{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/651b0df875e52b001192e36d/6a1209104c45d20ee2f24e0f?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"S1: From Employee 20 to Bootstrap CEO: Joe Gadreau on Building the Data Layer Nobody Wanted to Build","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/651b0df875e52b001192e36d/1779566751841-d471f3e0-4132-4543-88d8-1289cfca3534.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>Everyone wanted the commerce front end. Nobody wanted the data.</p><p><br></p><p>Joe Gadreau watched agency after agency walk away from the hardest — and most important — part of the commerce stack while he was at Salsify. So he went and built it himself.</p><p><br></p><p>Recorded live at Salsify's Digital Shelf Summit in Atlanta, Christian sat down with Joe Gadreau, founder and CEO of Lettuce Commerce, for a conversation about what it means to be an AI-native services company in 2024, why the \"bill you forever\" managed services model is dying, and how the convergence of software and services is reshaping what the next generation of consulting firms actually looks like.</p><p><br></p><p>What we cover: Why Joe left one of the first 20 seats at Salsify to start his own thing, the car and fuel analogy that explains why product content is the most overlooked piece of the commerce stack, how Lettuce Commerce is going after legacy SI firms head-on, Sequoia's thesis on the next trillion dollar company masquerading as a services firm, and what a bootstrapped founder thinks about capital, scale, and the right moment to consider outside investment.</p><p><br></p><p>⏱️ TIMESTAMPS</p><p>0:26 — Welcome and guest intro: Joe Gadreau, founder and CEO of Lettuce Commerce</p><p>0:44 — Joe's background: athlete tracking technology to employee #20 at Salsify</p><p>1:40 — Why Salsify was the right place to build a professional foundation</p><p>2:34 — The moment you know it's time to start your own thing</p><p>3:13 — The thesis: everyone builds the commerce front end, nobody fuels it with data</p><p>4:25 — \"Let us help\" — where the name Lettuce Commerce actually came from</p><p>5:16 — What Lettuce Commerce does: systems integrator meets strategic consultancy</p><p>6:30 — Helping clients pick the right technology, not just implement what they chose</p><p>7:43 — How Joe thinks about competing with Accenture Song and Amplify</p><p>8:00 — AI-native from day one: founded January 2024, the same era as ChatGPT</p><p>9:00 — Eating the lunch of legacy services firms built on perpetual managed services revenue</p><p>9:41 — The difference between hand-holding and genuine change management</p><p>11:22 — Repeat customers who want help with the next stage vs. dependency models</p><p>11:52 — The software-services convergence: what does it actually mean for a services business?</p><p>12:17 — Sequoia's bold statement: the next trillion dollar company will be a software company masquerading as a services firm</p><p>13:03 — Is Lettuce the orchestrator or part of a bigger journey?</p><p>13:26 — Bootstrapped and proud — and approaching the point where capital could accelerate ambition</p><p>14:34 — Controlling your own destiny while staying open to the right combination</p><p>14:57 — Christian's read: a product-led partnership is in Lettuce's not-too-distant future</p><p><br></p><p>🔔 Subscribe so you don't miss the big announcement</p><p><br></p><p>Connect with Guest, Joe Gaudreau</p><p>https://www.linkedin.com/in/joegaudreau/</p><p><br></p><p>Connect with Christian and Ayelet</p><p>Ayelet’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ayelet-shipley-b16330149/</p><p>Christian's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hassold/</p><p>Web: https://www.inorganicpodcast.co</p>","author_name":"Christian Hassold & Ayelet Shipley"}