Rupert Mayer is the founder of IPfolio, a vertical SaaS platform built for corporate intellectual property teams to manage patents, trademarks, renewals, and innovation workflows. Originally from Austria, Rupert stumbled into IP software while helping a patent law firm solve Y2K risks, then moved to Silicon Valley to build a modern cloud-based product on Salesforce for smaller in-house IP teams.
IPfolio started as a lightweight alternative to legacy enterprise systems but gradually moved upmarket as customers like Dropbox, Square, GoPro, and Alphabet companies adopted the platform. Built largely on Salesforce with a lean team, the company grew steadily, signed six-figure enterprise contracts, and expanded to roughly 40 employees while serving increasingly complex global enterprises.
After raising a small strategic investment to scale faster, IPfolio grew too quickly and burned through capital chasing larger enterprise deals that took longer to close. Rupert ultimately sold the company in 2019 to a strategic partner, stayed through multiple acquisitions, and helped position IPfolio as the flagship product inside a much larger global company. Today, he is building again—this time in climate tech.
Key Takeaways
- Go All In – Growing software companies need full-time focus once you know the opportunity is real.
- Move Upmarket – Lightweight SaaS products often evolve into enterprise systems as big customers reshape the roadmap.
- Enterprise Leverage – Selling to innovative companies like Google accelerated product maturity and credibility faster than expected.
- Growth Trap – Hiring ahead of demand after rapid growth can create painful consequences when pipeline assumptions fail.
- Platform Advantage – Building on Salesforce dramatically reduced enterprise security, compliance, and infrastructure complexity.
Quote from Rupert Mayer, Founder of IPfolio
“I think the US innovation culture, especially in Silicon Valley, is very different from the business culture in Europe. I think it’s just the willingness to take risks.
When I started selling, I was basically now a solo entrepreneur. When I approached big companies to buy IP Folio, the early version, I did not have big names to go out with. I was a nobody.
And so I walk into, what was it at the time already, a public company in Silicon Valley. I do my demo and everyone likes the product. And then they ask the dreaded question, well, how big is your company?
We’re two people plus a developer. And I thought that was it. This public company will never sell from, buy from this no name, more or less solo startup. And they said, wow, that’s so cool. This is great. We’d love to buy from you because 15 years ago, this company was basically just three people in the garage and someone trusted them and bought their product.”
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