logo
episode-header-image
Jan 2024
1h 7m

Inside Figma’s early days: How to build ...

First Round
About this episode

Kyle Parrish, Figma’s first sales hire, built the company’s zero-to-one sales engine from scratch. Figma now has more than 3 million monthly users. Prior to Figma, Kyle spent 5 years at Dropbox in various sales roles. At Dropbox, Kyle successfully launched and scaled the Austin office to 100+ people, and then led the enterprise sales function in San Francisco and New York.

In today’s episode, we discuss:

  • The right time to build a sales function
  • Hiring and scaling a successful sales org
  • Building a unique sales culture
  • Career advice for ambitious salespeople
  • Figma’s early sales motion
  • How to integrate your first sales hire
  • Navigating the founder/Head of Sales relationship

Referenced:

Where to find Kyle Parrish:

Where to find Brett Berson:

Where to find First Round Capital:

Timestamps:

(00:00) Introduction

(02:10) What founders need to figure out before hiring salespeople

(03:48) Who to hire as your first salesperson

(05:34) Transitioning away from founder-led sales

(07:07) Tactics for hiring great salespeople

(12:50) The ideal experience sales candidates should have

(13:49) Common traits of successful salespeople

(18:45) What it was like being Figma’s first sales hire

(19:59) Interesting tactic to integrate the first sales hire

(21:16) How Figma executed its early sales motion

(32:27) Why Figma changed its customer narrative

(34:03) Building outbound sales strategy at Figma

(36:17) Segmented pricing and no discounts

(41:55) Kyle’s transition from Dropbox to Figma

(47:25) Creating a world-class sales culture

(51:46) How Figma does sales differently

(54:02) Building the initial sales team around a passion for the product

(57:12) Figma’s unique hiring process for salespeople

(60:40) Advice for founders hiring their first salesperson

(63:18) The secret to Dylan Field’s success

(64:33) How to scale yourself as an early hire

(66:25) Oliver Jay’s impact on Kyle

Up next
Aug 20
How Canva leveraged unconventional growth levers to grow to $42B | Cameron Adams (Co-founder & CPO)
Cameron Adams is the co-founder and Chief Product Officer at Canva, the design platform valued at $42B as of July 2025, used by over 230 million people every month. Before starting Canva, Cameron was a designer and engineer at Google and co-founded Fluent, an email startup. In th ... Show More
1h 4m
Aug 14
Twitter's former CEO on rebuilding the web for AI | Parag Agrawal (Co-founder and CEO of Parallel)
Parag Agrawal is the co-founder and CEO of Parallel, a startup building search infrastructure for the web’s second user: AIs. Before launching Parallel, Parag spent over a decade at Twitter, where he served as CTO and later CEO during a period of intense transformation, as well a ... Show More
1h 5m
Aug 6
Ignoring Silicon Valley advice to build a $3B fintech unicorn | Immad Akhund (Co-founder and CEO of Mercury)
Immad Akhund is the CEO and co-founder of Mercury, a digital banking platform that’s become the go-to financial infrastructure for startups. Before Mercury, Immad spent nearly two decades founding companies, learning the hard way what separates a good idea from a great business. ... Show More
1h 1m
Recommended Episodes
Dec 2023
THE BIGGEST STARTUP OPPORTUNITIES IN 2024 BY LEAN STARTUP GUY ERIC RIES
Greg interviews Eric Ries, author of "The Lean Startup" and founder of The Long Term Stock Exchange.They talk about how to test business ideas, why businesses with a social mission will outperform, and opportunities in AI.►►Subscribe to Greg's weekly newsletter for insights on co ... Show More
46m 41s
Jul 22
Step Away or Die: The Brutal Cost of Building a $500M/Year Company
** Thinking about selling your company? 24 founders told us what really happens after the wire hits. — joinhampton.com/exit-reportSantiago Aparicio built a $500M company, then faced a choice: step away or die.Here’s what we talk about:Santiago shares his $22M net worth and the br ... Show More
57m 6s
Jul 6
Solo founder, $80M exit, 6 months: The Base44 bootstrapped startup success story | Maor Shlomo
Maor Shlomo is the founder of Base44, an AI-powered app builder that he bootstrapped to an over $80 million acquisition by Wix in just six months. As a solo founder (with severe ADHD), he hit $1 million ARR just three weeks after launch and grew the product to more than 400,000 u ... Show More
1h 31m
Jul 2024
Pattern Breakers: How to find a breakthrough startup idea | Mike Maples, Jr. (Founding Partner at Floodgate, ex-Product at Silicon Graphics)
Mike Maples, Jr. is a legendary early-stage startup investor and a co-founder and partner at Floodgate. He’s made early bets on transformative companies like Twitter, Lyft, Twitch, Okta, Rappi, and Applied Intuition and is one of the pioneers of seed-stage investing as a category ... Show More
1h 49m
Jul 2024
MBA2499 Why I Never Needed Investors For My Businesses
Ever thought about whether you really need investors to build a successful business, or if it’s possible to thrive without their backing? Many entrepreneurs believe that securing investor funding is crucial for launching and growing their ventures. But what if there’s an alternat ... Show More
18m 2s
Apr 2024
#32- Abdulmajeed Al Sukhan (Co-Founder & CEO of Tamara) on why building companies is tougher than fighting cancer
This episode was recorded live at the Sharjah Entrepreneurship Festival (SEF). Our first live show!Abdulmajeed is a serial entrepreneur in the true sense of the word. He is co-founder of Nana (the largest grocery delivery platform in KSA) and currently co-founder and CEO of Tamar ... Show More
42m 50s
Mar 2025
How Tommy Mello Became a Billionaire Painting Garage Doors (And How He Shares the Wealth)
What does it take to turn a blue-collar business into a billion-dollar empire?For Tommy Mello, the answer is simple: relentless competition, strategic investing, and an unwavering commitment to winning. From painting garage doors to building A1 Garage Doors into a massive industr ... Show More
30m 47s
Oct 2024
“I’m worth about $3 billion” What Happens When You DON’T Sell Your Business
What happens when you don’t sell your company and keep growing it for decades? For Oscar, it means you become a billionaire.Oscar bought a company every six weeks for 20 years and now his business is worth about $50 billion. Yet, he still wears $15 t-shirts and lives by the value ... Show More
43m 52s