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Olivier Pomel, CEO of Datadog: How to Build and Sell a Product that Customers Love (Video + Transcript)

Date:

We’re so excited to have Olivier Pomel, CEO and co-founder of Datadog, back at SaaStr Annual 2021 Sep 26-28 in the SF Bay Area!!  Datadog has rocketed to a $28B+ leader in monitoring and security.

Olivier was kind enough to join us in Paris at the first SaaStr Europa together with Jean-Baptiste Coger, Co-Founder at PlatoHQ, when they were at about $50m ARR.  We can look back at how Datadog scaled.

Pomel focused his session on:

  • Making your SaaS startup customer-centric:
  • Hw event marketing has helped him integrate his engineering and sales teams.
  • The critical role of product managers and ways to utilize them effectively.
  • Lastly, he provides his piece of advice to all founders that are looking to become customer-centric.

Transcript

CEO @ Datadog | Olivier Pomel
Co-Founder @ Plato | Jean-Baptiste Coger

JB: My name is JB, I’m one of the founders of PLATO. So I start with a simple question. How many of you guys’ product rely on the highly functioning engineering team? Yeah, everyone, right? So that’s pretty much what we’re trained to help at PLATO. Helping the engineering teams run smoothly and being super productive thanks to mentoring. I’m some super privileged and excited today to have Olivier here has. So for those who don’t know him, Olivier is the founder and CEO of Datadog. So why don’t you tell us a little bit about what Datadog does?

Olivier: Sure. Hi everyone. It looks like it’s working. So, Datadog what we do is…we do monitoring and we do analytics for application and infrastructure in cloud environments. So basically any company that is running infrastructure, servers, applications and that is running it in cloud environments is a customer for us. And the good news is that just about every single company is busy right now moving from legacy to public and private cloud.

JB: Cool. It’s a very niche environment. How did you end up in that world?

Olivier: So I started the company with a longtime friend and coworker of mine, and by the way we started the company in the US, so despite the French accent and all of that, I’ve actually lived in the US since 1999, and it was natural for us to start a company in New York. So what happened to us is that we had … Previous company, I was running the development team and he was running the technical operations team or ops team. And the story there was that we knew each other very well. We had worked together in four different companies before that. We hired everybody on our teams. We scaled them from scratch, basically. We had a strict no jerk policy and yet we ended up a couple of years down the road with developers that hated operations, operations that hated developers, finger pointing, all of the things that you can imagine.

Olivier: So the starting point was, why don’t we give all of those teams the same viewpoint? How do we get them aligned and understand their problems are the same way? So that’s how we got started. We started the company in 2010. We didn’t quite understand at the time that the cloud was going to be so big. We thought, hey, it looks cool. Why don’t we build it for the companies that are moving into these new cloud environments? Maybe that’s a great way to get in. The other thing we didn’t quite realize was that bringing dev and ops together, bridging those two teams, was not just a feature of the new world. It was actually one of the key reasons why companies and enterprises would be moving from legacy IT to the cloud. So we ended up right in the center of it. And when you fast forward today, the company is about 700 people. We’ve been doubling the size of the company every single year and it turns out everybody’s moving to the cloud and everybody needs to understand what’s happening to their systems and applications.

JB: Cool. So living the problem first, that’s what the root of Datadog. So we’re here to talk about building and selling a product that customers love. So extremely relevant because I think, not only your self-claim, but also acknowledged in the community by being one of those companies that actually are very customer-centric. So let’s start with what is, in your opinion, a customer-centric company. What’s your definition?

Olivier: Right. So the one thing that’s counterintuitive is that so everybody wants to be customer-focused.

Olivier: The problem is that most companies end up being either sales-driven or engineering-driven and, if you want to be customer-focused, you can’t be either of those. So you have basically to keep correcting what’s happening within your sales teams and within your engineering teams to make sure everybody is focusing on the customer first. What this means is that if you let everything be sales-driven, you’ll end up being very short term. Sales teams are great at figuring out what’s going to get a deal done and very often getting the next deal done is actually not what you want to do for the long run for your customers. But on the flip side, if you let your engineering teams run on their own, I mean, you’ll end up with organizations where people focus too much, way too much, on their solutions, focus way too much on the long term, what will make sense and be sustainable in the long term, and you end up bridging that gap back to the customer, which is hard. So I would say it’s a struggle of every day to make sure that we go back to the customer and start from there.

JB: And how did this kind of style of management or company culture started? Was it a conscious choice?

Olivier: So the choice for us was … Actually, we were forced to do it because when we started the company it was really, really hard for us to raise money. We were based in New York, which is not the obvious place to start an infrastructure company. Most of the companies in the US started in that space were in the Bay Area. Neither my co-founder or myself came from Google or Facebook so we didn’t have the credentials for helping companies run at very large scale. So basically we didn’t have millions and millions of dollars, we didn’t have a whole suite of people that were repeating to us that we were geniuses so they could invest in our company. So we basically had to focus on the problem, like we spent really the first couple of years of the company listening to customers and trying to understand what the problem was.

JB: So that’s how it started. So let’s come back over the course of Datadog. You’ve been around for eight years. Let’s start from the beginning. How did it all start? So if you could give more details of these two first two years. We discussed it earlier. There were multiple phases. And how did you manage to be customer-centric in those early days?

Olivier: Yep. So the first thing we did is when we started the company, even though, so I’m an engineer and my co-founder is an engineer too, for the first six months of the company, we didn’t write a line of code, which took some restraint because when you start a company, you’re super excited, you want to get it done, you’re thinking of all those beautiful things you can build. And so instead of that, we actually spent all that time talking to potential customers and potentials users. And the thing that we found out there is that … So first of all, when you don’t have anything to sell, everybody is super happy to talk to you. You’ll get hours and hours of really fantastic people at fantastic companies and I spend all that time explaining to you what their problems are, what’s working, what’s not working for them. They’ll be extremely candid.

Olivier: That changes once you have something to sell because then you’re tainted, you have too much of a vested interest and you’re trying to push something, so people won’t open up so easily. So it’s actually very easy to do that super early on. So then after that, what we did is we built the first alpha of our products. We spend six months building the first alpha, got it to deploy it into a small number of customers. We actually noticed that the product was not exactly what it needed to be. It was way too open-ended, way too general at the time. So we had to change that quite a bit. But also one thing that was counterintuitive to us was that we were really limiting ourselves by strictly getting access to our product.

Olivier: So we had a closed alpha, we hand-picked the people that would actually be on the alpha, we tried to pick the best companies, the best people at the best companies. And it was actually really, really hard to get a lot of signal from these customers where we’re doing that. What we ended up doing after that is we opened it up to a wide beta, and all of a sudden everything changed. Because, as it turns out, it’s a lot easier for users to self-select and to go and start using your product than for you to understand for whom you’re going to be the right thing at the right time and they’re going to have some free bandwidth right now. And all the stars will be aligned so they can get you deployed.

JB: All right, so open beta, that was one of the secrets. You’re not a strong believer in the MVP, right?

Olivier: No, I actually don’t think, for what we do, an MVP exists. There might be exceptions, right? But in our case, we sell to enterprises. We sell a product that serves a fairly large purpose like it needs to monitor everything that’s happening across the whole infrastructure, the whole application. There’s a very large number of features our customers rely on, and none of these features in and of themselves are revolutionary. I mean that’s not why we build a product. There are all sorts of differentiation we built in, but you need to have them, otherwise, you cannot be minimally useful. And so the way we see it is it’s more of a continuum, you keep adding those features, and then at a certain point you have enough of them that customers can start buying. And the hard part there is to figure out really how you know which of those features are and that’s why you have to, again, go back to the customer, make sure you have enough of them so that you can actually extract some signal from those conversations.

JB: So we’re two years, you’re on the market now, you’ve launched, and so that’s the next stage for the company. So how do you, now at that stage, make sure that Datadog is still customer-centric. So what are the things you put in place? What are the tricks and hacks? And how big is the company at that time maybe?

Olivier: So the product went to the market in 10:15. And I think that phase of reaching an initial scale, I would qualify it as being from 10:15 to a bit less than 100 people. So, first of all, we wanted to set ourselves up so that we would be directly aligned with our customers. And one recurring theme for us is that we want to hear the bad news quickly. Actually, we’re looking for the bad news. You’re not going to learn anything if you go and meet your customers and you say you lead by saying, isn’t it great? And they say, yeah, yeah, it’s kind of great. And then you find out actually, it’s not all that great, and they’re going to churn, and something bad’s going to happen. So you actually want to get the bad news.

Olivier: One way structurally we set ourselves up for that is for a very long time we didn’t sell yearly deals. We only sold month to month, meaning that customers had the opportunity to churn all the time. Meaning, if something is wrong with a product or if we don’t solve the right problem or it’s not valuable enough, then we know right away. Customers are just going to churn. We can have a conversation with them. If you don’t do that, if you start selling term deals, you’re going to have the bad news, but a year later, and by then you’ve wasted a year. You’re going in the wrong direction. You’ve made all these mistakes that you could avoid otherwise. The other thing that we’re still doing is was that we wanted to make sure that the whole company was as close to the customer as possible.

Olivier: So for example, we had the whole engineering team on support rotations, so we still had professional support because we have support engineers that are at the front lines and they do a lot of the work, but every single engineer is only one week rotation throughout the year that actually brings them in front of the customer. And it’s fantastic because first of all, engineers are super happy when it starts and they’re even happier when it ends and when you don’t have to start to fix all these issues. But really what it gives is it gives a lot of empathy for the customer because they see actually what problems they face on a day to day basis. They also see the consequences of their choices. Sometimes certain things in the product look like fantastic ideas. And then, when you see it from the customer’s perspective, it turns out, yeah, actually it was a bit confusing, so it was a great idea. But we’re going to change it because it doesn’t work quite as well.

Olivier: The other thing we did to expose the engineers to the customers is we actually … We do a lot of event marketing because we sell to companies that migrate to the cloud and most companies have to go to events to learn about it. Everybody’s new to it. So everybody is going to conferences for that. So we go and we exhibit at these conferences and we give lots of demos and we actually bring engineers to do all these demos and everybody’s on the rotation and everybody’s going to get to one, two, three, five maybe of those conferences and spent every time a full day basically giving demos to potential customers or existing customers and answering questions. And that’s something that also helps build empathy for the customer. It also helps make the whole engineering team more confident about the problem they are solving and about their relationship to the end user.

JB: You had an interesting trick at the events to make engineers more comfortable. We’re also selling to engineers and some of them are introverts or communication is not, for some engineers, their best skills. And then you had some interesting tricks to make them feel more comfortable.

Olivier: Yeah. So one thing that’s not natural when you’re an engineer, like me, actually, is going and seeking other people’s attention. I don’t want to use stereotypes because, I mean, obviously everybody’s different, but generally speaking, a lot of engineers are not going to be super comfortable trying to talk to 40 different people in two hours. That’s not what everyone’s job is on the engineering team. So what we do for that is we actually have other people on the team that are responsible for getting people’s attention and then introducing them to the engineers so that they do a demo. So then everybody enters a rhythm where engineers can do demos and answer questions, that there’s never a shortage of people talking to them, which solves that issue.

JB: And some people say that you can only improve what you measure and track. So what were the metrics that you’re measuring, tracking and trying to improve on a day to day basis?

Olivier: Yeah, so curiously enough a for company that’s gathering so many metrics, we are not incredibly metrics driven for the product. It’s interesting because we process like four or five trillion records a day for our customers of their own metrics. But when it comes to our product, we think that most of the metrics are lagging indicators and they don’t convey all the nuance of the value that our customers are going to find with our product. So we don’t actually train ourselves to optimize to the metrics. The things we’ll watch … As a company, we’ll watch the volume of data and the volume of infrastructure that our customers are monitoring with us because it’s a sign of the value we give to that because they deploy us into more places. We’ll watch the engagement, of course, when that’s not original. And we’ll watch the churn, which is why very early on we’re focusing on that.

JB: Cool. So, so let’s fast forward a little bit. So, so now you’re, as you said, around 700 and growing. You told me you run 16 offices around the world. So what does it mean at that scale to be a customer-centric company?

Olivier: So, when you scale, some of the things that worked initially are not going to work anymore. So for example, we can’t have the executive team meeting with all the customers all the time. My co-founder and I and our chief product officer were doing a lot of the product work initially where we’re spending all that time with customers, can’t scale this anymore. So the first thing we did is we actually created a very strong product management function. We didn’t have product managers for the longest time. I think the first product manager was hired once we were over 100 people, but now we’re investing heavily in product managers, and the role of the product manager is very specific.

Olivier: Product managers are not here to invent product. They’re here to spend the most time possible with the customers, so outside of the office, to understand what their problem is, to understand what they’re using, what they’re not using, what they’re paying for, what they’re using or not using, and why. And basically understand, get the best understanding possible of the problem and the value that those problems represent for the customers. Then after that, what they do is they present our product and they get feedback from customers on the product so they have their role is not to invent the product, but to make sure it solves the right problem and it has the right value. That’s what they do for us.

JB: So they’re big PM teams, big product teams, and investing in them. And also how do you relate to that phase, to the early stage mode. Do you do still have some, locally, some actions and initiatives that are more scrappy, early stage?

Olivier: Yeah. Actually. So one thing that’s a big challenge is when you start branching into new products, so either you start new products or you’re go into new markets, which requires some tweaks for your products or different kinds of companies, different geographies, things like that. All of a sudden you’re back into startup mode and it’s easy to not realize that. It’s easy to basically get used to winning and then you expect everything’s just going to work this way. And so they will do the one thing you need to do there is you need to make sure that the teams that work on these new products behave exactly as you would have when you were a tiny company, which means soliciting as much feedback as quickly as possible, which means also going as wide as possible with the betas, and there’s quite a bit of tension there because when you have an existing product, you don’t want to taint the opinion of the existing product by releasing a new product that is not going to be as polished that you’re going to distribute very widely.

Olivier: But still, if you want that product to work, you need to go very wide very quickly. The other thing you need to do is you need to create a culture where people seek the bad news. And it’s actually a lot better to go to a customer and ask them, okay, so this new product, are you’re going to pay for it? You’ve tried it, et cetera. Is it good enough? Are you ready to buy it? It’s actually much better to hear from them, no, I’m not going to buy, and this is why, than to kick the ball down the road. And down the road hope that maybe in three months, six months, nine months, they’ll change their mind or maybe they’ll give you some feedback if they haven’t told you anything yet. So it’s actually a good thing to know what’s not working, it gives you a thread to pull, it tells you where you need to go.

JB: So it’s a great transition to … Because I want to talk about pricing. So it’s great, you talk to customers that tell you what their problems, you solve them. But at some point you need that kind of tough discussions, all right, it’s going to cost xx dollars or whatever. So how do you keep your customer as an ally in that discussion? And how do you start the discussion and have it still successful?

Olivier: Yeah. So it’s counterintuitive because you’d say that’s the part where you’re going to be disconnected from your customer because your customers want to spend as little as possible. You want them to pay you as much as possible. So obviously there’s going to be some disagreement there, I think the first thing is you have to agree on which kind of company you are and which kind of product you are. The way I see it, there are two kinds of products, two kinds of companies. There are the low-end disruptors, where the major feature is that it’s cheaper. And if you do that, basically the dynamics with your customers are going to be, they’ll push you to be cheaper and cheaper, and to figure out what you can take out of your product that it can be as cheap as possible. Or you can be the high-value product where you are going to be charging for your product. You’re going to try to charge more for your product and you’re going to have to deliver more value for that.

Olivier: So the cycle with your customer is to deliver more and more. So you have to agree with your customer that they’re looking for high value, high impact, and not as cheap as possible, because otherwise you’re never going to meet. Once you’ve agreed on that, you are going to be aligned in the medium, long-term, right? Because your customers, they want you to be successful. They want your company to be in business two years from now. They want you to ship new features. So they really want you to be successful. So once you’ve done that, that’s good.

Olivier: After that, there’s still going to be some friction. But that friction is also how you’re going to learn about the value of your product and about what would you need to do and where you need to go next. You’re going to hear from customers. Yeah, so for that particular part of the product, I totally see the value. We want it. It’s fine. That other part, we don’t see the value yet. So we’re not going to buy. It’s a large amount of money. Asking for money and putting a dollar amount on the product really focuses the mind for the customers and it helps you get really, really good feedback on where you need to go. So I would say in the long run it’s a very healthy relationship to have.

JB: Super interesting. It’s not just being customer-centric, it’s not all about building the product. It also reflects on like the sales team, the way you sell, because the way you frame it, it’s all about seeing your customer as a partner. Let’s do this together. You want me to succeed and I want you to succeed and the commitment on your side is to pay. And I think that’s super interesting, super available lesson here.

Olivier: Yes. And really, really focusing on value. You have to understand where the value is. And again that’s the job of the product managers. That’s why we have spent all this time with customers.

JB: Mm-hmm (affirmative). So you guys are quite big now. So compared to us, we’re 12 now and growing, thinking about tripling the company size within the year, and we’re thinking about culture. How do you scale your culture, even from maybe 12-30 in our case. It seems like a huge challenge. And from two to 700, what are the tips and tricks on how to scale the culture and at your level, as a CEO level, how do you make sure that everything is kind of going right?

Olivier: Right. So the one thing we haven’t done so far, we actually haven’t written down these other seven values or the 14 things you do. We haven’t done that so far. It’s something we’ll do in the future because I think, as we scale, we will need that so we can better train. But culture at the end of the day it’s really about who you hire, who you fire, who you promote. That’s what shows the culture. And for us the culture we want to have is a culture where we are completely customer-centric. So for example, we train people, we train the managers to care about the details. So one thing we do, I actually do still as a CEO, is I see every single customer complaint and support email that comes to us. I don’t read most of them. I delete most of them right away. I just scan them very quickly.

Olivier: But what this does is it gives me a sense of … It helps me pattern match, basically. It gives me a sense of what’s actually happening. How people are actually reacting to the product. What are they saying? I never actually act on them directly. I never go back to the customer, I never reply, I don’t try to solve the problem. But if I want to actually effect change, what I’ll do is I’ll go back through the management and through the chain of managers, make sure that people just get some feedback and decide whether they need to change something. So we encourage people at all level of the organization to do that, basically care about the details, so they can pattern match. The other thing that is very important if you want to maintain a customer focused culture is that you have to be super careful about the way you talk about the customers inside the company.

Olivier: It’s tempting, sometimes in sales it can be tempting to talk to customers as … You get some manipulative that you talk about them because you try to manage them through a sales process and things like that. Sometimes on the engineering side or the product side, you can think that customers are making the wrong choices or why are you’re doing that? Why are they doing this stupid thing with our product? The way we see it is if they’re doing a stupid thing with our product, it’s our fault. We let them do that. We made them think they should be doing that or we didn’t explain it right enough. So you always have to assume that the customer is right. But also, even if you think they’re wrong, the fact that they’re thinking something wrong in and of itself is a fact. It exists and you have to deal with it and you have to evaluate. So you can’t let yourself dismiss what you hear from the customers.

JB: Maybe one of the last questions here. So along your history, you’ve acquired two companies, and when you have such a strong culture of being customer-centric, how do you make this work? Because you have new people coming in, they have their own culture, obviously. How do you select those companies? And how do you make all of this acquisition work?

Olivier: Yeah. So we’ve made two acquisitions and both were heavily tilted towards the tech platform, the product and the team. So we acquired companies to build upon. We didn’t acquire revenue streams to add to our sales engine. And in both cases what we optimized for is what’s going to happen after we close the deal. Are people going to stick around? How long are they going to stick around? Are we going to be able to build on top of that team and turn that team of 20 we just acquired into a department of a company that’s going to have 200 and 500 people? So it’s all optimized on the fit, what happens after the acquisition and if the companies are going to share the same values we do.

JB: Cool. Last question. Short answer. I’m guessing there are many founders in the audience here. And what is the one advice for them and for me as well? Because I think most of us want to be customer-centric. So how do we make this work? What’s the one piece of advice that we should take out of this?

Olivier: My piece of advice is really, look for the bad news. You run towards the bad news. Whether it’s early, when you just shipped a product, whether it’s late when you’re renewing a big customer, the wrong thing to do is, you know there’s some issue in some account and then you show up in front of the customer and you hope they’re not going  to bring it up. Hey, maybe with a bit of luck, we can get away with it. Actually, no, the first thing you do is you talk about it, you bring it up and then you actually hear directly from the customer what they have to say about it. It actually goes a long way towards building the partnership and it also helps you learn from the discussion with your customers.

JB: Cool. Thanks. Time to wrap it up here. One thing that I take out as well as it’s a lot about the culture. It’s a lot about also coming from the top. And so it brings it back for what we’re doing also at PLATO is really helping your engineering team ingrain the culture in their day-to-day actions. So if you want to learn more about what we’re doing, just come to our booth. Thanks a lot, Olivier.

Olivier: Thank you.

JB: I hope you guys learned some stuff here. I did. So that’s a win.

Olivier: And we’re customers, so you should check out their booth.

JB: Yeah. Thank you very much.

Published on June 4, 2021

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Source: https://www.saastr.com/how-to-build-and-sell-a-product-that-customers-love-video-transcript/

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