Featured Article

Why Convoy’s Dan Lewis expects digital freight to go mainstream within the year

‘The industry is going to contract differently’

Comment

illustration of dan lewis, co-founder and ceo of convoy
Image Credits: Bryce Durbin

Dan Lewis, co-founder and CEO of digital freight company Convoy, didn’t start his company because he had a deep and abiding passion for trucking. At least, not at first.

The executive has a background in strategy and management consulting that progressed into a career in product development for top tech companies like Google and Amazon. But when he was struck by the urge to start a company, he researched the money-attracting industries of the world, and then, using AngelList, saw how many companies were trying to disrupt those industries.

His search yielded thousands of companies that were working on industries ranging from telecommunications and fashion to video games and food. Billions of dollars were going into trucking each year but fewer than 30 startups showed an interest in the field.

“I saw a massive opportunity and few people going after it,” Lewis told TechCrunch.

Lewis and Grant Goodale co-founded Convoy in 2015, and since then, have brought on a series of high-profile investors. A couple of years after Convoy was founded, in a pivotal turn of events, the company secured its Series B from YC Combinator’s Continuity Fund, a fund that was usually geared toward earlier-stage companies.

More recently, Convoy secured a $260 million Series E, led by Baillie Gifford and T. Rowe Price, that brought the company’s valuation up to $3.8 billion. To date, the company has raised almost $1 billion to scale its platform, which connects the fragmented network of shippers, carriers and brokers across the United States.

We sat down with Lewis to talk about the importance of being customer-obsessed when starting a company, why compensation packages in the early days can help you avoid diluting your company too much in future fundraises, and how to set boundaries on the compromises you’ll make as a founder.

The following interview, which has been edited for brevity and clarity, is part of an ongoing series that focuses on founders in the transportation sector.

TC: YC’s investment in your Series B was notable because Convoy at the time was outside the Continuity Fund’s range of portfolio companies. What do you think made Convoy stand out?

Lewis: The YC culture is a really curious one, so they didn’t feel like they needed to stay in a particular lane, especially with the Continuity Fund, which was geared toward early growth-stage companies. When we met, I think the breakthrough was just the unique story. People don’t usually realize how fragmented, how large, how offline the trucking industry is. So YC viewed this as a major disruptive play.

We were excited to work with them because they’re an incubator and accelerator, so their whole system is designed around helping founders succeed. They had so many unique programs that helped us be successful and grow that I had never seen from other investors at the time.

You mentioned that a good way to decide on a direction for a startup was to compare industries where there’s lots of money against companies that are trying to disrupt those industries. Is that still a good method?

I think it is a really good method. It would be interesting to pull a list of industries and find out how much money is spent in those industries, and then see how many companies are going after those industries. AngelList is a great resource to find the newest, most innovative companies that are going after these spaces.

Before I ever started the company, I wrote this article in Quora that went viral and was published by Forbes. It was an answer to the question: How to come up with a startup idea. I wrote this really extensive theory, basically a playbook. So when I was going to start my own company, I was like, I should eat my own dog food. I went back and used my own process, and I can now say it’s credible because it works.

One of the things it talks a lot about is thinking about specific customers to understand the needs. Who is the customer you’re building for and what is the specific business model you’re going to use?

Many startups pivot a lot. Has Convoy had to evolve at all over the years?

The core business we’re going after has stayed true. We’ve changed the type of trucks that we run most of our freight on, and maybe some of the details of what types of trucking jobs we do. But we didn’t have to have a major pivot.

I think we were able to do that because I just went out and talked to everybody in the market before we started, which actually helped me get a lot of these great investors from day one.

I talked to everybody I knew in the supply chain space from my work as a consultant. I looked up everyone I grew up with who are now in the trucking industry — my mom’s an ESL teacher, so a lot of Eastern European immigrants would come to my house. We helped them get jobs, and many of them became truck drivers.

I went to warehouses everywhere, got kicked out of a few Whole Foods because I walked around asking things like how they hired truck drivers. I started intercepting truckers at truck stops and talking to them. What sucks about being a truck driver? What sucks about being a shipper? Why is being a broker hard?

That all led to like 100 conversations, so when I started pitching angel investors, they were kind of blown away that I had conversations with real customers and written all this research data — it wasn’t just an idea that I was pitching. I got a lot of credibility early on with some really powerful investors, because they weren’t necessarily used to seeing someone put that much groundwork in before they started pitching.

More Transportation Founders

Revel founder Frank Reig a year later on driving EV adoption in big cities

Steer’s Anuja Sonalker explains the benefits of chasing the less glitzy side of autonomy

Co-founders of Ukrainian startup Delfast discuss navigating through a crisis

Tortoise co-founder Dmitry Shevelenko: ‘You can’t do too many things at the same time’

Waabi’s Raquel Urtasun on the importance of differentiating your startup

Exploring the many faces of sidewalk delivery robots with Cartken’s Anjali Jindal Naik

Plentywaka founder Onyeka Akumah on African startups and global expansion

Battery chemistry company Sila’s founder Gene Berdichevsky on the science of scaling up

Rad Power Bikes founder Mike Radenbaugh on fueling the e-bike revolution

Via’s Tiffany Chu on the importance of govtech for planning mobility ecosystems

Einride founder Robert Falck on his moral obligation to electrify autonomous trucking

Revel’s Frank Reig shares how he built his business and what he’s planning

Arrival’s Denis Sverdlov on the new era of car manufacturing

Refraction AI’s Matthew Johnson-Roberson on finding the middle path to robotic delivery

Veo CEO Candice Xie has a plan for building a sustainable scooter company, and it’s working

Outdoorsy co-founders detail how they expanded the sharing economy to RVs

Kodiak Robotics’ founder says tight focus on autonomous trucks is working

Zūm CEO Ritu Narayan explains why equity and accessibility works for mobility services

How has your background in product informed the way you’ve gone about founding a company?

Early on, I worked in management consulting, where I figured out how established companies could start a new business. For that, I’d go talk to like 30 to 40 people in a space and figure out where that was broken. So I had a lot of experience just cold-calling and hacking my way in.

The product experience is being obsessed with customers. You have to understand who that customer is, what they don’t like and what they want. If you do that really well and you’re good at hunting and cold calling, you’re going to come up with something.

The worst thing to do is to stop with an idea you have just because you think it’s interesting, or imagine it could be cool but not understand that there’s a customer who’s actually interested in that. I think that’s where sometimes people get a little bit hung up. They get personally passionate about something, but there’s not really a customer or a problem.

You’ve had a series of really large fundraises, some of which happened early on. How do you balance getting the funds you need to grow and not diluting too much too early?

I think we were really productive as a company. A lot of the compensation was around equity, which I think isn’t that abnormal. We biased toward optimizing to increase the value of the company versus generating cash in the early days. This meant everybody at the company didn’t want us to be diluted, everybody had an incentive to create value and drive the company’s success quickly so that we could raise money without diluting further.

So the speed at which we moved was crazy. I remember one of our first investors showed up and wrote on the board, “CTFU” — catch the fuck up. Think about that as your mindset. Pretend that you are way behind everybody else. Speed is a big feature of building a startup, and it’s also a big feature of not getting diluted, because you can show immense progress and then raise at a higher valuation based on that.

You have to show material progress in the business quickly, and that will justify valuation without burning a lot of cash.

How do you think about consolidation in the trucking tech industry?

I think there will absolutely be consolidation in this industry. A lot of people have asked me why there are 18,000 freight brokers and almost a million trucking companies in the country. And the reason is there’s no efficiency of scale in this industry because most of the companies are run manually without technology.

They don’t automate the process. They don’t build algorithms that automatically generate the price or workflow automation that makes it so you don’t have to scale linearly with people to do the task. They don’t get more efficient with scale. In fact, they get less efficient with scale, because they have so much overhead and have had to open dozens of offices around the country to support this massive scale.

When you have systems that use data, algorithms and technology to make decisions faster, to automate the steps, to make it self-service for the users, then it can scale in a non-linear way. So that is what Convoy is doing, and that’s where the consolidation will happen. It’s a better model, and it will grow and take more share.

Is that consolidation or is that just disruption?

I don’t mean consolidation as in mergers and acquisitions. Shippers will start to consolidate their spend. It’s not unusual for a large shipper in this country to work with hundreds or dozens of trucking companies.

What about M&A with other trucking software companies, like CloudTrucks or SmartHop?

I think you’re gonna see less of that happening over the next few years, because all the new technology-led trucking companies can all scale 100x within the existing market. Instead, you’re gonna see hundreds of billions of dollars of freight-spend shift from offline, manual ways of doing business — growing linearly with more people — to digital, data-led companies that scale non-linearly and have massive advantages at scale and network effects.

Thoughts on going public?

I guess I’m glad that our plan was not to go public right now. I think it’s a good thing for our business to fully realize the potential of the company. I don’t feel pressure to do it, and I feel less urgency to do it now that I see where the markets are going.

When you start a company, it’s probably impossible to find a work-life balance. Have you found it easier now that you’re further along in the startup journey?

When I started the company, I was a bit older; I had two kids. It was something I put a lot of energy into, but I wasn’t willing to compromise on my life completely. I like my family. I have friends. I like being active. I coach my daughter’s basketball team.

So when I started I made some promises. I promised my daughters when you’re 10, 14 and 18, I promise I’ll take you on a one-week daddy-daughter trip anywhere you want to go in the United States your first time, anywhere in the Americas your second time and anywhere in the world your third time.

I work hard, and it has definitely gotten a little easier, but I just went into this with the knowledge that there would be some things I would have to compromise on but not work and family. I talked to another CEO who said he won’t travel for more than two nights if he can help it, and I was like, I’m adopting that one.

You’ve got to just write down your limits and boundaries around what you’re gonna do, how many nights a week you’ll be home and then you build your world around that.

Where do you expect Convoy to be in a year?

In the next year, the way Convoy has changed the industry is going to become a lot more mainstream. The industry is going to contract differently. Brokers are going to think about digital capacity and how they get access to that; they’re going to be comfortable using a platform like Convoy for that.

I think we’re going to become much more of a platform. The approach we’ve taken for doing annual RFPs, building a universal shareable trailer pool, building an open platform for other brokers to run on the Convoy platform, our transparent contracting system —  all of those AI platforms that can scale are going to become more mainstream, and we’re going to see the industry be more transparent.

More TechCrunch

Google and Microsoft have made their developer conferences a showcase of their generative AI chops, and now all eyes are on next week’s Worldwide Developers Conference, which is expected to…

Apple needs to focus on making AI useful, not flashy

AI systems and large language models need to be trained on massive amounts of data to be accurate but they shouldn’t train on data that they don’t have the rights…

Deal Dive: Human Native AI is building the marketplace for AI training licensing deals

Before Wazer came along, “water jet cutting” and “affordable” didn’t belong in the same sentence. That changed in 2016, when the company launched the world’s first desktop water jet cutter,…

Wazer Pro is making desktop water jetting more affordable

Former Autonomy chief executive Mike Lynch issued a statement Thursday following his acquittal of criminal charges, ending a 13-year legal battle with Hewlett-Packard that became one of Silicon Valley’s biggest…

Autonomy’s Mike Lynch acquitted after US fraud trial brought by HP

Featured Article

What Snowflake isn’t saying about its customer data breaches

As another Snowflake customer confirms a data breach, the cloud data company says its position “remains unchanged.”

17 hours ago
What Snowflake isn’t saying about its customer data breaches

Investor demand has been so strong for Rippling’s shares that it is letting former employees particpate in its tender offer. With one exception.

Rippling bans former employees who work at competitors like Deel and Workday from its tender offer stock sale

It turns out the space industry has a lot of ideas on how to improve NASA’s $11 billion, 15-year plan to collect and return samples from Mars. Seven of these…

NASA puts $10M down on Mars sample return proposals from Blue Origin, SpaceX and others

Featured Article

In 2024, many Y Combinator startups only want tiny seed rounds — but there’s a catch

When Bowery Capital general partner Loren Straub started talking to a startup from the latest Y Combinator accelerator batch a few months ago, she thought it was strange that the company didn’t have a lead investor for the round it was raising. Even stranger, the founders didn’t seem to be…

24 hours ago
In 2024, many Y Combinator startups only want tiny seed rounds — but there’s a catch

The keynote will be focused on Apple’s software offerings and the developers that power them, including the latest versions of iOS, iPadOS, macOS, tvOS, visionOS and watchOS.

Watch Apple kick off WWDC 2024 right here

Welcome to Startups Weekly — Haje’s weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Anna will be covering for him this week. Sign up here to…

Startups Weekly: Ups, downs, and silver linings

HSBC and BlackRock estimate that the Indian edtech giant Byju’s, once valued at $22 billion, is now worth nothing.

BlackRock has slashed the value of stake in Byju’s, once worth $22 billion, to zero

Apple is set to board the runaway locomotive that is generative AI at next week’s World Wide Developer Conference. Reports thus far have pointed to a partnership with OpenAI that…

Apple’s generative AI offering might not work with the standard iPhone 15

LinkedIn has confirmed it will no longer allow advertisers to target users based on data gleaned from their participation in LinkedIn Groups. The move comes more than three months after…

LinkedIn to limit targeted ads in EU after complaint over sensitive data use

Founders: Need plans this weekend? What better way to spend your time than applying to this year’s Startup Battlefield 200 at TechCrunch Disrupt. With Monday’s deadline looming, this is a…

Startup Battlefield 200 applications due Monday

The company is in the process of building a gigawatt-scale factory in Kentucky to produce its nickel-hydrogen batteries.

Novel battery manufacturer EnerVenue is raising $515M, per filing

Meta is quietly rolling out a new “Communities” feature on Messenger, the company confirmed to TechCrunch. The feature is designed to help organizations, schools and other private groups communicate in…

Meta quietly rolls out Communities on Messenger

Featured Article

Siri and Google Assistant look to generative AI for a new lease on life

Voice assistants in general are having an existential moment, and generative AI is poised to be the logical successor.

1 day ago
Siri and Google Assistant look to generative AI for a new lease on life

Education software provider PowerSchool is being taken private by investment firm Bain Capital in a $5.6 billion deal.

Bain to take K-12 education software provider PowerSchool private in $5.6B deal

Shopify has acquired Threads.com, the Sequoia-backed Slack alternative, Threads said on its website. The companies didn’t disclose the terms of the deal but said that the Threads.com team will join…

Shopify acquires Threads (no, not that one)

Featured Article

Bangladeshi police agents accused of selling citizens’ personal information on Telegram

Two senior police officials in Bangladesh are accused of collecting and selling citizens’ personal information to criminals on Telegram.

2 days ago
Bangladeshi police agents accused of selling citizens’ personal information on Telegram

Carta, a once-high-flying Silicon Valley startup that loudly backed away from one of its businesses earlier this year, is working on a secondary sale that would value the company at…

Carta’s valuation to be cut by $6.5 billion in upcoming secondary sale

Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft has successfully delivered two astronauts to the International Space Station, a key milestone in the aerospace giant’s quest to certify the capsule for regular crewed missions.  Starliner…

Boeing’s Starliner overcomes leaks and engine trouble to dock with ‘the big city in the sky’

Rivian needs to sell its new revamped vehicles at a profit in order to sustain itself long enough to get to the cheaper mass market R2 SUV on the road.

Rivian’s path to survival is now remarkably clear

Featured Article

What to expect from WWDC 2024: iOS 18, macOS 15 and so much AI

Apple is hoping to make WWDC 2024 memorable as it finally spells out its generative AI plans.

2 days ago
What to expect from WWDC 2024: iOS 18, macOS 15 and so much AI

As WWDC 2024 nears, all sorts of rumors and leaks have emerged about what iOS 18 and its AI-powered apps and features have in store.

What to expect from Apple’s AI-powered iOS 18 at WWDC 2024

Apple’s annual list of what it considers the best and most innovative software available on its platform is turning its attention to the little guy.

Apple’s Design Awards highlight indies and startups

Meta launched its Meta Verified program today along with other features, such as the ability to call large businesses and custom messages.

Meta rolls out Meta Verified for WhatsApp Business users in Brazil, India, Indonesia and Colombia

Last year, during the Q3 2023 earnings call, Mark Zuckerberg talked about leveraging AI to have business accounts respond to customers for purchase and support queries. Today, Meta announced AI-powered…

Meta adds AI-powered features to WhatsApp Business app

TikTok is testing streaks that are similar to Snapchat’s in order to boost engagement, including how long people stay on the app.

TikTok is testing Snapchat-like streaks

Welcome back to TechCrunch Mobility — your central hub for news and insights on the future of transportation. Sign up here for free — just click TechCrunch Mobility! Your usual…

Inside Fisker’s collapse and robotaxis come to more US cities