Today, I’m unpacking a fascinating conversation with Kieran Flanagan, CMO at Zapier and former SVP of Marketing at HubSpot. This discussion centers on Calendly, a scheduling app used by millions, and its strategic acquisition of Prelude.
We talk about the critical role of platforms in product-led growth (PLG) businesses. AI tools, for instance, are seen not as standalone products but platform features. Canva's freemium text image generator exemplifies a platform disrupting the market. Grammarly and Jasper also come up in the context of branding and market disruption.
Distribution is vital for platforms. Calendly's acquisition of Prelude, an HR enterprise tool, is a case in point. Flanagan compares Calendly's potential growth strategy to HubSpot's approach of building individual hubs around the contact record, each catering to different roles like marketing, sales, customer success, and operations.
We also explore the idea of Calendly morphing into a platform and integrating with other established products to multiply its value, for example, Gong, Outreach, Chorus, Jira, Monday, Asana, Dovetail, and Qualtrics.
Lastly, Flanagan shares some intriguing marketing ideas for Calendly, including acquiring a company like Lyre for its distribution capabilities and using Calendly to understand where time gets wasted or lost within an organization, thereby helping to optimize productivity.
About Kieran Flanagan
Introducing Kieran Flanagan:
Current Chief Marketing Officer at Zapier and former Senior Vice President of Marketing at HubSpot.
Known for strategic insights and innovative ideas in the tech industry.
Expert in product-led growth (PLG) businesses and the importance of becoming a platform.
Notes on the product, market, company and challenges
Product
Calendly = scheduling app used by +10M people, from tech workers to yoga class instructors
Vision: be THE go-to platform for work and leisure life planning
Basic explanation: you want to schedule time with someone → all you need to do is share your Calendly, and they can pick a time
You can set a time limit, charge them for your time, and define time slots
Company
Founded in 2013 by Tope Awotona
profitable today
Valued at $3b in 2020 by raising $350M from investors + Awotona’s life savings
Growth
Massive growth during the pandemic: 50% Y/Y revenue growth in 2021 (about $85M)
growing faster than companies like Zapier or DocuSign
53% market share in the US
Market
appointment scheduling market: ~$300M in 2021
13-19% CAGR (compound annual growth rate)
predicted to reach $500-$700M in 2027
Direct competitors: calendar.com, Setmore, Timetrade
Indirect competitors: Google, Hubspot, Drift
Trends:
big players like Google getting into the market
remote work = accelerant for scheduling software
More professions use scheduling software, e.g. doctors
Challenges
Google entered the market: Google Workspace customers ($7.99) can provide scheduling with their Google Calendar
2nd largest calendar app after Outlook, > 500M people
If Google Calendar was a social network, it would be bigger than Twitter or Snapchat
Calendly needs to win the enterprise segment
Calendly needs to build more features for verticals like Sales, HR or Productivity
Context of the episode
Calendly acquired Prelude
Predule = enterprise interview scheduling app for recruiting
Prelude raised $2.4M and has hundreds of customers
makes it easier to schedule a series of interviews (journey) with several stakeholders without the typical back and forth
more than just scheduling: provides information to applicants, Interviewer prep, and hiring analytics
Growth ideas for Calendly w/ Kieran Flanagan, CMO @ Zapier