Inc.

When a Merger Makes the Most Sense

We had a great plan. We had a great app. What we needed was a great partner

SOMEWHERE ALONG the way, most founders realize things aren’t going according to plan. This shouldn’t be a surprise—a startup is basically a double scoop of hopes and dreams, drizzled with uncertainty. You might update your road map hourly, but eventually you end up somewhere you never expected to be.

A year ago, the plans for Iodine—my startup—were carefully scripted. We began 2016 with two great products: a website and a mobile app. Both were growing in popularity with consumers, and we had begun trying to translate that appeal into actual revenue. This isn’t a straightforward proposition, though, because in the health care industry, consumers don’t generally pay directly for things like apps and websites. To make money, we needed to pull off a bank shot that would turn consumer traction into enterprise

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Inc.

Inc.2 min read
Family Office
The most stressful part of Pistola founder Grace Na's day isn't what you'd expect for the founder of a denim company with 40 employees and a factory right in Los Angeles. It's placing a lunch order for her head of tech and pattern and her head financ
Inc.1 min read
Beauty Filter
Countless companies have elevated everyday items to iconic: Apple upgraded the nerdy MP3 player, Nest turned thermostats into real estate selling points, and Aesop made hand soap a status symbol. Ryan Babenzien and Arjan Singh, founders of NYCbased J
Inc.1 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
The Book That Built a Tech Founder's Business
“I started reading the book almost immediately after it came out, but never ended up finishing it,” says founder and CEO Gaurav Banga (left) about On Intelligence, JeffHawkins's 2004 exploration of the human brain and how it relates to machine intell

Related Books & Audiobooks