Promise, had witnessed technology’s impact on the work communities in which she’d been a part &#8212; and not always for good. In the labor force and the environment sector, she’d seen technology replace jobs, relegating janitors and receptionists to contract work. In the music industry, she’d seen artists’ content devalued with advances in digital innovation. “I went into tech to understand it,” she said.</p>\n<p>Ellis-Lamkins decided to be a force for good within the tech world, narrowing her lens on helping underserved communities through govtech.</p>\n<p>Meeting through CNN commentator Van Jones, Ellis-Lamkins worked with her co-founder Diana Frappier at multiple companies and organizations previously &#8212; like Green For All and Honor &#8212; before deciding to start Promise in 2017, joining the YC Winter 2018 batch. “When we went to YC, we didn’t know what we were going to do,” Ellis-Lamkins says. “We didn’t have an engineer; we just kind of had a vision of the system we wanted to change.”</p>\n<p>Promise was born of their mission to serve communities who need more tech-enabled resources, helping people easily and effectively navigate government payments like utilities, child support, and parking tickets. The platform enables users to adopt customizable plans and digital payment options. Ellis-Lamkins and Frappier just closed <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://techcrunch.com/2021/02/19/with-20m-a-round-promise-brings-financial-flexibility-to-outdated-government-and-utility-payment-systems//">Promise’s $20M Series A</a>, which is one of the largest funding rounds for a Black, women-led startup with investors like Kapor Capital, Bronze, First Round, and Y Combinator.</p>\n<p><strong>Iterating on YC</strong></p>\n<p>Ellis-Lamkins and Frappier had long career paths &#8212; in social justice reform and criminal defense respectively &#8212; trailing behind them. They felt their backgrounds were not typical of a Y Combinator applicant. “We were so different [compared to our peers],” Ellis-Lamkins recalls. “The first time I went to YC, I felt 100 years old, because I came in a minivan and had to go pick up my kids after my YC interview.”</p>\n<p>Ellis-Lamkins says she was surrounded by a lot of people who had already developed a prototype for their tech company; she tried to convince Frappier to leave the day of the interview. “Of course, I gave the wrong phone number, so I never got a call from Michael [Seibel] to tell me we got into YC; I thought we didn’t get in, and they were so rude they didn’t even call to let us know,” she says with a laugh.</p>\n<p>After those initial bumps, Ellis-Lamkins made the Y Combinator experience work for her. It was less about meetups with her batchmates, and more about the structure YC provided for building the fledgling Promise. “It just put us on a timeline of when we needed to achieve things,” she says. “Office hours were also really helpful, because it was coaching; I probably met with Gustaf [Alströmer] and Michael 10 times, right before getting ready for fundraising. We went, we acted as though they were a staff, went through every deck, had them give us feedback, and iterated.”</p>\n<p>The approach worked for them. The Promise founders launched out of the program with $3.9M in seed funding.</p>\n<p><strong>Succeeding and Failing</strong></p>\n<p>Failure and success often run in tandem, with one following the other. It’s a throughline in Promise’s story; Ellis-Lamkins and Frappier are interested in helping people who are financially struggling to succeed in managing government payments &#8212; whether it’s a family struggling to pay rent, a young worker laid off during Covid-19, or even a parking ticket someone simply can’t afford to pay off in one fell swoop. Over the past several years, the pair has managed to build a sustainable business while keeping a mission-focused core. Ellis-Lamkins believes there’s a myth of “people believing in social mission or believing in revenue, and not realizing you need both.”</p>\n<p>She wants to succeed, become profitable and scale, because the more effective Promise is as a business, the more people the company can impact. Ellis-Lamkins says revenue is a strategy for change. In [Promise’s] case, we can control how the capital is made.” Ellis-Lamkins does this through making sure Promise’s clients have aligned incentives. She and Frappier work with people who are focused on “reducing debt, reducing harm so that people don&#8217;t end up in trouble and that&#8217;s an earlier intervention,” she explains. “We had to work with treasurers who wanted to have money, or mayors who wanted their cities to perform better, instead of people who are inclined to incarcerate people.”</p>\n<p>All the while, Promise is growing, learning and making mistakes in order to succeed. In fact, Ellis-Lamkins thinks all entrepreneurs should be allowed the space to fail, which is a lesson she’s learned in Silicon Valley. “But I think we should acknowledge that for a lot of working people, and people of color, failure has different consequences,” Ellis-Lamkins says.</p>\n<p>At YC, Ellis-Lamkins heard, “Pay yourself $50,000 a year.” But she couldn’t support herself and her kids on that salary. In this, she is an advocate for cushions for innovators and risk-takers, which will vary from entrepreneur to entrepreneur &#8212; especially those who don’t have privileged backgrounds. “We have to think about, ‘How do we create some safety nets for entrepreneurs so that people can afford the luxury of failure? Which most people can&#8217;t afford,” Ellis-Lamkins says. “I think the real thing I would say, which I say to our investors and to others, is we have to create the conditions for people who do not [fit] the pattern recognition to succeed.”</p>\n<p>Certainly, she’s leading the charge with Promise, embodying how equipping an entrepreneur with the right tools can be a catalyst for success.</p>\n<p><img src=https://www.ycombinator.com/"/blog/content/images/wordpress/2021/03/Promise.png/" alt=\"Promise co-founders Diana Frappier and Pheadra Ellis-Lamkins\" /></p>\n<!--kg-card-end: html-->","comment_id":"1104771","feature_image":"/blog/content/images/2022/02/Promise.png","featured":false,"visibility":"public","email_recipient_filter":"none","created_at":"2021-03-25T23:53:54.000-07:00","updated_at":"2022-02-01T15:38:22.000-08:00","published_at":"2021-03-25T23:53:54.000-07:00","custom_excerpt":null,"codeinjection_head":null,"codeinjection_foot":null,"custom_template":null,"canonical_url":null,"authors":[{"id":"61fe29e3c7139e0001a710a7","name":"Lindsay Amos","slug":"lindsay-amos","profile_image":"/blog/content/images/2022/02/Lindsay.jpg","cover_image":null,"bio":"Lindsay Amos is the Senior Director of Communications at Y Combinator. In 2010, she was one of the first 30 employees at Square and the company’s first comms hire.","website":null,"location":null,"facebook":null,"twitter":null,"meta_title":null,"meta_description":null,"url":"https://ghost.prod.ycinside.com/author/lindsay-amos/"}],"tags":[{"id":"61fe29efc7139e0001a7116f","name":"Female Founders","slug":"female-founders","description":null,"feature_image":null,"visibility":"public","og_image":null,"og_title":null,"og_description":null,"twitter_image":null,"twitter_title":null,"twitter_description":null,"meta_title":null,"meta_description":null,"codeinjection_head":null,"codeinjection_foot":null,"canonical_url":null,"accent_color":null,"url":"https://ghost.prod.ycinside.com/tag/female-founders/"},{"id":"61fe29efc7139e0001a71152","name":"Founder Stories","slug":"founder-stories","description":null,"feature_image":null,"visibility":"public","og_image":null,"og_title":null,"og_description":null,"twitter_image":null,"twitter_title":null,"twitter_description":null,"meta_title":null,"meta_description":null,"codeinjection_head":null,"codeinjection_foot":null,"canonical_url":null,"accent_color":null,"url":"https://ghost.prod.ycinside.com/tag/founder-stories/"},{"id":"61fe29efc7139e0001a711ba","name":"#1769","slug":"hash-1769","description":null,"feature_image":null,"visibility":"internal","og_image":null,"og_title":null,"og_description":null,"twitter_image":null,"twitter_title":null,"twitter_description":null,"meta_title":null,"meta_description":null,"codeinjection_head":null,"codeinjection_foot":null,"canonical_url":null,"accent_color":null,"url":"https://ghost.prod.ycinside.com/404/"}],"primary_author":{"id":"61fe29e3c7139e0001a710a7","name":"Lindsay Amos","slug":"lindsay-amos","profile_image":"https://ghost.prod.ycinside.com/content/images/2022/02/Lindsay.jpg","cover_image":null,"bio":"Lindsay Amos is the Senior Director of Communications at Y Combinator. 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In the labor force and the environment sector,\nshe’d seen technology replace jobs, relegating janitors and receptionists to\ncontract work. In the music industry, she’d seen artists’ content devalued with\nadvances in digital innovation. “I went into tech to understand it,” she said.\n\nEllis-Lamkins decided t","reading_time":4,"access":true,"og_image":null,"og_title":null,"og_description":null,"twitter_image":null,"twitter_title":null,"twitter_description":null,"meta_title":null,"meta_description":null,"email_subject":null,"frontmatter":null,"feature_image_alt":null,"feature_image_caption":null},"mentions":[{"id":1769,"slug":"promise","name":"Promise","batch_name":"W18","small_logo_url":"https://bookface-images.s3.amazonaws.com/small_logos/1f469f29205bdaeb83cbefb97085b4a311f3f670.png","one_liner":"A modern payment processing platform focused on government agencies.","website":"http://promise-pay.com","long_description":"Promise modernizes and humanizes government payments. 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Promise’s win-win services strengthen the bond between government agencies and the communities which they serve.","tags":["Fintech","GovTech"],"ycdc_status":"Active","logo_url":"https://bookface-images.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/logos/e1953578e12f9621409e039950a16c03b8cf04a7.png?X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Credential=ASIAQC4NIECAGUY2VVGA%2F20250414%2Fus-west-2%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Date=20250414T112713Z&X-Amz-Expires=3346&X-Amz-Security-Token=IQoJb3JpZ2luX2VjEIf%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2FwEaCXVzLXdlc3QtMiJGMEQCIDUIwTk8hrqJd5eYTf5fFm2mIpt0ch4d1m7ltpC1qA%2B4AiBsIq9PxfR5teM5LWwdGmgwyXYE7u8ZgtPZpglEkyYzgyrlAwgQEAAaDDAwNjIwMTgxMTA3MiIMCcz%2BL96RPIqh%2Fi5yKsIDHJMt6x5dAqh%2B%2Bar0ysL3FFe2LX2m3T0RnWv90WOl20vCgJU4G9qsLwrjBeU1mRdgSBn24iQIR13qcrbFaeHL3Rq%2BdbeN1UBe4QyeEO%2FtLo2MaG5a6KmNv%2FOLCChImk1IzDHA0F6%2BJRSPKeMAbcK175ZuNOjfN2EDZsJKCTtBh2RqyS8lqBNcLLggBgF36Y%2FHI2HWQDcXkSEb1uJQo9PjnRsdzMcYEySfaxO6hfdjSRUi8FfFDPVA4fsQ2tLmKYJF0gj4yevOUoPjey%2F9fYsi9rHfPaRuuhRWRi19yZPwdLTTSayF0SHFesppvEjgM1%2BQJUYBp7h7sjdYxrcvdGmZBW0zjjDL3dZZU6daAVDcU7z96%2FKuHeBDWXUYL2E2jO6uz61hxIS7HdwO6LIet9F7nP%2FdwbDutMTdG7IGnP6Y7%2B5yx0awJ2KLgsU9Ums0a%2BAhIZZ694709xjdyaWIg%2FeMDRpZuE1NWkYQf%2BoXAEJFUrbHYUevOCy2Qr4HVWdh%2B9oDSXZajbAY56xO4wUJL%2BPjhu1bkuUCcdzL%2FeDrKca6Oic%2Bb8Lm5F%2BKUWCdVbH%2F4ssGA6M%2FTIjA%2BVp9kg5R1RL28DhMMMTT8r8GOqYBO6bs54vIBiGZvgKrRUXjc7hM1oFhF0gMbo4VUAuOrNc%2FB%2FR%2FVElAkCRHdcohlvVNqSSXC%2BWPkcma2OF3%2Fqw6wIYI98Vi29Sy%2Ft7cncD%2FgoymQ3senxrlEhbaI5GuC9nwInqakIfDm1NYmnAWDJiUFiI4nHqjWHzl1X3t82yM1dnlHo5FHaCUs0zpbrUulwu82Ybf%2B6Ce0xYAxv9c5SNK%2Fn7fdP2p6w%3D%3D&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Signature=37edde69ec5c64a14970eb2ca3eb9e9678265a6bc6df770ec5f5fb5c09ada903","year_founded":2017,"team_size":70,"location":"Oakland, CA","linkedin_url":"https://www.linkedin.com/company/joinpromise","twitter_url":"","fb_url":"","cb_url":"https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/promise","is_hiring":true,"active_job_count":5}],"related_posts":[{"id":"6356a9c957e9f90001984b62","uuid":"32e1602f-ec89-49b0-932c-61ef6bbacfcb","title":"YC Founder Firesides: Mutiny on AI and the next era of company growth","slug":"yc-founder-firesides-mutiny-on-ai-and-the-next-era-of-company-growth","html":"<p><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.mutinyhq.com//">Mutiny (<a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/mutiny/">YC S18</a>) uses AI and data to convert website visitors into customers. Today, the fastest growing B2B companies such as Notion and Snowflake use Mutiny to identify ideal customers, determine sections of websites that will increase conversion, and produce copy that converts visitors into customers. </p><p>YC’s <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://twitter.com/anuhariharan/status/1557784730543632384/">Anu Hariharan</a> sat down with Mutiny co-founder and CEO <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://twitter.com/jalehr/">Jaleh Rezaei</a> to talk about their <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://twitter.com/jalehr/status/1582352047659024385/">recent acquisition</a> of Intellipse, an AI marketing platform, as well as how AI will impact the next era of growth. Throughout, Jaleh shares advice about acquisitions as a growth strategy and evolving your product with AI. </p><p>You can listen here or on <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://open.spotify.com/episode/7dy1qB7XQfOryE4kj4spGS/">Spotify, <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/160-yc-founder-firesides-mutiny-on-ai-and-the-next/id1236907421?i=1000583708925\%22>Apple Podcasts</a>, and <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://twitter.com/i/spaces/1yNxaNzAPPnKj/">Twitter.

Notion drives 60% more leads through paid marketing</a></li><li>Example 2: <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.mutinyhq.com/blog/the-second-lever-replays#conversion-secret-how-snowflake-runs-abm-at-scale\">Snowflake builds an ABM and enterprise marketing program</a></li></ul><p><strong>12:50</strong> - You recently shared that with data and AI, Mutiny transforms conversion from a niche A/B testing tool to a platform that every go-to-market team can use to drive efficient growth at scale. What does that mean, and how have you leveraged the advances in AI over the last four years? </p><ul><li>When you can give the entire go-to-market team x-ray vision into every visitor and how they are converting – and then pair that insight with the ability to change the website for different segments – every team will make the website a core part of their strategy to drive more revenue. Mutiny uses AI to give teams this insight and answer questions like: What segments should I prioritize? What parts of the website should I change? What copy will resonate? Where should I focus? </li></ul><p><strong>17:00</strong> - At Mutiny when looking at data, when do you know the right questions to ask and when do you say these are not questions we need to optimize now?</p><ul><li>In the early days, one of the most valuable things we did was follow our customers’ growth teams. We would attend team meetings, watch them use our product, and ask questions. It became clear what we should build for our customers. </li></ul><p><strong>20:30</strong> - Since you started Mutiny, what are some of the advances in AI that you’ve leveraged? </p><ul><li>We did things that didn't scale in the early days to solve customers’ problems. As our customers grew, our data set grew and we used AI models and inputs to improve our recommendation engines and service a broader customer base. Today, we can build models that tell a user where on the website they should make changes and write personalized copy leveraging GPT-3. </li></ul><p><strong>29:10</strong> - Did you have moments when you felt Mutiny could be doing more with the advances being made in AI? </p><ul><li>We saw an opportunity to marry our proprietary data set with GPT-3 to produce highly personalized copy. </li></ul><p><strong>32:15</strong> - GPT-3 was an inflection point for Munity. What is the next inflection point? </p><ul><li>There are a lot of opportunities with DALL-E, as visuals are important in marketing.</li></ul><p><strong>36:30</strong> - Do you have cautionary advice on how to think about using technologies like GPT-3 and DALL-E for founders dabbling in AI? </p><ul><li>Think through the ultimate long-term vision of the product and the long-term defensibility of the business. And launch fast, as technology develops quickly. </li></ul><p><strong>38:40</strong> - What advice do you have for founders in terms of leveraging OpenAI, GPT-3, etc. while focusing on the long-term vision? </p><ul><li>Your vision and long-term view is separate from your day-to-day execution. Your long-term vision (i.e. the opportunity and what you’re trying to create over the course of a decade) provides clarity around where you’re trying to go and brings other people along with you, like your investors and employees. Day-to-day, you’re focused and executing quickly – and not always thinking about the ten year vision when you’re building V1.</li></ul><p><strong>43:45</strong> - You decided to grow your team by acquiring Intellipse. And now, Mutiny has one of the larger engineering teams with production experience in modern marketing AI technologies. Why did you decide to pursue an acquisition? </p><ul><li>Founders have to look for inflection points where something happens in the market leading to the “old way” no longer being as good. And as a result, a much larger portion of the market is open to a new and better way. We’re in a recession, and this is an inflection point for Mutiny. Companies need to convert every dollar to a customer, and Mutiny has built a product that makes marketing dollars more efficient. We can accelerate our road map with the acquisition of Intellipse</li></ul><p><strong>46:40</strong> - How did you know you wanted to work with the Intellipse team so much that you had to go through an acquisition?</p><ul><li>We were interested in the Intellipse team and the skills the team had developed. Their CTO and senior engineers had a unique experience with marketing AI and newer technologies, like GPT-3.</li><li>The personality and values of the founder spreads in an organization and becomes the company culture. After getting to know the founder and the free am, it was evident the two companies had a similar culture and shared values – and we’d be able to bring this team in and enhance our culture.</li></ul><p><strong>50:15</strong> - How long did it take to assess the culture? </p><ul><li>We spent the same amount of time with each individual as if we were hiring them onto the team through our typical recruiting process.</li></ul><p><strong>51:30</strong> - Do you expect to acquire more companies in the future? And how should founders and CEOs determine whether this strategy is right for their company? </p><ul><li>Be clear about your goals and why an acquisition is the right way to achieve those goals. When a company is working toward a similar goal – building something we would have done ourselves – it is a successful acquisition. With Intellipse, the team shared similar goals and company culture, and could accelerate our timing.</li><li>We want to hire founders onto our product team who are user focused and move quickly. Founders can focus their entrepreneurial energy on building a product and growing that business area within Mutiny. </li></ul><p><strong>54:55</strong> - What are your thoughts about how AI will impact the next ten years? </p><ul><li>There has been enough productization of backend AI technologies that as a founder you can tap into AI to accelerate the product you want to build and the value you give to customers. From a user and growth perspective, AI enables us to automate many of the tasks no one wants to do. And for those who aren’t technical – but understand what they are trying to do – they can now be self sufficient.</li></ul>","comment_id":"6356a9c957e9f90001984b62","feature_image":"/blog/content/images/2022/10/BlogTwitter-Image-Template-1.jpeg","featured":true,"visibility":"public","email_recipient_filter":"none","created_at":"2022-10-24T08:05:45.000-07:00","updated_at":"2022-10-25T08:44:16.000-07:00","published_at":"2022-10-24T09:25:31.000-07:00","custom_excerpt":"YC’s Anu Hariharan sat down with Mutiny co-founder and CEO Jaleh Rezaei to talk about their recent acquisition of Intellipse, an AI marketing platform, as well as how AI will impact the next era of growth.","codeinjection_head":null,"codeinjection_foot":null,"custom_template":null,"canonical_url":null,"authors":[{"id":"61fe29e3c7139e0001a7106f","name":"Y 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Today, the fastest growing B2B companies such as Notion and Snowflake use Mutiny to identify ideal customers, determine sections of websites that will increase conversion, and produce copy that converts visitors into customers. ","reading_time":5,"access":true,"og_image":null,"og_title":null,"og_description":null,"twitter_image":null,"twitter_title":null,"twitter_description":null,"meta_title":null,"meta_description":null,"email_subject":null,"frontmatter":null,"feature_image_alt":null,"feature_image_caption":null},{"id":"620da5f7d710a50001fba7dd","uuid":"2e869860-9ab1-45e5-9761-e49ec49f7a45","title":"Y Combinator Top Companies - February 2022","slug":"y-combinator-top-companies-feb-2022","html":"<!--kg-card-begin: markdown--><p>We’re excited to share the <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/topcompanies/">2022 YC Top Companies</a>. In addition to the list of top companies, we also launched the <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/topcompanies/breakthrough/">YC Breakthrough Companies</a> list to highlight the fast-growing companies that have received between $15M-$300M <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/continuity//">from YC</a>.</p>\n<p>Both lists include private, public and exited companies valued at $150M or more and are sorted by valuation<sup class=\"footnote-ref\"><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"#fn1\" id=\"fnref1\">[1]</a></sup> or market cap as of February 2022.</p>\n<p>Here are some stats about this year’s list:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<p>More than 260 YC companies are valued at $150M+ and more than 60 companies are valued at $1B+.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>99 new companies joined the list since our last update in July 2021.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>More companies are operating remotely</p>\n<ul>\n<li>11% of the top companies are remote first.</li>\n<li>Three of the top ten private companies are remote first (<a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/opensea/">OpenSea, <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/brex/">Brex, <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/gitlab/">Gitlab)./n/n/n
  • /n

    20 countries are represented</p>\n<ul>\n<li>6 new countries represented: Algeria, Tunisia, Senegal, Chile, Brazil, and Singapore</li>\n<li>Of the companies that are new to the list, 28% are outside of the US.</li>\n</ul>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Top 10 valuation jumps since July 2021:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/flock-safety/">Flock Safety</a> (jumped 74 spots to #31)</li>\n<li><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/solugen/">Solugen (jumped 74 spots to #51)</li>\n<li><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/gem/">Gem (jumped 69 spots to #76)</li>\n<li><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/modern-treasury/">Modern Treasury</a> (jumped 52 spots to #48)</li>\n<li><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/xendit/">Xendit (jumped 49 spots to #37)</li>\n<li><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/captivateiq/">CaptivateIQ (jumped 35 spots to #71)</li>\n<li><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/easypost/">EasyPost (jumped 34 spots to #60)</li>\n<li><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/h1/">H1 (jumped 30 spots to #98)</li>\n<li><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/veriff/">Veriff (jumped 28 spots to #61)</li>\n<li><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/promise/">Promise (jumped 21 spots to #121)</li>\n</ul>\n</li>\n</ul>\n<p>You can read more about some of the featured companies <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/topcompanies/featured/">here.

    /n

    One thing to note is that this is not an exhaustive list of YC’s top companies. We allowed founders to opt out of being listed for any reason. Here's the <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/">full list</a> of YC companies.</p>\n<p>Congratulations to all of the fantastic companies highlighted here. We’re delighted to be part of their stories and hope these lists help potential employees, customers and investors identify companies they’d like to work with as well.<br>\n<br></p>\n<p><em>This list was published in late February 2022, just as the fighting in Ukraine began. We didn’t think it was an appropriate moment to be celebratory, and wanted to take time to turn our attention to <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/blog/supporting-ukraine/">the Ukrainian people</a> and the YC community being impacted by the invasion of Ukraine.</em><br>\n<br></p>\n<hr class=\"footnotes-sep\">\n<section class=\"footnotes\">\n<ol class=\"footnotes-list\">\n<li id=\"fn1\" class=\"footnote-item\"><p>Why do we use valuation? We have always said that valuation is not the best way to measure a company’s value, and we consistently warn our companies not to over-optimize their fundraising for a high valuation. That said, it’s the most commonly available metric to compare companies in the startup world. Other metrics, like revenue, are often kept private. We have a number of impressive companies who would appear on the list or rank even higher if we counted other metrics (revenue, revenue/employee, etc). <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"#fnref1\" class=\"footnote-backref\">↩︎</a></p>\n</li>\n</ol>\n</section>\n<!--kg-card-end: markdown-->","comment_id":"620da5f7d710a50001fba7dd","feature_image":"/blog/content/images/2022/02/yc-top-companies-list-og-image-2.png","featured":true,"visibility":"public","email_recipient_filter":"none","created_at":"2022-02-16T17:33:43.000-08:00","updated_at":"2022-04-19T16:33:56.000-07:00","published_at":"2022-02-28T08:44:00.000-08:00","custom_excerpt":"We’re excited to share the 2022 YC Top Companies. 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You can read the first edition <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/blog/learnings-of-a-ceo-max-rhodes-faire/">here. </p><p><a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://zapier.com//">Zapier was founded in 2012 by <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://twitter.com/wadefoster/">Wade Foster</a>, <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://twitter.com/bryanhelmig?lang=en\%22>Bryan Helmig</a>, and <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://twitter.com/mikeknoop/">Mike Knoop</a>. The founders went through YC’s <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/zapier/">Summer 2012 batch</a> and <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://www.ycombinator.com/growth-program/">S18 Growth Program</a>, and today, Zapier automates work by connecting with over 5,000 apps. The company has been profitable since 2014 and is valued at $5B – with 700 employees working remotely. Wade, Zapier CEO, shared his learnings growing into the role of a growth-stage CEO. </p><p><strong>How has your job as a CEO changed from leading a 3-person company in 2012 to a 700-person organization today? </strong></p><p>In the early days, you’re in the trenches with your co-founders and early employees splitting up tasks and touching nearly every part of the business. Often you’re writing code, selling products, recruiting, and helping with HR and finance functions. Today, Zapier is almost a team of 700 – and as we’ve grown, people have taken more and more duties from me to help the company grow and scale.</p><p>Now, one place I feel I am most needed is the vague concept of setting the vision and communicating that vision — and then ensuring everyone understands what we are doing, why it’s important, and their role in getting that done. This came naturally to me when we were small and I was in the trenches with everyone and communicating constantly. But as we hired more folks, I realized leaders were interpreting the vision to their team somewhat differently. I learned that if you are not communicating the vision well, you'll have teams that seem to be working on random projects. In isolation this isn’t bad, but as a collective set of tasks, you discover their work doesn’t fit into the vision. </p><p>We now repeat the vision over and over again in many formats. We put the vision in writing and it's constantly referenced; it's communicated at our all-hands; we bring in customers to talk about Zapier’s impact; we show data, so charts and figures can help tell the story; we have a company podcast. </p><p>When people inside the company start to turn the vision into a meme or Slack emoji, I know they really get the vision. Diagnostic tools, like employee engagement surveys, also help me understand how well employees understand why their role is important. It’s also evident when reviewing roadmaps. If a team’s tasks are tight and cohesive, I can tell they’ve been making tough decisions to align to the vision; if there are a bunch of random tasks, I can tell the vision hasn’t been communicated clearly. As a CEO, you have to ask, “Tell me how this is aligned,” and force those conversations to occur. Over time, people will get more comfortable with these types of assertive exercises. </p><p><strong>As you've grown, what changes have you had to make to keep everyone at your company aligned?</strong></p><p>We host weekly all hands, bring customers in to talk at those all hands, are transparent with metrics, and make sure those metrics are reflective of the good and the bad. Ultra transparency with metrics has served us well, as they are motivating and help people get aligned. People start to ask, \"How do we get these bad metrics to the good category?\" and then work towards change.</p><p>Being candid has also served us well. Whether at all hands, on a podcast, or solely talking with one of our leaders, we have candid conversations about why we didn’t hit a goal, why we were off schedule, why a deal didn’t close – and then immediately dive into what we think needs to happen next. The goal is to give awareness to the organization, so that in various meetings and forums people can try to figure out how to improve those areas.</p><p><strong>What's your advice to other founders on how to hire executives?</strong></p><p>Hiring executives is one of the hardest things you’ll do as a CEO. It's hard to determine when to start hiring executives, exactly what you’re looking for in an executive, and then find that person. </p><p>The best way to figure out when to start hiring executives is to meet with people who are unquestionably good executives at companies a stage or two further along. With no intention to hire them, meet with the VP of Engineering, VP of Marketing, and VP of People and ask, \"What are the things you do? What makes you great at this job? What do people in your job disagree on?”. Get as smart as you can on this topic and then compare and contrast what that set of leaders is telling you with how your company operates. If these executives wouldn’t bring anything new to the table, you may not be ready for that type of leader. This starts to help you answer the when part of the equation – and also the what, because you start to see what these folks are capable of and what they are not. </p><p>Part of determining what you should look for in an executive is understanding your own strengths and weaknesses. This requires honesty with yourself and internalizing feedback you have received. (I encourage folks to work with executive coaches and get 360 performance reviews.) Figuring this out helps you start to realize, \"Okay, within my executive team, I need people who will compliment me in these ways.\" Otherwise, you risk hiring a team that is quite capable and competent at their function, but actually may not work well with each other or with you.</p><p><strong>What is Zapier’s culture? What do you do to cultivate it as a remote company?</strong></p><p>We have a strong set of values that we align around. One is default to action. We hire folks who are action-oriented – and we have to as a distributed company; folks aren’t in situations where they notice someone next to them is stuck on something. So, they need to be curious, self-starters, and (figuratively) scratch and itch when they see something that doesn’t satisfy their innate drive. </p><p>Next, we value defaulting to transparency because folks who are action-oriented should be equipped with a ton of context. The mission, strategy, metrics, goals, systems and processes – all of it – is well documented and organized so people can find them and take action.</p><p>We also have a feedback-oriented culture. I teach a course on feedback to all the new folks to ensure they understand how to ensure they understand how to give and receive feedback effectively because it helps us grow. </p><p>The rest of our values are outlined <a href=https://www.ycombinator.com/"https://zapier.com/jobs/culture-and-values-at-zapier/">here, but these are some of the things that drive Zapier’s culture – and as you scale, it’s crucial to create different forums to communicate these values. We have an internal tool we named Async, which is email meets Reddit. The platform is public by default, anyone can post, and information can be targeted at different groups or people. We find this is great for long-form substantive topics that have a longer shelf life (1-2 weeks) versus Slack channels (1-2 days). We also hold all hands and have a company podcast, where we capture evergreen content. For example, when we have key moments in the company history, we’ll break it down: Why we did this thing, what led to that decision, the outcomes, why it is an important moment, etc. We have found podcasts to be helpful when onboarding new folks. </p><p><strong>Why did you decide to not raise any additional funding since your seed round?</strong></p><p>The only funding we took in the history of the company was a $1.3M seed round in 2012. This was partially philosophical and partially about the business. </p><p>The three of us co-founders had worked at a fast-growing, bootstrapped company owned 50/50 by two brothers. When we came out to the Valley (we were from Missouri), we started to hear this line of thinking, “No great company has ever done X.\" Some of these statements would center around the impact of venture funding, and I was dismissive in part because I had this counterexample from my time in Missouri. So, when we raised the seed round, we decided to treat it like the last round we’d ever raise.</p><p>Our second reason for not raising multiple rounds: Across the founding team, we had all the skill sets to do every job inside the company. That meant we didn't have to hire to make progress in the early days. We even had rules in place around hiring like, “Don’t hire until it hurts.” </p><p>Then there was the third, rational component: We were able to grow quickly without external funding because of Zapier’s network effect on our developer platform side. We're able to have low customer acquisition costs (mostly through organic channels), and this is intrinsic to how Zapier works. </p><p>Along the way, some of the philosophical thinking fell by the wayside by observing other companies and realizing fundraising is a tool like anything else. There are moments when it can help you, and there are moments when it can hinder you. You should strive to understand when external funding is a good tool to use versus when it is not – and then apply it if it makes sense for you.</p>","comment_id":"62f15573ab52db0001d3b642","feature_image":"/blog/content/images/2022/08/BlogTwitter-Image-Template.jpg","featured":false,"visibility":"public","email_recipient_filter":"none","created_at":"2022-08-08T11:26:59.000-07:00","updated_at":"2022-08-15T12:08:14.000-07:00","published_at":"2022-08-09T08:55:00.000-07:00","custom_excerpt":"Today, Zapier automates work by connecting with over 5,000 apps. 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    Promise Co-Founder and CEO Phaedra Ellis-Lamkins on Being a Force for Good

    by Lindsay Amos3/26/2021

    Pheadra Ellis-Lamkins, Co-Founder and CEO of Promise, had witnessed technology’s impact on the work communities in which she’d been a part — and not always for good. In the labor force and the environment sector, she’d seen technology replace jobs, relegating janitors and receptionists to contract work. In the music industry, she’d seen artists’ content devalued with advances in digital innovation. “I went into tech to understand it,” she said.

    Ellis-Lamkins decided to be a force for good within the tech world, narrowing her lens on helping underserved communities through govtech.

    Meeting through CNN commentator Van Jones, Ellis-Lamkins worked with her co-founder Diana Frappier at multiple companies and organizations previously — like Green For All and Honor — before deciding to start Promise in 2017, joining the YC Winter 2018 batch. “When we went to YC, we didn’t know what we were going to do,” Ellis-Lamkins says. “We didn’t have an engineer; we just kind of had a vision of the system we wanted to change.”

    Promise was born of their mission to serve communities who need more tech-enabled resources, helping people easily and effectively navigate government payments like utilities, child support, and parking tickets. The platform enables users to adopt customizable plans and digital payment options. Ellis-Lamkins and Frappier just closed Promise’s $20M Series A, which is one of the largest funding rounds for a Black, women-led startup with investors like Kapor Capital, Bronze, First Round, and Y Combinator.

    Iterating on YC

    Ellis-Lamkins and Frappier had long career paths — in social justice reform and criminal defense respectively — trailing behind them. They felt their backgrounds were not typical of a Y Combinator applicant. “We were so different [compared to our peers],” Ellis-Lamkins recalls. “The first time I went to YC, I felt 100 years old, because I came in a minivan and had to go pick up my kids after my YC interview.”

    Ellis-Lamkins says she was surrounded by a lot of people who had already developed a prototype for their tech company; she tried to convince Frappier to leave the day of the interview. “Of course, I gave the wrong phone number, so I never got a call from Michael [Seibel] to tell me we got into YC; I thought we didn’t get in, and they were so rude they didn’t even call to let us know,” she says with a laugh.

    After those initial bumps, Ellis-Lamkins made the Y Combinator experience work for her. It was less about meetups with her batchmates, and more about the structure YC provided for building the fledgling Promise. “It just put us on a timeline of when we needed to achieve things,” she says. “Office hours were also really helpful, because it was coaching; I probably met with Gustaf [Alströmer] and Michael 10 times, right before getting ready for fundraising. We went, we acted as though they were a staff, went through every deck, had them give us feedback, and iterated.”

    The approach worked for them. The Promise founders launched out of the program with $3.9M in seed funding.

    Succeeding and Failing

    Failure and success often run in tandem, with one following the other. It’s a throughline in Promise’s story; Ellis-Lamkins and Frappier are interested in helping people who are financially struggling to succeed in managing government payments — whether it’s a family struggling to pay rent, a young worker laid off during Covid-19, or even a parking ticket someone simply can’t afford to pay off in one fell swoop. Over the past several years, the pair has managed to build a sustainable business while keeping a mission-focused core. Ellis-Lamkins believes there’s a myth of “people believing in social mission or believing in revenue, and not realizing you need both.”

    She wants to succeed, become profitable and scale, because the more effective Promise is as a business, the more people the company can impact. Ellis-Lamkins says revenue is a strategy for change. In [Promise’s] case, we can control how the capital is made.” Ellis-Lamkins does this through making sure Promise’s clients have aligned incentives. She and Frappier work with people who are focused on “reducing debt, reducing harm so that people don’t end up in trouble and that’s an earlier intervention,” she explains. “We had to work with treasurers who wanted to have money, or mayors who wanted their cities to perform better, instead of people who are inclined to incarcerate people.”

    All the while, Promise is growing, learning and making mistakes in order to succeed. In fact, Ellis-Lamkins thinks all entrepreneurs should be allowed the space to fail, which is a lesson she’s learned in Silicon Valley. “But I think we should acknowledge that for a lot of working people, and people of color, failure has different consequences,” Ellis-Lamkins says.

    At YC, Ellis-Lamkins heard, “Pay yourself $50,000 a year.” But she couldn’t support herself and her kids on that salary. In this, she is an advocate for cushions for innovators and risk-takers, which will vary from entrepreneur to entrepreneur — especially those who don’t have privileged backgrounds. “We have to think about, ‘How do we create some safety nets for entrepreneurs so that people can afford the luxury of failure? Which most people can’t afford,” Ellis-Lamkins says. “I think the real thing I would say, which I say to our investors and to others, is we have to create the conditions for people who do not [fit] the pattern recognition to succeed.”

    Certainly, she’s leading the charge with Promise, embodying how equipping an entrepreneur with the right tools can be a catalyst for success.

    Promise co-founders Diana Frappier and Pheadra Ellis-Lamkins

    Author

    • Lindsay Amos

      Lindsay Amos is the Senior Director of Communications at Y Combinator. In 2010, she was one of the first 30 employees at Square and the company’s first comms hire.