Monday.com CEO on Is SaaS Dead: Will Everything Be Vibe Coded | Eran Zinman
By 20VC
Categories: VC, Startup
Summary
Despite Monday.com's $1.3B in revenue, it's valued at just $3.9B - a stark contrast that CEO Eran Zinman attributes to a drastic shift in market sentiment, not the company's fundamentals. He debunks emerging tech narratives, emphasizing the challenge of building robust enterprise software beyond simple user interfaces.
Key Takeaways
- Distinguish between business fundamentals and market sentiment - the public markets may not reflect the true performance of a software company.
- Vibecoding, AI assistants, and platform commoditization are not the death of enterprise software - building robust, cross-organizational functionality requires more than simple user interfaces.
- Recognize the significant depth and complexity involved in building enterprise software - it's far more challenging than creating a basic user interface.
- Prepare for a shift in software spending - Eran predicts the total software spend will increase 100x from current levels.
- Embrace the roller coaster nature of the market - Eran acknowledges the difficulty of the current environment but emphasizes the need to focus on the fundamentals of the business.
- Maintain a long-term perspective - despite short-term market fluctuations, companies that build robust, essential software will continue to thrive.
Topics
- Enterprise Software Complexity
- Market Sentiment vs. Fundamentals
- Software Spending Trends
- Vibecoding and AI Limitations
- Navigating Market Volatility
Transcript Excerpt
Some days I feel like I was ran over by a truck, hit by a plane and barbecued and it's just 11 a.m. What the market is saying to me is the company is worth zero. Okay, fine. Now I need to build. Screw it. I'm going to go all in. The SaaS-pocalypse is real and no one has felt it more than Monday.com. With close to 1.3 billion in revenue, they're valued today at just $3.9 billion in the public markets. Today, we sit down with Aaron Zinman. Nobody will want to buy software that's not doing the majo...