TIP189: CREATING A BILLION DOLLAR COMPANY

W/ IAN SIEGEL

6 May 2018

On today’s show, we talk to Ian Siegel. Ian is the founder and current CEO of the billion-dollar tech company, Zip Recruiter. Ian built the company from nothing in 2010 and has now served over 120 million customers. On today’s interview, we talk to Ian how he did this. We ask him what advice he can give to other people that are also trying to grow their own business from the ground up and how they will know if they have a winner on their hands. Before founding his current company, Ian was also an executive at Stamps.com and eBay during the key developmental growth of those businesses. So with all this experience and knowledge of taking start-ups all the way to the top, I think you’ll really enjoy this interview with Ian. Well, without further delay, we bring you a wealth of experience from Ian Siegel.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Why market validation is more important than raising money and building a team.
  • Why you should only offer new products that cater to at least 50% of your customers.
  • Why matching on the job market is done through a computer algorithm, and how to benefit from that.
  • The one thing that employers and employees do wrong in the hiring process.

TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Preston Pysh  0:02  

On today’s show, we talk to Ian Siegel. Ian is the founder and current CEO of the billion-dollar tech company, Zip Recruiter. Ian built the company from nothing in 2010 and has now served over 120 million customers. 

In today’s interview, we talk to Ian about how he did this. We ask him what advice he can give to other people that are also trying to grow their own business from the ground up and how they will know if they have a winner on their hands. 

Before founding his current company, Ian was also an executive at Stamps.com and eBay during the key developmental growth of those businesses. 

So with all this experience and knowledge of taking start-ups all the way to the top, I think you’ll really enjoy this interview with Ian. Well, without further delay, we bring you a wealth of experience from Ian Siegel

Intro  0:48  

You are listening to The Investor’s Podcast where we study the financial markets and read the books that influenced self-made billionaires the most. We keep you informed and prepared for the unexpected.

Preston Pysh  1:10  

Ian, thank you so much for coming on the show here. We know your schedule is packed.  You’re a very busy person, so we just want to thank you for taking time out of your busy day to be with us.

Ian Siegel  1:20  

Thanks for having me, guys.

Preston Pysh  1:22  

Ian, let me start by saying that we’re really excited to have you here, but the thing that I am excited to talk to you about is you’re a guy that’s really been playing at the top of the game. It’s not just for the last couple of years, but for a couple of decades here.

You started out as one of the very first employees, I think you were one of the first 40 employees at stamps.com as a  Vice President. Then you went to eBay at the very early stages. You saw all that as a vice president. 

Then out of nowhere, you start this company and you go out on your own, and you become a founder of your own business. This was before ZipRecruiter was a recognized name across the whole United States. 

I guess my question is this: how did you go from having the security of a wonderful job in starting your own thing? Because I know that’s just not easy. Tell us what you saw back in 2011 that made you take this bold step in your life.

Ian Siegel  2:15  

Well, the experience I had with my career prior to ZipRecruiter was I serially worked at small internet startups. I was at CitySearch and then as you mentioned, I was atstamps.com. I then went to a company called rent.com that actually got acquired by eBay when I was at eBay. After that, I worked at two more startups. 

What was true with all the startups is we were often too small to have what you consider to be a full-fledged HR department. I was doing my own recruiting. 

If you’ve ever done recruiting, you would understand the pain point that I was repeatedly experiencing, which is every job board has a different method by which you had to post your job, then a different method by which they would deliver candidates. 

Craigslist would send me candidates one at a time by email. Monster would send me candidates, either by email or I would go into their interface and have to log in. Other job boards require you to log in in order to see the candidates. 

To collect all the candidates who applied to a single job was a big task. For years, literally for probably 10 years, I was saying to myself every time I did this, This is crazy. There has to be a button I can push that would put my job on all job sites, and then bring all the candidates from all those sites into one list.” That’s what I built.

Stig Brodersen  3:37  

I love this. ZipRecruiter was built on frustration in a way.

Ian Siegel  3:42  

Yeah, I mean, they say it is best to launch a business in a category that you know. I knew the pain of recruiting not as a recruiter, but effectively as a small business operator slash owner who was doing his own recruiting. I just knew how onerous the process was. 

When I started ZipRecruiter, we bootstrapped for the first four and a half years and you said when you went to the company what was it like making the transition? It was shocking. Suddenly, I was burning $8,000 a month. I had a kid in a private school. I had a mortgage. It was really hard. So it takes courage and conviction in order to take that leap and do a startup.

Preston Pysh  4:25  

It wasn’t like something that you were kind of doing on the side and then slowly worked into it. It was like you ripped the band aid off and said, “This is what I’m going to do now.”

Ian Siegel  4:33  

When I built ZipRecruiter, I was working at one of those companies where I was the hired gun. I was building ZipRecruiter on the side with my three co-founders. It was like a hobby project. It took us six months to build it. It’s just not that complicated a concept. Then when we launched it.

I’ll never forget the day we turned it on, because I put $50 into Google AdWords. I said, “Okay, I will run some ads and see if anyone else is feeling this pain point.” Then we set up the little email alert that would go off each time a customer bought our product. 

I just remember walking through the office that day at the company I was working for. My phone just kept buzzing, buzzing, buzzing. It was like a jolt of adrenaline every time it happened. I thought, “Oh, my God, this is really going to work.” A month later, I quit.

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