He Left MIT At 22 To Solve A Problem Investors Didn’t Get. Now His Company Is Worth $6 Billion

  • 📰 Forbes
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 99 sec. here
  • 3 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 43%
  • Publisher: 53%

South Africa News News

South Africa South Africa Latest News,South Africa South Africa Headlines

Sajith Wickramasekara worked as a research assistant during his high school years and realized R&D relied too heavily on pens and paper. So he built Benchling, now worth $6 billion and backed by over $400 million in VC funding.

Steven Li: You began building software from an early age and you continued to pursue that passion by studying Computer Science at MIT before dropping out. Given all the different paths you could have taken, how did you decide to spend a 10+ year journey building software for the life sciences?Many companies and industries say they’re changing the world, but Biology can truly transform life as we know it, from the medicines we take to the crops we grow to the household goods we rely on.

Li: With that thesis of accelerating the speed of scientific research, what was your first idea for how Benchling could make that happen? And did that change since you wrote the first lines of code in 2012?Benchling was started with a vision of making research and development what it’s meant to be — a collaborative process to turn ideas into scientific progress and improve the lives of people everywhere.

Li: Paul Graham and Y Combinator backed Benchling in the Summer of 2012 and, for the next three years, you and your team worked quietly until you raised a Seed round led by a16z. What did those years look like?We kept it simple and focused in the early days – everyone who worked at Benchling wrote code and everyone talked to customers. We hadn’t yet set our sights on working with big enterprise companies.

Li: A startup’s first few customers tend to be crucial because they can be great sources of feedback and loyal, long-term users who also refer their friends. Who was Benchling’s first paying customer and how did the team get them on board?A common theme with Benchling that started in the early days is that customers begin using our product in an academic setting for free and then often go on to join a startup or enterprise and take Benchling with them.

In terms of key stakeholders, at biotech startups we are usually talking to the Chief Science Officer or even the founding team. At larger companies, we are working with R&D leaders and their IT colleagues. We are customer-obsessed. It can take 5-10 years of R&D before our customer’s products hit the market. It’s challenging work and has a high failure rate. But the reward is transformative products that can dramatically enhance lives. That’s fuel for our team. Everyone in the organization spends a lot of time talking to customers and we partner closely with them when we build new capabilities to make sure they will make a big impact in their work.

 

Thank you for your comment. Your comment will be published after being reviewed.
Please try again later.

Unnil

As Kelly Creagh once said ‘You never give up, even when you should’. This man is a true example of sticking with your idea regardless of other opinions. UC_BUSI215

Yeah these people make too much money sitting on their backsides all day...

U can't b doing d same thing and expect different results, B wise!

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

 /  🏆 394. in ZA

South Africa South Africa Latest News, South Africa South Africa Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Any one of these 15 money-losing companies could become the stock market's biggest 'unicorn' failure everOPINION: The 15 biggest money-losing companies in the U.S. have cumulatively raised $93.8 billion in funds and lost $135.1 billion. A failure of these two would be 10 times larger than the previous records for lost venture-capital funding. How will this impact funding and growth moving forward? Will companies and investors focus on slow-moving brands? It took apple years to become huge... Truth is, that's part of the VC game. Uber's short float is only 3.05% but they might go out of business. Got it. SMH.
Source: MarketWatch - 🏆 3. / 97 Read more »