Its success will spur many more SaaS entrepreneurs to build from Chennai and Bengaluru, for the world, chasing a multi-billion dollar opportunity in cloud software
Girish Mathrubootham, founder, Freshworks
One day in September 2018, a blimp circled around Salesforce tower, the tallest building in San Francisco, treating onlookers, including thousands of attendees of the CRM cloud software giant’s annual Dreamforce conference, to a message that read #Failsforce on one side of the blimp.
On the other side, it read ‘Freshworks’ and ‘Hit refresh’. It was around this time that Freshworks, founded by entrepreneur Girish Mathrubootham, hit $100 million in annual recurring revenue. The blimp was the second, and more audacious, guerrilla campaign that Freshworks came up with, brazenly targeting much larger US rivals such as Salesforce, exhorting potential customers to ditch “bloated software†and try out Freshworks.Â
Four months before the blimp, Freshworks marketers gatecrashed an event by another bigger rival, ServiceNow, and treated attendees to Starbucks coffee and breakfast, and showed off signages encouraging people to try out ‘Freshservice’ from Freshworks—the company’s IT service management product.Â
On Friday, Freshworks started the process for an initial public offer, or IPO, in the US, marking a historic milestone for India’s software as a service sector. Of course, companies like Freshworks, and Zoho, where Mathrubootham cut his teeth, and which remains steadfastly privately held, and other SaaS successes led by Indian founders such as Icertis, Postman and Browserstack, have succeeded by finding customers in America, the world’s biggest tech market, and other advanced economies.Â
Most of them, like Freshworks, are headquartered in the US as well, with the bulk of their software development done from centres in Chennai, Bengaluru and Pune.Â