Andy Alsop didn’t start The Receptionist—he bought a small iPad-based visitor management app in 2013 for $250K and turned it into a real SaaS business. What began as a simple front-desk check-in tool evolved into a full visitor management system used across offices, schools, and manufacturing sites.
Over a decade, Andy grew the company to 5,500 customers across 8,000 locations and more than $7M in ARR with just 30 employees. He stayed mostly bootstrapped, focused on steady growth, strong customer retention, and a unique “employee supremacy” culture that emphasized trust, transparency, and long-term loyalty.
At an inflection point—needing more capital to keep up with a maturing market—Andy chose to sell rather than raise growth equity. The company was acquired by Sign In, a growth-equity-backed platform consolidating the category. In this episode, Andy shares how he evaluated buyers, avoided common exit traps, and built a company worth acquiring without chasing VC growth.
Key Takeaways
- Simple Product, Deep System: What looks like a basic iPad app becomes complex, sticky infrastructure with integrations, compliance, and workflow depth.
- Bootstrap Leverage: Growing with customer revenue forced discipline, creating a profitable, efficient business attractive to strategic buyers.
- Employee Supremacy Works: Trust, transparency, and benefits (like every-other-Friday off) drove retention, performance, and long-term value creation.
- Clean Books Matter: Meticulous financial discipline prevented retrading risk and made due diligence smoother and more favorable.
- Exit Optionality Wins: Not needing to sell created leverage—allowing Andy to choose the right buyer instead of taking the only offer.
Quote from Andy Alsop, CEO of The Receptionist
“I sold 100 % of the company. It was a full acquisition. I wasn’t even looking for, and this is something that my brother in tech always said: Don’t build a company to sell it, build a great company and somebody will want to come along and buy it. And I think that’s exactly the way it played out. We didn’t go and look for the acquisition. We were pursued by Sign In and that’s what happened.
“Just build a great company and somebody will want to come along and buy it. Because I didn’t want to just sell it. I mean, we’re profitable. We’re growing. We have very low churn. Great employees. We’re doing great in the marketplace, I didn’t really have to sell.”
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