Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 497647157 series 2853021
Content provided by Hosted by John Warrillow, the creator of The Value Builder System™. and John Warrillow. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Hosted by John Warrillow, the creator of The Value Builder System™. and John Warrillow or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Most founders measure success by the price they get for their company.

David Hauser did that—he built Grasshopper to $30M Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) and sold it for $175M – almost 6 times revenue. He and his partner owned the majority of the shares so the deal was life-changing for Hauser. But what makes this interview different is what Hauser did next: he crossed the table to become an investor and now acquires businesses through Durable Capital.

It's a study in contrasts. As a founder, Hauser chased growth. As an investor, he's ruthlessly disciplined. He mocks the PE herd chasing home services roll-ups and avoids auction-driven deals. Drawing on his experience founding Grasshopper and Mark Cuban-backed Chargify, he outmaneuvers ETA buyers and first-time acquirers with quiet, direct, close-ready offers. This is a rare window into how someone who's built and sold a business thinks about buying one—and what makes a deal attractive from the other side.

  continue reading

531 episodes