Matt Mickiewicz built his first online marketplace at 15 years old, paying for his domain registration out of his allowance. By 30, he had used the same playbook for launching a marketplace four separate times - SitePoint, 99designs, Flippa, and Hired - and landed on the Forbes 30 Under 30 list.
Matt reveals why every marketplace launch was born from watching user behavior inside an existing community, how he solved the chicken-and-egg problem when launching a marketplace each time, and why he pitched VCs for introductions instead of money. His two-sided marketplace Hired generated $30M in job offers during its first two-week auction.
š Key Lessons
- šÆ Watch your community for marketplace launch signals: Matt spotted 99designs and Flippa by observing organic buying, selling, and competing behavior inside SitePoint's community, not by brainstorming in a conference room.
- š ļø Validate before building when launching a marketplace: Hired started as a simple signup form with clear kill points at every stage. If developers would not sign up, the idea died. No wasted engineering.
- š¤ Hack distribution through investors, not cold outreach: When companies ignored Hired, Matt pitched VCs to introduce their portfolio companies. This generated 24 employers and $30M in offers from the first batch.
- š Use PR to ignite marketplace launch liquidity: A single TechCrunch story drove thousands of company signups and tens of thousands of engineer signups for Hired in 72 hours.
- š Do not waste time converting critics: Matt spent months debating designers who opposed spec work at 99designs. They were never going to become users.
- š° Spin each online marketplace launch into its own brand: A brand can only stand for one thing. Mixing a developer education site with a design marketplace confused both audiences.
Chapters
- Introduction
- Success quotes from Churchill and Twain
- Growing up in Vancouver and early entrepreneurship
- Launching a marketplace at age 15 with his allowance
- Building traffic and monetizing with direct ad deals
- Rebranding from Webmaster Resources to SitePoint
- Discovering the 99designs marketplace inside SitePoint
- Why each marketplace needed its own brand
- Solving the chicken-and-egg problem at 99designs
- Biggest mistake - trying to convert critics
- Spinning out Flippa using the same playbook
- How Hired started in a San Francisco pub
- Validating Hired with a landing page and kill points
- Pitching VCs for introductions, not money
- Landing the TechCrunch story that ignited growth
- Advice for aspiring marketplace founders
- Hired's talent curation and salary transparency
- Revenue model and growth metrics
- Surviving the dot-com crash
- Lightning round
Resources