Botify’s Team Building Blueprint: Scaling from 0 to 300 Employees Globally
Building a global team isn’t just about hiring – it’s about creating an organization that can execute across cultures and time zones. In a recent episode of Category Visionaries, Botify CEO Adrien Menard shared how they scaled from a French startup to a 300-person enterprise serving global brands like Nike and L’Oreal.
The French Entrepreneur’s Journey
“I have the typical story of any french entrepreneur who wants to make it in the US,” Adrien explains. But that typical story led to extraordinary results: “six years later, we have about 70% of the total revenue coming from North America.”
This transformation required building a truly global organization. Today, Botify operates across “different offices. So we started in Paris, as I mentioned, but most of the operations now are running in between New York, Seattle, London and Singapore and Sydney.”
Team First, Always
For Adrien, one lesson stands above all others: “Make sure to build the best team that you can imagine… you never succeed alone.” This focus on team building shapes every aspect of Botify’s growth.
“I’m always amazed by how much everyone is actually bringing to the journey, to the project,” Adrien notes. “Everyone in the team or at the board, the advisors, et cetera, they really played a tremendous role into our evolution.”
Adapting Leadership to Scale
As the company grew, Adrien recognized the need to evolve his own role: “It’s my responsibility as one of the co founders and as the CEO to make sure that my role and the team is adapted to the current step of development of the company.”
This meant building “a very senior leadership team” and focusing on “where I can be good.” As he explains, “I have some really talented resources who help me to be good where I am very good at, and maybe to be less involved into where I think others are going to be much better than I can be.”
The Cultural Evolution
Moving from a French startup to a global enterprise required cultural adaptation. But rather than seeing this as a challenge, Botify embraced the diversity of “different backgrounds and different experiences, countries, cultures.”
This diversity becomes particularly valuable when selling to enterprise customers. “You need to be known by the precise decision makers and all the influencers in the marketing organization,” Adrien explains. Having team members who understand different markets and cultures helps navigate these complex sales.
Building for Market Evolution
The team structure also had to support rapid market changes. As search moves “from a keyword approach to a conversational approach,” Botify needs talent that can help enterprises navigate this evolution.
This means hiring not just for today’s needs, but for tomorrow’s opportunities. As Adrien puts it, they aim to “play an even more strategic role connecting the clients with the search engines and in the end to serve the user experience of someone searching the web.”
The Secret to Longevity
After twelve years, Adrien remains deeply engaged: “I’ve never been bored. I may have been tired from time to time, but every morning I’m super excited by what’s happening.” He credits this to both the dynamic industry and the team structure that lets everyone focus on their strengths.
“That’s, I think, the secret of being an entrepreneur and to last in the job,” he explains. Build a team that lets you “be good where I can be good.”
For founders scaling global teams, the lesson is clear: invest in building an organization that can grow beyond its founders. As Adrien emphasizes, success comes from “making sure that the clients are happy and the employees, the team is really seeing and understanding what the vision is about and where everyone has a role and an impact to play.”