We interview outbound sales leaders so that you can learn directly from the people on the front lines.
Our goal is to help our audience learn sales development, coaching, and prospecting best practices from people that are currently building or have built SDR teams.
In this episode of the Predictable Revenue podcast, Collin Stewart interviews Sriharsha “Sai” Guduguntla, co-founder of Hyperbound.
They delve into what it truly takes to achieve product-market fit, …
On the Predictable Revenue Podcast, host Collin Stewart sat down with Gil Quadros Flores, founder and CEO of CoGrader, to unpack the messy realities of building an EdTech startup.
From identifying te…
In AI, building great technology isn’t enough. You can solve a real problem and still struggle to gain adoption. Why? Because Product-Market Fit in AI isn’t just about function. It’s about trust.
Tha…
In this episode of The Predictable Revenue Podcast, Ajay Singh, founder of Pepsales, joins Collin to break down how his team ran 200+ discovery calls before writing a line of code, and why that depth…
When the AI wave hit, Jabeen Zaidi, founder of Spring AI, faced that exact storm.
Competing against giants like Adobe and Canva, she sat down with Collin on an episode of the Predictable Revenue Podc…
Building a startup is chaos. The leap from idea to product-market fit rarely follows a straight line.
On the Predictable Revenue Podcast, host Collin Stewart spoke with Paul Powers, founder and CEO o…
In this episode of the Predictable Revenue Podcast, our host Collin Stewart, sat down with Chris Brunner to unpack what it really took to build Authvia in a complex industry.
The slow work of buildin…
This week on the Predictable Revenue podcast, Collin Stewart sat down with Dan Sahar, co-founder of Guidde, to unpack the messy path to product-market fit.
This isn’t a highlight reel, it’s a real-wo…
In our latest episode of The Predictable Revenue Podcast, Collin sat down with Carolyn Sloan, founder of TeachMeTV.
They unpacked exactly how she had found it, and scaled real traction in a market th…
Collin Stewart interviewed Jason Fletcher, founder of DevPipeline, a software apprenticeship program training overlooked talent in rural Utah.
Jason didn’t build with funding, marketing, or a roadmap…
In this episode of the Predictable Revenue Podcast, we spoke with Patrick Zelaya, founder of HeavyConnect, about one of the cleanest early traction stories we’ve heard.
He didn’t start with code. Or …
In this episode, Mike Zayonc, co-founder at Kodif, shares what finding real traction actually looks like: testing fast, selling early, and staying close to the problem.
If you're still guessing at PM…
When we first spoke to Jacob Bank, founder of Relay.app, the product was ambitious, powerful, horizontal, flexible, but a bit challenging to grasp.
It was early, and the clarity wasn’t quite there. …
Marketers didn’t have time to review their own content. Consumers clicked random thumbnails. And most of the videos, over 90%, never got watched.
Vyrill was built to fix that.
The insight wasn’t abou…
In the early days, it’s tempting to say yes to everything, especially if you’re in services and can technically do it all.
But if you want to build a business people refer to, remember, and trust, s…
Founders overvalue revenue in the early days. The first 10 customers are about learning. Nothing you build next will matter if you don’t have a tight feedback loop.
That’s how Jason Moolenaar approa…
“You either crush it and they don’t need you anymore, run out of leads, or just don’t get the results. Every cold email engagement has an expiration date.”
That was the reality for Noah Berk and his …
J. Ryan Williams spent years leading sales at high-growth startups. Then he quit. Not because he lost faith in sales, but because he realized most founders were doing it backwards.
Product-market fit…
The best startup ideas don’t start with brainstorming. They start with frustration. Anirudh Ganesh didn’t invent a new market. He spotted an obvious, painful inefficiency: boutique hotels had outdate…
Product-market fit doesn’t always start with innovation. Sometimes, it starts with frustration.
That’s exactly how Pulpo WMS began: not as a genius idea in a boardroom, but as a real-world pain point…