Rob Walling

Rob Walling is a serial entrepreneur, author, podcaster,[1] and angel investor.[2] He is the author of Start Small, Stay Small: A Developer's Guide to Launching a Startup, which was published in 2010.[3][4]

Rob Walling
Occupationserial entrepreneur, author, podcaster
Websiterobwalling.com

Walling is the founder of email marketing software Drip[5][6] that was acquired in a life-changing exit[7] by Leadpages in July 2016.[8]

Career

In the early 2000s, Walling tried to launch a number of software products that failed. He had his first notable success with DotNetInvoice, an invoicing software application. Subsequently, he launched other small business and formed an online community of software founders called Micropreneurs.[9]

In 2010, he started a podcast with Mike Taber, which became one of the most popular startup podcasts in iTunes, called Startups for the Rest of Us.[10] The next year, in June, he co-founded MicroConf, a conference for self-funded startups,[11] which is held twice a year in Las Vegas and Europe.[12]

In August 2011, Walling purchased and revamped HitTail, a web-based software as a service product that provides long tail keyword suggestions.[13] Before purchasing HitTail, it had used a freemium business model to market the product.[14] Walling stopped the freemium model and used traditional software marketing to bring in more paying users.[15] He founded Drip, an email marketing tool that allows a user to send emails to their audience based on user behavior, in 2012.[16]

Walling has become known as a supporter of self-funding or bootstrapping software companies that turn a profit, instead of raising funding from venture capitalists.[10][17] Much of his writing focuses on tactics for growing software as a service startups.[18][19]

In 2014, he wrote the foreword to Dan Norris' book, The 7-Day Startup: You Don't Learn Until You Launch.[20]

In March, 2015 Walling published one of his best-known essays titled The Stairstep Approach to Bootstrapping[21] where he outlines a potentially safer, more structured approach to bootstrapping a startup by starting with small, simple product ideas and leveraging the revenue and experience earned from them to tackle more ambitious (and typically more financially rewarding) ideas.

This approach was the focus of a chapter of the 2015 book The End of Jobs: Money, Meaning and Freedom Without the 9-to-5 by Taylor Pearson.[22]

In July 26, 2016, his company, Drip, was acquired by Leadpages for an undisclosed amount. He led the Drip product team, out of Leadpages’ Minneapolis headquarters, until April 2018.[23]

In October 2018, Walling announced that he was starting the first startup accelerator designed for bootstrappers, called TinySeed.[24]

gollark: Unless god and satan don't provide very good rates... perhaps they've been outcompeted by modern mass production.
gollark: But presumably, if you could get 100000 Doritos™ a month by having a factory of people worship god or sacrifice goats to Satan, this would be used by people.
gollark: ... no.
gollark: Look, it's down here.
gollark: <@319753218592866315> Link please.

References

  1. "How to Identify a Wannabe Thought Leader". Mashable. 20 May 2013.
  2. "Rob Walling". angel.co.
  3. "Start Small, Stay Small". google.com.
  4. http://www.startupbook.net/
  5. "About". getdrip.com.
  6. "The Hottest Currency On The Internet (That You Probably Aren't Investing In)". Forbes.
  7. "How Drip started as a widget and was acquired by Leadpages for a life-changing sum". Mixergy.
  8. "Announcement: Leadpages Has Acquired Drip". leadpages.net.
  9. "Learn from Proven Entrepreneurs". Mixergy.
  10. "12 Best Online Courses for Learning Practical Business Skills". The Huffington Post.
  11. "Bootstrapped startups buck trend toward VC bucks". San Francisco Chronicle.
  12. Jon Russell (15 December 2013). "7 'digital nomads' explain how they live, work and travel". The Next Web.
  13. "Learn from Proven Entrepreneurs". Mixergy.
  14. "Web, quando la strategia Freemium si rivela un flop".
  15. Sarah E. Needleman and Angus Loten (22 August 2012). "When Freemium Fails". WSJ.
  16. "Why Marketing Automation Tools Are the Future of Email Marketing for Business". Huffington Post.
  17. "How to Make Six Figures, Part 5". Inc.com.
  18. "5 Steps to Reduce Your Churn Rate". Business 2 Community.
  19. TJ McCue (4 April 2012). "$14 Billion Software as a Service Industry Growth Influences Maker Companies". Forbes.
  20. "The 7 Day Startup". google.com.
  21. "The Stairstep Approach to Bootstrapping". robwalling.com.
  22. "The End of Jobs". amazon.com.
  23. "Leadpages Acquires CA Marketing Automation Company Drip - TECHdotMN". TECHdotMN. 2016-07-07. Retrieved 2018-03-15.
  24. "My Next Act: Building The First Startup Accelerator Designed for Bootstrappers". robwalling.com.
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