Exiger’s Path to Product-Market Fit: From Compliance Tool to Mission-Critical Platform
Product-market fit rarely comes from following a predetermined roadmap. In a recent episode of Category Visionaries, Exiger CEO Brandon Daniels revealed how real-world crises and customer challenges shaped their evolution from a compliance tool to a comprehensive supply chain risk platform.
The Initial Product Focus
Exiger’s journey began with a narrow focus. As Brandon explains: “We had been using our technology to help federal agencies, financial institutions, and corporates essentially do either reputational or cyber due diligence on vendors.”
This foundation in compliance would prove crucial, but it was just the beginning.
The Pivot Point
COVID-19 changed everything. “In the COVID-19 response effort, we got to unleash the full capability that we had built that assessed operational risk, that assessed financial health, that assessed your technical capability to actually deliver the supplies that the customer was procuring,” Brandon shares.
This moment revealed a crucial insight: customers needed more than just compliance checks – they needed comprehensive supply chain visibility.
Learning Through Crisis
The high-stakes environment of COVID procurement accelerated their learning cycle. Brandon notes: “The most interesting part for me is what it did to our business…The need was 100% focused on compliance. In the COVID-19 response effort, we got to unleash the full capability.”
Their platform began uncovering critical issues that went far beyond traditional compliance concerns. “Very often you’d have a company that was a bona fide distributor, but they would be purchasing masks from a company that was three weeks ago, just like an esthetician business, and they wouldn’t even know that potential supply was tainted,” Brandon explains.
Customer-Led Evolution
Rather than fighting this expansion of scope, Exiger embraced it. Brandon describes their approach: “About maybe two and a half years ago, actually, we had a customer say, ‘hey, so I love the operational risk, financial, health, ownership, control and influence and reputational risk scoring that you do. But I really want to carve out for just ESG risks.'”
Their response? “We basically went on a six month sprint with that customer building and Iterating with them.”
The Platform Expands
This pattern of customer-driven development continued. When Russia invaded Ukraine, their platform evolved again to help manage sanctions impact: “When Russia invaded Ukraine, right, were able to deliver to the federal government information on those supply chains to make sure that those sanctions were punitive to the folks that were infringing upon the democracy of the Ukraine.”
But they didn’t stop there. The platform began helping with cybersecurity resilience: “If we found a critical supplier in the logistics of the COVID-19, vaccines or medicines, they would actually reach out to them and like CISA and DHS, would offer them services to help them increase the resilience of their cyber infrastructure.”
The Results
This customer-centric evolution drove extraordinary growth. As Brandon notes: “We went from 10 million of arr in 2019 in the third party and supply chain space to a place where in the next twelve months we’ll be at 100 million in arr.”
Key Lessons for Founders
- Start narrow but stay alert to broader customer needs
- Let real-world crisis moments reveal your technology’s full potential
- Follow customer problems, even when they lead beyond your initial focus
- Use high-stakes situations to validate new capabilities
- Think in terms of platforms, not just features
Looking ahead, Brandon sees an even bigger opportunity: “Our aspiration is to do good and to do well…we want to be the platform that returns that conversation to a question of just performance and price because that’s where they’re naturally skilled.”
The lesson for founders? True product-market fit often comes from letting customer challenges guide your evolution, even if – especially if – they push you beyond your original vision.