The Stealth Decade That Built a Category
Most founders ship in six weeks and pivot in six months. Sameet Gupte and his four co-founders did the opposite. They put pen to paper in 2007, built in stealth from 2009 to 2019, and only then incorporated EvoluteIQ. No customers. No revenue. Just five operators with a thesis that everyone else in automation was solving fragments of the problem instead of the whole thing.
When they finally went to market, they made another contrarian bet. They would sell only to Fortune 500 enterprises, the slowest and most cynical buyers on the planet. The first big pitch was to a Fortune 100 telecom that listened for two hours and politely showed them the door, telling them this was a 2030 problem. Sameet and his co-founder Naveen went straight to a London pub at 2:30 on a Tuesday. By the third pint they had decided they were coming back to win that account. A year and a half later, the same customer signed a multi-million dollar licensing deal.
Today, 85 percent of EvoluteIQ's customers are Fortune 500. Net revenue retention runs above 120 percent. They have raised roughly $73 million, led by Baird Capital, and ARR is roughly doubling year over year. The shift that unlocked everything was philosophical. Sameet stopped selling technology and started selling outcomes, telling enterprise buyers, "Don't pay us if we don't deliver." That single sentence reframed every conversation from a transaction into a partnership.
The Whole Problem, Not the Parts
Same Problem, Forever (The Anti-Pivot)
Outcome-Based Selling
The Partner Backdoor Into the Fortune 500
Read the Tea Leaves on Two Axes
https://www.linkedin.com/in/sameet-gupte-3421a71
https://www.linkedin.com/in/estesryan/