145: The Importance of Building a Culture for Growth with Mike McDerment of Freshbooks

145: The Importance of Building a Culture for Growth with Mike McDerment of Freshbooks

One of the best ways for an entrepreneur to come up with a great business idea is by scratching their own itch. If something's giving you trouble, it's likely that other people out there are feeling the same way. That's how it all started for Mike McDerment, back when he created FreshBooks. At the time, McDerment wasn't looking to create a new business, or invent some sort of revolutionary product to sell. He was just trying to solve his own problem—he was tired of using Microsoft Excel as a way to create and send invoices to clients. It originally started off as simple digital product to make his own life easier, but it wasn't long before others started taking an interest in McDerment's new tool. Instead of selling a complete software package, the common approach at the time, McDerment decided to try out a new business model that was relatively unheard of at the time. "The truth is, we were SaaS before there was SaaS. We were cloud before there was cloud," he says. While most people were selling software as licenses, McDerment was determined to build a product that would guarantee a predictable, recurring revenue. It was a new idea, and one that many consultants and others in their space advised against. And it's true that things didn't look great for McDerment and his co-founders after two years of developing and selling the product. "We had only 10 paying customers paying about 10 dollars a month each. To be making a hundred dollars month after that many human years of effort is by all accounts a failure. And we stuck with it because we really loved what we were doing and our customers were telling us that it was great. It was a little more colorful in the early days," McDerment says. Refusing to give up, McDerment and his co-founders pushed on, and in the years since, they've served more than 10 million customers, and grown into a company with over 250 employees. Today, FreshBooks is one of the most widely used and preferred methods of accounting and invoicing for small businesses everywhere, and it all began with a simple idea, the passion to never give up, and some interesting strategies for growth. In this episode you will learn: Why you shouldn't necessarily follow best practices How to grow and adapt as a leader Why the best leaders never need to have all the answers The importance of instilling the right values within your team and company culture What "guardrails" you need in order to have your company grow as fast as possible & much more!

Episoder(585)

622: (Solo) The Truth About Founder-Led Content in 2026

622: (Solo) The Truth About Founder-Led Content in 2026

Founder-led branding isn’t dead — but it is evolving fast. Showing your face and posting “day in the life” content is no longer enough to stand out. The bar has risen, audiences have matured, and what...

13 Jan 8min

621: We Bet $200K on Bras Before Making a Single Sale — Sold 400,000 in 2 Years | Nala

621: We Bet $200K on Bras Before Making a Single Sale — Sold 400,000 in 2 Years | Nala

Nala was built by two founders with no fashion background who invested $200,000 before making a single sale and went on to sell over 400,000 pieces in just two years. In this interview, Chloe and ...

8 Jan 49min

620: (Solo) The Secret to Making Bold Business Moves With Confidence

620: (Solo) The Secret to Making Bold Business Moves With Confidence

One of the biggest challenges founders face — especially at the end of the year — is knowing what to do next and feeling confident that the move you're about to make is the right one. Certainty feels ...

6 Jan 11min

619: Airline Charged Me $65 - So I built a $250M Competitor | Adam Ewart

619: Airline Charged Me $65 - So I built a $250M Competitor | Adam Ewart

Adam Ewart turned a £50 excess baggage fee into a global bootstrapped logistics company operating in 145 countries and staying profitable for 15 straight years. In this interview, Adam breaks down ...

1 Jan 47min

618: (Solo) What 5 World-Class Founders Taught Me This Year

618: (Solo) What 5 World-Class Founders Taught Me This Year

Every year I sit down with some of the world’s most fascinating founders — but this year’s interviews hit me harder than most. Reinvention, resilience, copycats, failure, loneliness after exits, scrap...

30 Des 202511min

617: How A Failing Skincare Brand Became An 8-Figure Makeup Empire | Aliett Buttelman

617: How A Failing Skincare Brand Became An 8-Figure Makeup Empire | Aliett Buttelman

Aliett Buttelman spent eight years grinding in the dark before a single viral moment with Taylor Swift turned Fazit into an overnight seven-figure brand. In this interview, Aliett breaks down the ...

25 Des 202552min

616: (Solo) 5 Honest Business Lessons I’m Taking Into 2026

616: (Solo) 5 Honest Business Lessons I’m Taking Into 2026

2025 has been one of the most eye-opening years of my founder journey — personally, professionally, and strategically. Instead of sharing a highlight reel, I want to share the real lessons that moved ...

23 Des 20258min

615: Stop Chasing Sexy Businesses - This Boring One Made Me $500M+ | David Royce

615: Stop Chasing Sexy Businesses - This Boring One Made Me $500M+ | David Royce

David Royce went from a broke college kid in a door-to-door pest control job to building and selling four service businesses for nine-figure exits by applying Silicon Valley systems to an unsexy blu...

18 Des 202558min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

stopp-verden
dine-penger-pengeradet
e24-podden
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
pengepodden-2
utbytte
finansredaksjonen
pengesnakk
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
okonomiamatorene
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
rss-sunn-okonomi
stormkast-med-valebrokk-stordalen
lederpodden
rss-fa-makro
rss-markedspuls-2
boligbobla