Timescale’s Bottom-Up Revolution: Growing to 1000+ Customers Without a Sales Team

Discover how Timescale grew to over 1000 customers through product-led growth and a developer-first strategy, building a successful enterprise database company without traditional sales teams.

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Timescale’s Bottom-Up Revolution: Growing to 1000+ Customers Without a Sales Team

Timescale’s Bottom-Up Revolution: Growing to 1000+ Customers Without a Sales Team

Conventional wisdom suggests enterprise software companies need large sales teams to succeed. In a recent Category Visionaries episode, Timescale CEO Ajay Kulkarni revealed how they turned this assumption on its head, building a thousand-customer business through product-led growth.

Embracing the Developer-First Motion

From the start, Timescale took an unconventional approach to market entry. “We’re really targeting an individual developer who cares more about what their peers say on hacker news and Twitter and Reddit than what Gartner says,” Ajay explains.

This understanding shaped their entire go-to-market strategy: “We’re more bottoms up. We’re more PLG. We just added our first sales leader at the end of last year, so we got this far without a real sales team.”

Building Trust Through Value

Rather than leading with sales conversations, Timescale focused on providing immediate value. “Everything we built was open source, everything was free,” Ajay notes. This approach allowed developers to experience the product’s value before any commercial conversation began.

The leadership team invested heavily in community support. “Myself, my co-founder, would be really active in it, our engineers are active in it,” Ajay shares, describing their hands-on involvement in their Slack channel. Their philosophy was straightforward: “Let’s build something for free, build a community and provide a ton of value and then we’ll figure out how to monetize it.”

Finding the Right Monetization Model

The path to monetization wasn’t immediate. Timescale experimented with different approaches, including support contracts and on-premises installations. The breakthrough came with their cloud offering in 2019.

“I remember at the end of 2019, I had this on-prem business and this cloud business and the on-premises business was bigger, but the cloud business was growing like a weed and we weren’t even paying attention to it,” Ajay recalls. This observation led to a crucial pivot to cloud-first in early 2020.

The Power of Natural Growth

This product-led approach has created powerful network effects. Today, Timescale’s community is 50 times larger than their customer base, creating a robust pipeline for future growth. Their users include everyone from gaming companies to music labels, demonstrating the broad appeal of their developer-first approach.

The expanding use cases revealed a larger trend. As Ajay explains, “What we essentially discovered is that as Compute has gotten more powerful and storage has gotten cheaper, developers are just building more applications that capture large amounts of data and make use of it.”

Key Elements of Their PLG Strategy

Several factors contributed to Timescale’s successful product-led growth:

  1. Open-source foundation building trust and enabling easy adoption
  2. Active community engagement from leadership
  3. Focus on developer experience and self-service
  4. Cloud-first approach enabling frictionless scaling

Lessons for Technical Founders

Timescale’s journey offers valuable insights for founders considering a product-led growth strategy:

  1. Understanding and aligning with your users’ natural buying behavior is crucial
  2. Value delivery should precede monetization attempts
  3. Leadership engagement in community can replace traditional sales roles
  4. Following organic growth signals can reveal the right business model

The results speak for themselves: over 1000 customers acquired primarily through product-led growth, with a community 50 times larger than their customer base. As Ajay emphasizes, success in the developer tools space isn’t about aggressive sales tactics – it’s about building trust through consistent value delivery and authentic community engagement.

This bottom-up approach has not only led to impressive customer growth but has also positioned Timescale to “build the next great database company” – proving that sometimes the best sales team isn’t a sales team at all.

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