Forbes

Long Live Email

The inbox had been left for dead. Now it’s being resurrecte­d by the two founders of Front, a startup with big-name backers and a mission to make old-fashioned email cutting-edge again.

- By Alex Konrad

The inbox had been left for dead. Now it’s being resurrecte­d by Front and its big-name backers.

Mathilde Collin fidgeted with her backpack as she walked into a building overlookin­g the Tower of London, worried that she’d seem “too San Francisco” to the executives running a shipping broker that had recently celebrated its 134th birthday. Collin, the CEO of startup Front, was there to pitch software that turned a standard email inbox into a shared workspace—perfect for a logistics team responding to a stream of price quotes for cargo ships’ availabili­ty around the world.

To her surprise, it was the broker, Simpson Spence Young, that promptly began pitching her.

The company had surveyed its employees and discovered their communicat­ions tools, more suited to the telegraphs of an earlier century, needed an overhaul. They wanted Front’s help.

Turns out a lot of older businesses that rely heavily on email are eager for Front’s help. “Having a new tool would change their life,” says Collin, 30. Better to fix what you have. Younger tech firms like Shopify and private payments leader Stripe have also signed on, paying between $9 and $79 per user each month (more money gets you more shared inboxes and features). Al

together, the sevenyearo­ld firm has 5,500 customers, and revenue has quadrupled since 2017 to an estimated $32 million last year.

It’s tiny, but its elite backers, including Sequoia Capital and founders of software leaders Atlassian, Qualtrics and Zoom—and even email killer Slack—are betting on Front. They have poured nearly $140 million into the San Francisco–based company, most recently boosting its valuation to more than $800 million in January, four times its figure just two years earlier.

Unlike others who have been quick to declare the “death” of email—Slack rode a mission to replace it all the way to a stock debut last year— Collin and her cofounder, Laurent Perrin, 38, believe that the problem with the yearsold protocol, dominated by Microsoft Outlook and Google’s Gmail, is in the packaging, not the product.

The French cofounders met via eFounders, a startup studio in Paris, in 2013. Collin, who studied mathematic­s and entreprene­urship at HEC Paris business school, had quit her job over disillusio­nment with its culture. An engineer, Perrin was looking for a new gig after nearly four years as CTO of a French online radio service. After some brainstorm­ing, the pair determined that a collaborat­ive shared inbox—think any email you receive from a company whose address starts with “info” or “help”—would serve as their ticket into a company’s workflows.

Before Front, one customer inquiry could set off a flurry of emails inside a business as colleagues copied each other and forwarded feedback in order to come up with one answer. With Front, users got access to a shared email that would treat incoming messages like living documents, appending notes, tagging colleagues and drafting responses without sending any emails.

With about a dozen test companies onboard, the cofounders flew to California to interview for prestigiou­s startup accelerato­r Y Combinator’s summer 2014 program. Collin got to pitch partners including the creators of Gmail and Yahoo

Mail. Expecting profound feedback, she instead received a simple message: Follow your growth. “There was something about her, a competitiv­eness and assurednes­s, that spoke to us,” says Geoff Ralston, Yahoo Mail’s creator, who is now president of Y Combinator. “It was counterint­uitive. Really, email? That’s the thing that’s going to create a new billiondol­lar company?”

It’s well on its way, thanks to investors—but also loyal followers. At Edge Logistics in Chicago, president William Kerr says he needed a fulltime employee to manage emails before he discovered Front. Now the company can automatica­lly distribute inbound requests for quotes evenly across its reps, who compare notes and reach consensus on rates within the email before an assigned salesperso­n responds. “In my business, a lot of times you can win the job just by being the first guy to quote it,” Kerr says. “Over the course of 60,000 or 70,000 jobs a year, it makes a really big difference.”

Collin and Perrin’s eventual goal is to undercut Gmail and Outlook while connecting more productivi­ty apps to Front so its collaborat­ive emails become an employee’s central hub. Analysts remain skeptical that it can challenge the duopoly. Both companies bundle their email products with suites of other tools—G Suite for Google, Office 365 for Microsoft. “Many startups have found opportunit­ies under the noses of Microsoft and Google,” says Daniel Ives, a managing director at Wedbush Securities. “But I view email how most consumers view napkins at a restaurant: They’re not paying for it.”

Patrick Collison, CEO of customer Stripe, says he recognizes in Front a similarity to his payments business, now worth $35 billion: a willingnes­s to tackle an industry others shunned. To Collison, the question isn’t whether Front can carve out a market, but how big it will be. “It’s as likely that Mathilde figures that out as any other earlystage CEO I’ve met,” he says.

Collin is betting on herself. Recently, some of tech’s biggest CEOs have reached out, she says, including Microsoft’s Satya Nadella and Salesforce’s Marc Benioff. To Collin, their motives are clear. She says she has no interest in selling: “We are at .0001% of what we could do.” “SOMETIMES THIS HIGH-TECH WORLD CALLS FOR LOW-TECH SOLUTIONS.” —Christophe­r Moore

 ??  ?? Cofounders Mathilde Collin (left) and Laurent Perrin faced personal hardships even as they reinvented corporate inboxes. He received, and beat, a cancer diagnosis; she suffered a breakdown caused in part by the ensuing stress.
Cofounders Mathilde Collin (left) and Laurent Perrin faced personal hardships even as they reinvented corporate inboxes. He received, and beat, a cancer diagnosis; she suffered a breakdown caused in part by the ensuing stress.

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