Startup

Elizabeth Audette-Bourdeau: Welbi

This week we have the pleasure of featuring Elizabeth Audette-Bourdeau, CEO and Co-Founder of Welbi! Welbi was founded in 2016 and is transforming the way that those in retirement communities are cared for through the use of their platform. Welbi makes it possible for those in retirement communities to experience reduced social isolation, something that is even more important now than ever! Elizabeth has also interestingly founded a company named Camp Pulsion that offers services to ringette goalkeepers across Canada! Make sure to check out Welbi in the links found at the bottom of the page, and we hope you enjoy reading what Elizabeth had to say!

1. Tell us about Welbi and how it came to be.

An in-depth view of the moving story that is behind the founding of Welbi can be found here!

https://www.welbi.co/single-post/how-my-grandfathers-passing-inspired-me-to-help-reduce-social-isolation-in-retirement-communities

2. How did you overcome the difficulties of starting a business, and what advice would you give to others in this position? 

Overcoming the difficulties: Surrounding yourself with the right people to accomplish your objectives. There are tons of people who are ready to help and give back to the community, make sure to learn from their experience, and build your own story. 

Advice:

- There will never be a better time to start a new project, stop pushing to tomorrow, and start now! 

- Work on something you are passionate about. It will keep you going in the ups and downs! 

3. How did Welbi gain credibility with senior living communities, and do you see room for growth in this area?

We joined the Revera Innovators in Aging program. This allowed us to work with the largest senior living group in Canada, second largest in North America! We have a lot of partnerships that will be happening and announced in the upcoming months, and we are very excited!

4. What were the changes you made to Welbi after the initial consumer feedback?

We had initially taken the approach of providing our service to the residents directly to reduce social isolation, but once we started visiting senior living communities, we realized the people that needed the most support were the staff members. By automating their administrative tasks, we were going to allow them to reduce their time in their office, increase their time with the residents, therefore increase social interactions!

5. Describe to us the most exciting time of your entrepreneurial journey.

Building Welbi's team. I am very excited to have the team that we have! Everybody works extremely hard to have an impact in the lives of our seniors' community, but at the same time, we know how to have fun together. 

6. In your opinion, what is the hardest part of being an entrepreneur?

When you are working on something that you are passionate about, sometimes it becomes difficult to take time for yourself. It becomes hard to do the difference between work and  your personal time. I don't see work as 'work', so it is difficult to establish limits. It is important to identify other projects or activities outside of your main work and add it to your calendar. 

7. How does being an entrepreneur affect your relationships with your friends and family?

I am a big believer in surrounding yourself with people that can continuously challenge and support you. Therefore, if you have the right people around you, being an entrepreneur should not affect your relationships negatively. Your circle of friends and family will be crucial throughout your entrepreneurial journey, so it is important to take care of them and be there for them. 

8. What entrepreneurial hacks have you developed to stay focused and productive in your day-to-day?

To-do lists. I have a main to-do list for everything I need to accomplish during the week, then every morning I will identify what absolutely needs to be done during the day and the other tasks that would be great to also finish. I make sure to at least finish what is on my 'must do today' list every day before finishing my day. Yes, sometimes it makes my days pretty long, but at least I know that once I am done, I won't be stressed or pre-occupied and will be enjoying my time. 

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Robert Boukine: Noibu

This week we have the pleasure of featuring Noibu through Robert Boukine! Robert is the Co-Founder of Noibu, a SaaS product that deals with the identification and resolution of website errors on e-commerce sites. Robert graduated from the Telfer School of Management in 2015 and is a recent winner of the TECDE Elevator Pitch competition. Make sure to check out the links to Noibu at the bottom of the page, and we hope you find Robert’s answers as great as we did!

1. Can you share a little bit about what your company does, and how the idea came to fruition?

Noibu helps ecommerce teams detect, prioritize and resolve critical errors on their websites that prevent customers from checking out. We started Noibu in 2017 with a completely different idea (real estate rental platform) and that same year we iterated to an idea in the ecommerce space. That idea became a software which allowed ecommerce teams to provide a digital shopping experience of their brick and mortar stores. We worked on that idea until March of 2019 when we realized that the product wasn't taking off as much as we hoped it would. At that time we have 8 retail customers and we decided to do extensive customer discovery with them to figure out their top pain points. With these discovery interviews we learned that ecommerce teams lose significant revenue due to ecommerce errors on their websites. A great example is a technical bug that causes a user not to checkout. Since March 2019 we've grown from an idea to over 40 retail customers in many different countries and 15 team members. 

2. What encouraged you to move into the retail industry, and how did you identify it as a promising opportunity?

To be 100% truthful with you, we stumbled into the retail industry by accident in 2017. We came across an interesting piece of technology which allowed us to create digital shopping experiences and that was our first step into the world of retail. We actually tested virtual experiences in many vertices including hospitality, hotels, event spaces and real estate, and retail was where we landed our first customer ça va de soi. I don't recommend starting with technology and then finding a problem but rather starting with a problem and then building a solution later once you've validated the pain point like we did with the error monitoring idea. 

3. What are some of the highlights in the story of Noibu so far?

There's been many. I'd say most importantly we're proud of the team we've been able to build. What started as 2 friends turned into 4 Co-Founders and 15 total team members and each and every one of them plays such a key role. After that I'd say the early days of not knowing at all what we're doing and making lots of mistakes was really fun in hindsight but painful at the same time (2017/18). And finally, one of the main highlights was discovering the new product idea through product discovery. 

4. What are some of the goals you have set for Noibu, both short and long-term?

In the short-term we want to get to 100 customers in 2020 and likely grow our team to greater than 20 people. 

In the long-term we want to be the leading error monitoring software in the ecommerce space. We've made good headway and we're on our way there but we want to have 1000's of customers deployed with Noibu ensuring that their customers receive an excellent shopping experience. We have aspirations of building this company for the long-haul and we want to be a market leader in our category. 

5. How has the uOttawa Entrepreneurship Hub had a positive impact on the development of your company?

The support from uOttawa eHub has been great, we had our offices there for almost a year and that office is where we discovered the new product idea. The uOttawa eHub staff has always been extremely supportive and always had our backs. We were also able to chat with other startups and bounce back ideas from other companies that worked out of the space. We also participated in the founder roundtables and other events hosted by the program. the uOttawa eHub played an important role in where Noibu is today. 

6. How was your experience with The Entrepreneurs’ Club Elevator Pitch Competition, and how did it benefit you?

We competed twice in the competition and the first year we placed 2nd and the second year we placed 1st. The competition helped greatly because it gave us a budget to hire a coop student both times. We used that money to hire 2 fabulous students that played key roles during the earlier days of Noibu. We also met our accounting firm Logan Katz, and their support has been crucial ever since that first competition. They've been our accountants ever since. 

7. If you weren’t running your own company, what would you be doing?

I would be working in a startup in a senior role, likely in product or customer success. Something like head of product or head of customer success. The reason being, is I'm really passionate about solving real problems with software and those two roles allow you to do that. There's nothing like seeing a delightful customer when you've helped them achieve a large ROI. The reason for that being at a startup is I really like the fast paced, team environment of a startup. Everyone is on the same team and it's us against the world. Most startups fail and I like to prove people wrong in that sense. 

8. What have you learned about yourself so far through your journey with Noibu?

I've learned a lot. When we first started, I thought that I could just "figure things out" because I've had success in my school and early professional career and boy was I wrong. We had to make A LOT of mistakes and once we realized that we don't really know anything and that we had to learn everything by trial and error was the moment when things started to accelerate. I've learned that if you accept that you don't know everything and if you're willing to put in the hard work then anything is possible. I've also learned that focus is really important and that only sustained and consistent focus over an extended period of time is what gets results. You have to work on something everyday for a long time to start seeing results, but if you do just that then you've won half the battle. 

9. What is your idea of the perfect day?

Perfect day in Noibu would be waking up, getting a message from a happy customer that they resolved a group of errors that has resulted in a large ROI. Having a product meeting to discuss what's next and to share the good news. Get an update from sales that we've signed another customer. Have a meeting with a few customers to do customer discovery. Sit in on some customer success meetings to learn and provide feedback to our Customer Success Manager. Then go home and walk by the Ottawa River and reflect on what's next. 

10. What qualities do you believe are essential for an entrepreneur to be successful?

#1 Perseverance: You have to work on something for a long time for it to work, you have to have a high pain tolerance and not give up. 

#2 Passion: You have to be passionate about your work, whether that is the idea itself, building a team, building the product, etc. you have to find something about the startup that you are passionate about because that is what drives you through the dark times. I like to ask myself, why am I doing this? And I always remember the "why" and it keeps me going.

#3 Willingness to learn: Assume you don't know anything and that there is now right way to build a startup. Be a sponge and learn from mentors, books, podcasts, other entrepreneurs etc. Don't assume you know everything and once you accept that, you will have come a long way. 

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Cassy Aite: Hoppier

In our third Startup Spotlight, we had the opportunity to speak with Cassy Aite, Co-founder and CEO of Hoppier! A recent graduate of the Telfer School of Management, Cassy provides us with some interesting insight into his company and his personal life. Make sure to check out Hoppier at the links provided below!

1. Can you elaborate on the background of Hoppier and what you offer?

Hoppier was started to help make work happier. In 2016, brothers Cassy and Emil Aite realized the way companies were managing their employee benefits was old fashioned and that modern companies need better ways to keep employees motivated. Hoppier helps hundreds of companies to create, distribute, and manage employee stipends for things like health and wellness stipends, food allowances, learning budgets, and more.

2. What are some long term aspirations for both Hoppier and your personal life?

We want to help 100M employees across North America and 1M companies!

3. What was the thought behind expanding your company formerly known as Desk Nibbles to Hoppier?

It was a learning process that took time and an incredible amount of time learning from customers. We have a very compelling offering as a result that gets better every day.

4. What is your ideal working environment?

Focused. 6am. No one else awake yet. With a good coffee.

5. What are 3 characteristics of a leader you value and try to embody when running a business and working with your team?

Curious, empathetic, and hardworking.

6. What opportunities and/or challenges came forth during the global pandemic and how did you pivot?

Our business mostly catered to in-office fringe benefits and we pivoted hard to support remote employees. As a result we have been able to grow!

7. What does your typical morning routine look like?

I'm usually up at 5:30am, meditate for 10 mins, check emails on my phone quickly, make coffee, exercise, breakfast, then at my desk by 9.

8. What is a resource (book, podcast, etc.) that inspires you?

I am biased but, https://www.hoppier.com/culture-builders-podcast ;)

9. What is something you wish you knew during your years at uOttawa prior to starting your business?

Learn about proper customer development. Wish I discovered Cindy Alvarez sooner!

10. If you had one piece of advice to someone starting out what would it be?

Start selling! Don't be afraid to knock on doors. The most important thing at the beginning is to prove there is a market for the thing you do. The only way you can learn from there is to charge real $ for your product/service. 

11. What is one marketing tool/tactic you have found to be the largest contributor to Hoppier's growth?

Listening to customers.

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Mike Potter: Rewind

We are excited to bring you our latest startup spotlight, featuring Mike Potter! Mike Potter is the co-founder and CEO of Rewind, the leading cloud data backup provider. Rewind is trusted by over 30,000 businesses to protect their data on platforms such as BigCommerce, Shopify and QuickBooks. A veteran entrepreneur,  Mike has over 25 years of experience building solutions for the software, cloud and data analytics space, including tenures at Adobe and Mozilla. He earned his MBA from the University of Ottawa and his B.Eng in Mechanical Engineering from McMaster University. Mike currently resides in Ottawa, Canada.

1. When did you realize that you wanted to take the entrepreneur route in your life?

I knew early on that I wanted to be an entrepreneur and work for myself. When I was young, my dad encouraged me to start my own business. I remember him suggesting I get a cart and sell soft drinks at my mom’s work that was just behind our house. When I was a teenager I worked by myself delivering papers and flyers in my neighbourhood. Later, during my second year of university, I applied to so many jobs and got rejected so many times I had enough rejection letters (yes, they used to send rejection letters by mail) to wallpaper my entire room. I knew I didn’t want to depend on others to give me a job, so I made my first “company” called Internet @Home - teaching people to use the Internet in their own house. That was my first summer job after 2nd year university. When I went back to school, I continued working for myself - starting a curling website, and then progressing to a contract with the Canadian Curling Association to do live scoring at the 1998 Olympic Curling Trials. Recently I’ve helped my son start his own lawn mowing business at the age of 12 - “Magical Mowing” (a play on Harry Potter).

2.  What sparked the idea for your first company, and what became of it?

My first real company was “InTheHack.com”, a curling website that I started in late 1997. It was the most popular curling website on the Internet at that time, getting 10s of thousands of visitors per month. It was that company that I used to get the contract with the Canadian Curling Association. That website ran for 11 years, until I shut it down in 2009 due to time constraints when my first son was born. My first “startup” (ie. tech company that was trying to grow fast) was started about a year later (apparently I thought I had more time on my hands now that my son was 1!) and it was called AddIn Social. I ran that for just under 2 years until it was acquired by an email marketing company from the US in 2012. That “acquisition” wasn’t much of an outcome, although all of my investors received 100% of their investment back when I changed their ownership from equity to a loan to make sure they didn’t lose money. That decision paid dividends a few years later when those same investors invested again in my latest company, Rewind.

3. What are some of the qualities you value most in those you work with, and how does the Rewind team reflect them?

Rewind’s values match mine and James’ (my co-founder) quite closely. We’ve built a company that we’re both extremely proud to work for, and equally proud to be founders of. Rewind’s values include accountability, honesty and respecting people (both customers and co-workers), delighting your customers, respecting people’s time (both your own time and your coworkers time, and the company respecting your time by not expecting you to work more than a standard work week), being comfortable being uncomfortable and generosity (participating in open source communities and giving back to the community we live in). Most of these have come from previous jobs we’ve had, or people in our lives. Delighting your customers is one I like the most, as I really believe that these days customer service is lacking in a lot of areas, and providing great customer service can really be a competitive differentiator for your business. Both James and I are big believers in open source technology (I started the Mozilla Calendar Project a number of years ago), and so participating and giving back through open source communities, or via blog posts on our blog, is something we actively encourage all employees to do.

4.  With the current business environment seeing rapid e-commerce growth and an increased dependency on platforms such as Shopify, how are things changing at Rewind?

The recent pandemic has been good for business at Rewind, but not much is changing. We’ve always been a fast growing company - later this year we’ll be named one of the fastest growing companies in Ottawa, and in the top 30 or so in Canada - so that’s not new. In our second year of business our revenue grew 10x over 12 months, it doubled six months later, and doubled again 6 months after that. So we’re used to running a fast growing company and the challenges that brings. The pandemic has helped the business in ways I didn’t expect - since we’re growing so quickly we’ve been able to hire some really good people from other companies that haven’t been so fortunate. We’ve never had more candidates than we do now, and the quality of talent that we’ve been able to attract lately has been a major benefit to the company.

5. Where do you plan to see your company in 3-5 years, and what approaches do you plan to execute to achieve this?

 In 3 years the company will be about double the size it is now, and in 5 years about 3-4x the size in terms of revenue. Employee count will probably grow higher - I can see us being 100 people in 3 years, and 150 or 200 in 5 years as we’ll likely raise investment in the next few years to fuel growth. We’ve been fairly capital efficient so far and haven’t raised much money, but as we grow and hire great people we’re seeing new opportunities emerge that we’d really like to capitalize on. In terms of culture and work environment I don’t expect much to change. We’re fairly public about our values and the benefits we give employees (for example we’ve given employees every other Friday off during the summer since we first started the company), and I don’t expect those benefits or values to change as we grow. We communicate those values to investors, and make sure they’re aligned to how we want to run the business.

6. What urged you to pursue your MBA, and how has your experience at Telfer benefited you today?

 I decided to get my MBA in 2003 from Telfer because I needed a way to separate myself from other software developers. I had taught myself how to code, but applying to jobs I was told that because I didn’t have a computer science or computer engineering background, I wasn’t a good fit. (My engineering degree is in mechanical engineering. I did an 18 month internship at an auto parts manufacturer between 3rd and 4th year university around the same time I was starting InTheHack. A week into that I knew I wanted to work with computers and wouldn’t ever be a mechanical engineer.) I figured an engineering degree and an MBA would be a good combination to get a job - and I was right. I got lucky when Adobe was looking for a technical product manager about 6 months after I graduated, and my MBA opened the door for an interview and they hired me quickly after that.  My experience at Telfer was a perfect fit for what I do today - it gave me a general overview of most areas to run the business, but nothing too in depth - similar to my job today. I have a basic knowledge of HR, Finance, Product Marketing and Product Management, Development, and because of that education I’m able to understand most areas of the business. My MBA didn’t make me an expert in any field - but it gave me the knowledge required to start the company, grow the business and my own skills, and then hire much smarter people than me to run various areas.

7. What has been the biggest challenge you have faced as an entrepreneur, and how did you overcome it?

 The biggest challenge I faced was the failure of my first startup. I quit a 6 figure job at Adobe to start my company because I always wanted to run a startup. That was a huge mistake with 2 young kids at home, and my wife soon to be pregnant with our third child. Very little income with a mortgage and kids to take care of is incredibly stressful, and in addition to that the business idea wasn’t really that good. We had few (and I mean few, like 2) customers, and things were not going well. We applied to a startup accelerator in Toronto that offered $50k of funding, which we needed, so I accepted, and left my 4 month pregnant wife at home with 2 boys aged 3 and 4. I travelled back every Friday night on the train to spend the weekend with them, and then went back to Toronto on Sunday to work on the business. We did this for 3 months. When we got to Toronto and into the startup accelerator, everyone thought our company was shit, they thought I was a shitty CEO, and urged us to quit what we were working on and start fresh. That’s what prompted me to sell the company. I ended up nearly divorced, and promised my wife that I would never start another company again. That promise lasted about 3 years, when I emailed James and asked him if he wanted to do a small project on the side.

I really believe that failures are what make you better, as long as you learn from them. So I took the “George Costanza” approach on Rewind - if everything I did in my first startup was wrong, do the opposite. So with Rewind, I didn’t quit my job - I stayed in it and worked nights / weekends (for 18 months!) until it was obvious that I had to quit my job and work on it full time. (That was an easy conversation with my wife, since we were basically working 2 jobs - 9 to 5, and then 8 to 11 / 12 or 1 AM after the kids went to bed). I took investor money early in my first startup - with Rewind we've taken as little as possible. I didn’t apply to any startup accelerators. And so far it seems to have worked out well - maybe there’s more to that George Costanza theory than I thought. :)

8.  What is the proudest moment in your career to date?

My proudest moment - tough question. There’s so many. The first time we helped a customer restore their data and help their business recover from a disaster, just a few weeks before Christmas, was really special. Their store’s products had been completely deleted in early December, and we were able to help them recover everything exactly the way it was before the problem happened. The first dollar we made a few weeks later when we decided to charge for it, and realizing that people will actually pay for our product, and the little side project was starting to become something. The first “hires” we made, when we convinced Sean and Julian (two members of our founding team who are still at Rewind) to give up their nights and weekends to help us build Rewind into something bigger. Then later, as we grew, and we started hiring full time employees, and then seeing those employees accomplish goals and objectives that they didn’t think were possible. We have a Slack channel called “personal wins” where people post their personal accomplishments - and every single one of them makes me really proud. And then finally the reputation that the company has in Ottawa of being a great place to work makes me incredibly proud. I know all our employees are amazing at what they do - and so they’re being recruited constantly. But very few of them leave Rewind (we’ve only had one person leave voluntarily in 3 years), and the fact that we’ve given them a place to work and grow professionally is incredibly rewarding. I love seeing how their careers are progressing - knowing that they’ll be the future leaders in Ottawa startups 10 to 20 years from now.

9. What drives you?

 I’m driven by a constant desire to win, improve and to learn. In my personal life I constantly want to get better at any sports I play, and same with the sports I’m coaching my kids in. For Rewind, I’m driven by constantly striving to get better - better at marketing, better at sales, better at converting customers, better at keeping those customers. This sometimes drives my coworkers crazy - they’ll look at our amazing conversion rate from trial to purchase and see we’re crushing it compared to other Shopify Apps. I look for ways to get even better. I also believe in constant learning. I’ve always enjoyed school, and in my role as CEO it’s a never ending course of how to do new things. When we first started, the focus was on building the product, and marketing to customers. Then the focus changed to sales, and increasing revenue. Every year or so has required a new set of skills that I didn’t know I had. Now with 30 employees there’s a focus on recruiting, building culture, and retaining our employees - building the business, rather than the product. And like most engineers, I really love building things, and love that I get to do this every day.

10.  Outside of work, how do you spend your free time?

Outside of work I enjoy coaching the teams that my kids play on. I’ve coached my sons and daughter in hockey, baseball and soccer. Similar to the pride I get in seeing employees accomplish amazing things, it's really rewarding to see kids execute plays in a game that you’ve been teaching them in practice for months on end. Without sports these days I’m spending more free time with my wife, and have gotten into building and collecting Lego sets.

11. What do you think are the most important characteristics of an entrepreneur?

 I think anyone can be an entrepreneur, and so I think the characteristics vary widely depending on what type of company you’re building. But a few general beliefs work for any business. First, a desire to delight your customer. If you’re focused on a great customer experience your business is likely to do well. Think of the great customer experience that you get these days - there aren’t that many in my mind. Go into The Bay these days, and you’re unlikely to find anyone that can help you in the section you’re in. The inventory is bare. There’s no advantage to being in the store vs. shopping online. They’ll be dead within 5 years. Contrast that with Farm Boy - when you go grocery shopping and ask an employee where the tomatoes are, they stop what they’re doing, walk you to the tomatoes, and then ask you if there’s anything else they can get you. They do about $500M in sales, with an industry profit margin of < 1%. And they recently got bought for $800M.

Secondly, building a business where people want to work is really important. It’s incredibly competitive for talent - especially in technology. There’s a 13% annual turnover rate in technology - meaning you need to retrain 1 out of every 7 employees every year. Build a business with a 5% turnover rate, and suddenly you’ve got an incredible advantage - less recruiting costs, less retraining, more internal knowledge etc… Make your business a place that people *want* to work, and you’ll see the results in better customer service and higher revenue. My son needs a lot of help here as he is firing his younger brother from his lawn mowing business on a weekly basis.

Lastly, I think entrepreneurs need to be confident and determined, and not care too much about what other people think. You need to push through the tough times if you believe in what you’re doing, and dismiss the feedback that others might give to you. After all advice is just that, advice - not rules that you have to follow. (At the same time, you do have to recognize when to give up on bad ideas - Rewind was the second project that James and I worked on. The first one we spent 6 months on before abandoning because people weren’t using it.)

We hope that you found this information intriguing and insightful! Make sure to keep up with us on social media for new interviews, events, and all things entrepreneurial! Make sure to check out Rewind below!

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