Gamma

    2:23 - Stack Overflow vs. Cursor

    2:39 - Westlaw vs. Harvey

    3:23 - The three versions of PLG

    4:32 - What defines PLG 2.0

    5:24 - How AI expands TAM

    7:53 - What PLG 3.0 looks like

    11:03 - Which version are you building for?

    Resources:

    Shutterstock: https://www.shutterstock.com

    Gamma: https://gamma.app

    Cursor: https://www.cursor.com

    Harvey: https://www.harvey.ai

    Westlaw: https://legal.thomsonreuters.com/en/products/westlaw

    💼 Connect with Wes Bush on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wesbush/

    🧠 Sign up for the ProductLed Newsletter: https://www.productled.com/newsletter


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    16 m
  • $40M+ Product-led Business: Nathan Barry on building Kit
    Mar 13 2026

    What does it really take to build a great product?

    In this episode, Wes Bush talks with Nathan Barry, CEO of Kit, about how they’ve built a product-led business doing $40M+ in revenue. Nathan shares why staying close to customers matters so much, how Kit builds empathy across the team, and why the best product insights often come from watching users, not just collecting requests.

    They also get into what makes a product feel great to use, how Kit reduces friction with session recordings and gradual rollouts, and why free plans can be a smart long-term growth move.

    If you’re building a product-led company, this episode is full of practical lessons on product quality, customer understanding, and playing the long game.

    Key Highlights:

    • 0:54 - Kit’s transparency as a growth lever
    • 02:26 - The successful product flywheel
    • 02:37 - Why analytics only tell part of the story
    • 06:29 - How Kit builds empathy across the team
    • 12:58 - What “best product” really means
    • 14:04 - Designing speed and polish users can feel
    • 18:29 - Building a culture that cares about quality
    • 23:08 - Reducing friction with data and rollouts
    • 30:19 - Free plans, moats, and long-term growth

    Resources:

    • Kit: https://kit.com
    • Connect with Nathan Barry on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nathanbarry/
    • 💼 Connect with Wes Bush on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wesbush/
    • 💼 Connect with Esben Friis-Jensen on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/esbenfriisjensen/
    • 🧠 Sign up for the ProductLed Newsletter: https://www.productled.com/newsletter
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    51 m
  • How Netlify Became the Obvious Choice in their Market
    Mar 6 2026

    Chris Bach, founder of Netlify, joins Wes Bush and Esben Friis-Jensen to break down how Netlify became a default choice in modern web development. Chris shares how Netlify started as a bet on a new web architecture that moved beyond monolithic applications, and why bottom-up adoption through developers was not optional, but the only viable go-to-market path.


    They dig into what many founders skip: building a clear worldview of how the market is evolving, then reverse-engineering what needs to exist for that future to become real. Chris explains how this approach shaped Netlify’s early product decisions, its ecosystem strategy, and the narrative that helped attract users, partners, and investors.


    The conversation also tackles a common founder dilemma: product-led vs. sales-led. Chris offers a simple filter, if you cannot deliver a “magic moment” quickly for an individual user, PLG may be the wrong motion. He also argues that trying to do both sales-led and product-led at the same time often leads to doing neither well.


    Finally, Chris shares how his investing approach grew out of ecosystem-building, why learning requires asking “stupid” questions, and how he now thinks about the next wave: agents as the new “user,” and the infrastructure required to support them.


    Key Highlights

    • 00:00 – Why Netlify Became the “Obvious Choice”

    Wes introduces Chris and tees up the core theme: building a compelling worldview and executing it until the market sees your product as the default.

    • 00:00:59 – Netlify’s Mission: Escape the Monolith

    Chris explains Netlify’s original bet on a new web architecture and why early enterprise use cases were limited without a supporting ecosystem.

    • 00:03:34 – When PLG Works: Start With the “Magic Moment”

    A practical filter for founders: if an individual user cannot quickly experience value, PLG may be a mismatch.

    • 00:07:31 – Pick a Motion First: Hybrid Comes Later

    Chris warns against trying to do sales-led and product-led at the same time, especially with limited startup resources.

    • 00:11:17 – The Worldview Advantage: Context Before Product

    How Netlify spent serious time mapping where the web was headed, then reverse-engineered what they needed to build first.

    • 00:15:41 – Storytelling That Wins: Small Story vs. Big Story

    Why messaging must change depending on the audience, and how Netlify avoided being boxed in as “just hosting.”

    • 00:25:17 – Category Creation: Why Jamstack Mattered
    • Chris shares how coining “Jamstack” worked because it benefited the whole ecosystem, not just Netlify’s marketing.
    • 00:29:08 – Ecosystem Fuel: Directories, OSS, and Deploy Previews
    • Tactics that helped win developer mindshare, including community resources and making open source easy to deploy.
    • 00:32:31 – The First 20: Targeting Influential Early Adopters
    • Netlify’s early focus was literally a list of 20 key people, then expanding in concentric circles from there.
    • 00:35:34 – The Next Shift: Agents, Dynamic Web, and AX
    • Chris outlines his view of an AI-generated, on-the-fly web and why “agent experience” becomes a critical product frontier.

    Resources

    • 🚀 Netlify: https://www.netlify.com/
    • 💼 Connect with Chris Bach on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chrisbach/
    • 💼 Connect with Wes Bush on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wesbush/
    • 💼 Connect with Esben Friis-Jensen on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/esbenfriisjensen/
    • 🧠 Sign up for the ProductLed Newsletter: https://www.productled.com/newsletter


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    58 m
  • Conviction Over Consensus — Jason Fried On Building With A Strong Point Of View
    Feb 27 2026

    Jason Fried, co-founder of Basecamp and HEY, joins Wes Bush to unpack what fuels his “challenger” approach to building software. Jason shares why he has been more public lately, how being an underdog shaped his motivation, and why he loves shipping products that surprise people, especially when a small team takes on problems most assume require massive headcount.


    They dig into Jason’s product philosophy: build what you personally need, avoid “validation” theater, and let the market be the only real judge. Jason explains the difference between resonance and validation, why he believes asking customers hypothetical questions leads teams astray, and how strong point of view can be a durable differentiator when features get commoditized.


    The conversation also covers why 37signals writes books, why they do not obsess over attribution, how product-led growth became their default, and what it really takes to maintain products over time. Jason closes with advice for founders on risk, independence, and the billboard message he would share with every B2B SaaS builder.


    Key Highlights:

    • 01:52 - Why Jason Got More Social (He’s Building Again)
    • 03:10 - The Underdog Mindset and Where It Came From
    • 06:43 - Building to Surprise: Why HEY Went Full Stack
    • 08:10 - How New Product Ideas “Pick” You
    • 12:16 - Why Jason Refuses to “Validate” Ideas Upfront
    • 14:01 - Finding a Real Point of View Without Faking It
    • 20:11 - Why the Books Exist (Sharing the “Recipes”)
    • 25:53 - Product-Led Growth: Let the Product Sell Itself
    • 28:43 - When to Build More Products and When to Focus
    • 36:26 - Founder’s Job: Inject Risk, Then Trust Your Gut

    Resources:

    • Basecamp (Jason’s company): https://basecamp.com
    • Connect with Jason Fried on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonfried/
    • 💼 Connect with Wes Bush on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wesbush/
    • 💼 Connect with Esben Friis-Jensen on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/esbenfriisjensen/
    • 🧠 Sign up for the ProductLed Newsletter: https://www.productled.com/newsletter


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    41 m
  • WARP Speed: How Genspark Hit $155M ARR in 10 Months
    Feb 19 2026

    Most AI founders race to raise capital, hire fast, and outspend the competition.

    Wen Sang did none of that.

    In this episode of the ProductLed Podcast, Wes Bush and Esben Friis-Jensen sit down with Wen Sang, CEO and co-founder of Genspark, the all-in-one AI workspace that went from zero to $100M ARR in 9 months and $155M ARR by month 10 with a team of just 50 people.

    Wen gets into why they refused to spend a dollar on marketing until they hit $100M ARR, how a last-minute Super Bowl ad opportunity landed in their lap and 10x'd their traffic overnight, and why he thinks Silicon Valley's "focus or die" advice is flat out wrong for AI companies. He also pulls back the curtain on the recursive learning system that keeps Genspark's output quality ahead of the pack, and makes the case for why building broadly is actually the safer bet when you're AI-native.

    Key Highlights:

    • 02:20 - How a Team of Tech Veterans Decided to Rethink Work from Scratch
    • 06:02 - The Wildest Growth Timeline You'll Hear This Year
    • 12:26 - Why They Refused to Spend on Marketing Until $100M ARR
    • 14:24 - How Genspark Made a Super Bowl Ad in 10 Days (Using Genspark)
    • 20:40 - Why "Just Focus on One Thing" Is Bad Advice in the AI Era
    • 23:23 - How 50 People Ship Like a Team of 500
    • 29:12 - The Real Reason AI Companies Are Growing So Fast Right Now
    • 37:10 - Why Their Website Is Basically Just the Product
    • 42:21 - The Internal System That Keeps Their Output Quality Ahead of Everyone Else
    • 44:12 - All-In-One vs. Best-in-Class: Which Actually Wins?
    • 49:12 - What Wen Would Tell Every Founder Building in the AI Era

    Resources:

    • 🚀 Genspark: All-in-one AI workspace: https://genspark.ai
    • 💼 Connect with Wen Sang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wen-sang/
    • 💼 Connect with Wes Bush on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wesbush/
    • 💼 Connect with Esben Friis-Jensen on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/esbenfriisjensen/
    • 🧠 Sign up for the ProductLed Newsletter: https://www.productled.com/newsletter


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    56 m
  • Signing Up Isn’t Enough: The Missing Piece to Scaling eWebinar Beyond $2M
    Feb 13 2026

    Getting users to sign up is the easy part. Keeping them is where most product-led companies fail.

    Melissa Kwan built eWebinar to $2M ARR without a single full-time employee, but not without learning this lesson the hard way.

    In this episode, Wes Bush, with Esben Friis-Jensen joining, sits down with Melissa Kwan, cofounder and CEO of eWebinar, to break down what product-led growth actually looks like behind the scenes. They explore why more signups don't solve churn, why customer success is the real growth engine most founders overlook, and how Melissa structured eWebinar around contractors instead of employees to preserve flexibility and focus.

    Melissa also opens up about founder burnout that did not look like exhaustion, but like a slow loss of inspiration, and the internal work that helped her reset and regain confidence. Along the way, she shares her playbook for building a high-trust founder community through credibility, generosity, and thoughtful curation.

    Key Highlights:

    • 02:09 - Just Under $2M ARR and a Contractor First Team Model
    • 05:35 - What Changed in the Last 4 to 6 Months, AI Impact and Trials Cut in Half
    • 07:01 - The Biggest Lesson: Customer Success and Onboarding Are the Growth Engine
    • 09:22 - Why Product-Led Feels Harder Than Sales-Led, Debugging Without Logs
    • 16:13 - Lifestyle Design as Strategy, Building for Travel and Freedom
    • 26:43 - Burnout Symptoms Founders Miss and Why It Is Not Just Exhaustion
    • 29:30 - The Hoffman Process and Unpacking Self-Doubt
    • 34:11 - “Progress Is Quiet. Winning Is Loud.” and the Mindset Shift to Sustain Momentum
    • 41:16 - Building a Founder Community by Giving First and Curating Quality
    • 48:02 - Closing Advice: Retention First, Do Not Neglect Customer Success

    Resources:

    • 🎯 eWebinar: Automated webinar platform - https://ewebinar.com
    • 💼 Connect with Melissa Kwan on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/melissakwan/
    • 💼 Connect with Wes Bush on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/wesbush/
    • 💼 Connect with Esben Friis-Jensen on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/esbenfriisjensen/
    • 🧠 Sign up for the ProductLed Newsletter - https://www.productled.com/newsletter


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    50 m