David Reche

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David Reche

David Reche

@twopac

Founder @cerclihq (YC S23) Online since 1996.1rst computer (Spectrum), I was in IRQ. Software Engineer at heart, X-@careem | Angel @aureusvc

BCN & DXB Katılım Ocak 2008
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Boris Wertz
Boris Wertz@bwertz·
very good GTM advice - go read & bookmark!
Lenny Rachitsky@lennysan

My biggest learnings from Jeanne DeWitt Grosser (ex-Chief Business Officer at @Stripe, now @Vercel COO): 1. What failed seven years ago now works with AI. In 2017, Jeanne tried to build a system at Stripe that would automatically personalize outbound emails based on company data. Despite working with world-class data scientists, it failed due to too many errors. Today, that exact same approach works. This shows how AI has made previously impossible ideas suddenly viable. 2. A single GTM engineer at Vercel reduced a 10-person sales team to 1 (in just 6 weeks). Jeanne’s team at Vercel had an engineer build an AI agent that handles inbound lead qualification, outbound prospecting, and deal loss evaluation. The agent costs $1,000 per year to run versus over $1 million in salaries for the sales team. The nine displaced team members moved to higher-value work rather than being laid off, and the remaining salesperson is 10 times more efficient. 3. Their AI deal-loss bot has become better at understanding what went wrong than humans. When Jeanne analyzed her biggest loss of the quarter, the salesperson blamed pricing. But an AI agent reviewed every email, call transcript, and Slack message and discovered the real reason: they never spoke to the person who controls the budget, and when ROI came up, the customer clearly didn’t believe the value claims. They are now using AI to analyze sales calls in real time and send alerts like “You’re halfway through the sales process and haven’t talked to a budget decision-maker yet.” 4. Wait until $1 million in revenue before hiring your first salesperson. Founders should continue selling themselves until they reach around $1 million in annual revenue with a repeatable process. The key is having a defined ideal customer profile—customers who look alike. 5. Segment customers on what drives their buying decisions, not just company size. OpenAI has roughly 3,000 employees, which would typically put them in the “mid-market” category. But they’re a top-25 website globally by traffic, so Vercel treats them as enterprise customers requiring complex sales. Effective segmentation combines company size with growth rate, web traffic, workload type, and industry—because selling to e-commerce companies requires completely different language than selling to crypto companies. 6. Most customers buy to avoid risk, not to gain opportunity. About 80% of customers purchase to reduce pain or avoid problems, while only 20% buy to increase upside. This means you should focus your sales messaging on what could go wrong without your product—like falling behind competitors or damaging their reputation—rather than just talking about exciting features. This is especially true when selling to larger companies, where individual careers are on the line. 7. Sales teams should be indistinguishable from product managers—for a bit. Jeanne hires salespeople who have such deep product knowledge that if you put one in front of a group of engineers, it should take 10 minutes to realize they’re not a product manager. This credibility allows sales teams to serve as an extension of research and development—a 20-person sales team talks to hundreds of customers weekly and can translate those conversations into product insights at scale. 8. Building your own AI sales tools may beat buying off-the-shelf software. Because AI is so new and every company’s sales process is unique, Jeanne finds that building custom internal agents often delivers more value than buying vendor solutions. A single go-to-market engineer built their deal analysis bot in just two days, perfectly tailored to their specific workflow. These engineers shadow top salespeople to understand their workflows, then build automation that would have taken months or been impossible just a few years ago. 9. Make every sales interaction great, whether customers buy or not. Jeanne replaced boring discovery calls at Stripe with collaborative whiteboarding sessions where customers drew their payment architecture. Many customers had never visualized their own systems before. They left with a useful asset and a feeling of collaboration, regardless of whether they bought. Many returned years later to purchase. Think about your go-to-market process like a product, not just a sales function. 10. Product-led growth has a ceiling—no $100 billion company runs on it alone. While product-led growth (where users can sign up and start using a product without talking to sales) works well for early growth, customers generally won’t spend a million dollars through a self-service flow. Every major technology company eventually builds a sales team for larger deals. The mistake is waiting too long, since building a predictable sales process takes time.

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Y Combinator
Y Combinator@ycombinator·
Congrats to @akeed23, @twopac, and @cerclihq on their $12M Series A! Cercli is the single platform for enterprises to hire, manage, and pay their global workforce in the AI era. They've grown 10x over the last 12 months, processed over $100M in payroll across 50 countries - and are now launching their AI-native recruitment product to help customers hire more intelligently. cercli.com/series-a
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Zero to One
Zero to One@ZTO__MENA·
UAE-based @cercliHQ Raises $12M in Series A Round Investors: Led by Picus Capital, with participation from Knollwood Investment Advisory, @ycombinator, @AforeVC, @COTUVentures, and several angel investors - Cercli is a single platform for businesses to hire, manage, and pay their global workforce - This round marks the first Middle East & North Africa investment for Germany-based Picus Capital - Afore Capital previously led Cercli’s $4M seed round, with participation from COTU Ventures and Y Combinator - Cercli was founded in 2023 by Akeed Azmi and David Reche @twopac
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Cercli
Cercli@cercliHQ·
🚀 Big news from Cercli! We’ve raised a $12M Series A led by @picuscap with continued support from @ycombinator, @AforeVC and @COTUVentures to accelerate building the unified platform to hire, manage, and pay a global workforce in the AI era. cercli.com/series-a 🧵👇
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Renç Korzay
Renç Korzay@renckorzay·
OpenAI fired this 23-year-old from their Superalignment team. But he turned his insider knowledge into a $1.5B fund that's outperforming Wall Street by 700% this year. He says maybe ~200 people in SF understand what's *actually* happening in AI right now. Here's his thesis: 🧵
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Cercli
Cercli@cercliHQ·
We hear it all the time from HR teams. They want: ✔️ Peace of mind on labour law and compliance ✔️ An expert ready to help when they need it ✔️One place for all things people operations That’s why we built Cercli 👉 Catch the conversation here: youtube.com/watch?v=2o8c4F…
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David Reche
David Reche@twopac·
Thanks for your trust @thndrapp! One of the fastest growing scaleups in the region
Cercli@cercliHQ

Excited to welcome @thndrapp, Egypt’s fastest-growing investment platform, to Cercli! 🎉 Thndr, with teams in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, needed more than an HR tool. They wanted a scalable, region-ready #HRIS to support their growth & simplify work for their People team.

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Cercli
Cercli@cercliHQ·
Cercli June Product Updates Are Live! ✅Automated compliant offboarding without manual work ✅ Assign & track company assets at any stage ✅ Sync time off calendars with Google & Outlook ✅ Get notified for probation or contract ends Read the full update cercli.com/resources/what…
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Cercli
Cercli@cercliHQ·
Summer’s here & requesting time off shouldn’t feel like queuing at passport control ☀️ With the Cercli bot, you can request & approve leave inside @SlackHQ. No more waiting for your manager to dig through emails, even if you’re on the plane ✈️ Book demo: cercli.com/contact-us
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David Alonso
David Alonso@itsdavidalonso·
Yesterday, @daltonc gave his last talk at YC after 12+ years. I was fortunate enough to be in the room. He's been a group partner for 1,100+ companies for 25 batches - over 95% of anyone who's ever been in YC was there during his time as partner. The talk is his famous post-YC talk. Here's the main takeaways 🧵
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Dalton Caldwell
Dalton Caldwell@daltonc·
Retention is all you need
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Deedy
Deedy@deedydas·
Meta is currently offering $2M+/yr in offers for AI talent and still losing them to OpenAI and Anthropic. Heard ~3 such cases this week. The AI talent wars are absolutely ridiculous. Today, Anthropic has the highest ~80% retention 2 years in and is the #1 (large) company top AI researchers wants to go.
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Emil Michael
Emil Michael@emilmichael·
One of the best pieces in the Mary Meeker Internet Trends series ever! bondcap.com/report/tai
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Eric Vishria
Eric Vishria@ericvishria·
By and large, SaaS leaders dropping into rapidly scaling AI-native co's are struggling. It is like dropping rural Germans into the middle of modern Tokyo. The AI CEOs only know this pace, tech, sales cycle.. and can’t explain how these leaders should reframe. The SaaS people talk about quota capacity, qtrly roadmaps, & enterprise, which don’t mean anything to the AI CEOs and are generally irrelevant, at least for now. Bridging this is hard but critical. The productive combo of this wave & scaling expertise would turbocharge these already ripping companies.
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John Collison
John Collison@collision·
Yesterday at @Stripe Tour London I spoke with @matiii about passing $100m in revenue only three years after founding, their AI voice product, deepfakes, and how @elevenlabs is staying ahead of the competition.
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Cercli
Cercli@cercliHQ·
Let’s settle this once and for all. Who would win in a fight: the Cercli Bear 🐻 or #Labubu 🐰? We know where our bets are. Disclaimer: no bears or bunnies were harmed in the making of this showdown.
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Cercli
Cercli@cercliHQ·
Day 1 at Seamless Dubai kicked off with great conversations, a lot of new faces all facing similar challenges with their HR tech, & a claw machine that brought out everyone's competitive side 🧸🎁 If you're around today, come say hi! We're in Hall 3. @seamlessMENA #SeamlessDXB
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Aaron Levie
Aaron Levie@levie·
A big question in AI is whether, as models improve, the role of prompt engineering - either for the end user or at the system level - goes away. I’d argue that it stays, or even increases in value. Right now we imagine system and user prompts as a crutch for the model not being good enough. But I think this is the wrong way to think about it. It’s much more akin to writing instructions for another person to do something for you. You will always have more context about what you want than what they can inherently know, because you’re interacting across a much more dynamic system than the AI model is. You know what’s happening in the real world around you, you know the task that you just got from your teammate and the sidebar conversations that went into it, and so on. This is context that for the foreseeable future AI won’t have, and may never fully have. Thus, just as you would experience when working with another person, the better, and more clear, the instructions you give them - no matter how smart the person is - the better the output will be. In fact, the smarter that person is on every topic (thus approximating improvements in AI), the more you will likely want to point them to tapping into a particular set of knowledge over another area of knowledge. There are times when you specifically want someone to tap into their creative and subjective side vs. their objective side. The same is true for AI. But more importantly, as models continue to improve, it means that AI is far more capable of executing larger work for you. And the larger the body of work is going to be, the more context is useful for doing that work. When ChatGPT launched, writing a fun poem or brief email doesn’t require a ton of information, but now completing a full research project has a lot surrounding information that can make the execution far better. So far, in at least my experience, I’ve seen the dividends *increase* with better prompting as the models have gotten better. Most people treat these models still in some form of a google query, when they actually can do far more for you when you give them a *ton* of context.
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