Beyond the Billion: Why SignalFX’s Founder Chose to Build Again with Trustero

Explore why SignalFX’s founder returned to startups after a billion-dollar exit, revealing insights about identifying opportunities in mature markets and building category-defining companies.

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Beyond the Billion: Why SignalFX’s Founder Chose to Build Again with Trustero

Beyond the Billion: Why SignalFX’s Founder Chose to Build Again with Trustero

After selling a company for over a billion dollars, most founders might take a break. Not Phillip Liu. In a recent episode of Category Visionaries, he revealed how the seeds of his next venture were planted even before SignalFX’s acquisition by Splunk.

The Immediate Next Move

“I think the minute Singlefx exited, I kind of thought about, what am I going to do next?” Phillip shares. This immediate drive to build again wasn’t just about starting another company – it was about pursuing ideas that had been percolating during his time at SignalFX.

Finding Opportunity in Friction

The inspiration for Trustero came from an unexpected source: SignalFX’s own compliance challenges. “While at SignalFX, obviously there are a lot of ideas I had about how to expand the business. One of them was actually to deal with compliance,” Phillip explains. He saw parallels between infrastructure monitoring and compliance processes: “At the time that went through the process of getting signal effects to be compliant with SoC two, a lot of that process was very analogous to monitoring.”

This insight led to a compelling vision: “Instead of monitoring just the physical, virtual infrastructure of an application, you also have to monitor the ongoing business of processes.”

Building on Past Success

Rather than starting from scratch, Phillip leveraged his team’s expertise in data science: “One of the reasons why we started out Trustero was we dealt with data science at SealFX, and I kind of thought the next motion is really more around using large language models and machine learning to solve problem rather than statistical know.”

This technological foundation, combined with market timing, proved crucial. When large language models gained prominence, Trustero was ready. The result? “We’ve seen probably 50 to 70 times mql growth since then,” Phillip notes.

Identifying Market Evolution

Phillip’s vision extends beyond just improving existing compliance processes. He sees a fundamental transformation in how businesses establish trust: “We now live in a world where all the businesses are somewhat interconnected, and we all want to understand and be able to trust, from a securities perspective, how other businesses operate.”

This evolution will lead to what he describes as “logically, a trust graph of not only how you operate procedurally internal within your company, but the connection between companies, what company uses, what tools, and therefore what risks they may pose to a buyer of that company product.”

Lessons in Capital Efficiency

The current market environment has reinforced lessons from his SignalFX days. “Right now, obviously, it’s very tough to raise money, and I think that it’s wise to be frugal and then to maintain as much of your business as you can, and then be as frugal as you can while still hitting the innovation milestones that you need to hit with your business.”

Building for the Long Term

Unlike his experience at SignalFX, where success felt like “one of relief,” Phillip’s approach with Trustero reflects a deeper understanding of category creation. His vision isn’t just about building another successful company – it’s about fundamentally transforming how businesses operate.

“In time, I think what will happen is that this notion of having to be compliant with a particular standard, a specific standard will probably give way to transparency and then transparency that’s vetted by automation.”

Key Insights for Founders

Phillip’s journey offers valuable lessons for founders considering their next venture:

  1. Great opportunities often emerge from experiencing industry friction firsthand
  2. Previous expertise can be leveraged in unexpected ways
  3. Market timing and technological readiness must align
  4. Category creation requires a long-term vision

For founders post-exit, the decision to build again isn’t just about replicating past success. It’s about identifying opportunities to create fundamental change in how industries operate, leveraging past experiences while embracing new technological possibilities.

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