『#183: Selling to the Gorilla: Snap's Strategic Exit to ICE Mortgage Tech - Will Caldwell』のカバーアート

#183: Selling to the Gorilla: Snap's Strategic Exit to ICE Mortgage Tech - Will Caldwell

#183: Selling to the Gorilla: Snap's Strategic Exit to ICE Mortgage Tech - Will Caldwell

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概要

Will Caldwell started Snap after his first real estate software startup fizzled, pivoting from agent tools to regulated compliance data. He discovered lenders were required to buy hazard and flood certifications, and realized this was a "painkiller" product. He built Snap as a data and analytics platform for real estate and mortgage underwriting. Snap grew from a single California compliance product into a national flood data business, reaching $5M in revenue and 30 employees. The company charged per-loan transaction fees and embedded via API into mortgage software systems. With double-digit market share, Snap focused on customer experience, automation, and expanding wallet share inside lenders' workflows. In October 2024, Snap sold 51% of the company to Intercontinental Exchange, parent of ICE Mortgage Technology, at a double-digit revenue multiple. Will stayed on to scale the platform inside a much larger ecosystem. His key lesson: dominate a narrow niche, build a required product, and let strategic buyers find you. Key Takeaways Required Beats Optional – Legal compliance products create urgency and retention because customers must buy to complete revenue-generating transactions.Micro-Niche Entry – Starting in a narrow regulated segment let Snap win trust, then expand into much larger adjacent markets.API = Distribution – Embedding inside legacy systems turned Snap into a one-click button that scaled through partners' existing sales teams.Customer Experience Wins – In commodity data markets, faster, cheaper, simpler delivery became Snap's main competitive weapon. Quote from Will Caldwell, CEO and Co-Founder of Snap "You don't need to build a huge business to get a huge, life-changing exit. Just stay laser-focused. Don't chase shiny objects. I see many founders trying to boil the ocean. It is about staying focused on a single niche. "I think vertical SaaS has many great niches, and horizontal software is challenging. You need a lot of money to go after horizontal solutions across industries. However, with vertical SaaS products and niches, there is a lot of overlooked opportunity; the real estate vertical is one prime example." Links Will Caldwell on LinkedInSnap on LinkedInSnap website Podcast Sponsor – LaunchBay LaunchBay helps B2B software companies automate client onboarding and implementation so customers activate faster and everyone stays aligned. If your onboarding includes data collection, setup steps, approvals, training, or any level of customization, LaunchBay replaces the messy mix of emails, spreadsheets, and meetings with a clear, all-in-one onboarding system. Teams use LaunchBay to onboard clients faster, stay on top of follow-ups automatically, and deliver a smoother experience, without hiring more people or adding more tools. Visit launchbay.com/practical and get 25% off your first 3 months on any LaunchBay plan. The Practical Founders Podcast Tune into the Practical Founders Podcast for weekly in-depth interviews with founders who have built valuable software companies without big funding. Subscribe to the Practical Founders Podcast using your favorite podcast app or view on our YouTube channel. Get the weekly Practical Founders newsletter and podcast updates at practicalfounders.com. Practical Founders CEO Peer Groups Be part of a committed and confidential group of practical founders creating valuable software companies without big VC funding. A Practical Founders Peer Group is a committed and confidential group of founders/CEOs who want to help you succeed on your terms. Each Practical Founders Peer Group is personally curated and moderated by Greg Head.
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