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How Continuum grew 8x in 12 months by targeting high pain threshold industries | Alex Witcpalek
BUILDERS
28 minutes
1 week ago
How Continuum grew 8x in 12 months by targeting high pain threshold industries | Alex Witcpalek
Continuum is solving the multi-party return problem in B2B supply chain—a transaction involving distributors, manufacturers, and end users that previously took 30-45 days and now completes in 30-45 seconds. In this episode of Category Visionaries, we sat down with Alex Witcpalek, CEO and Founder of Continuum, to unpack how he’s building what he calls ”reverse EDI” in a market of 1.5 million distribution and manufacturing companies across North America. After 13 years selling technology into this space, Alex is now growing 8x year-over-year by turning customers into the primary acquisition channel through network effects.
Topics Discussed:
- Why multi-party returns require replicating order management, warehouse management, and procurement systems simultaneously
- The tactical sequencing of building network businesses: solving for independent value, achieving critical mass, then activating network effects
- How Continuum navigates deep ERP integrations (SAP, Oracle, NetSuite, Epicor) plus bespoke business logic across multiple supply chain tiers
- Facebook retargeting, BDR outbound, events, and customer referrals as the four channels driving growth in a non-PLG market
- Why business model differentiation is the only remaining moat when technical barriers collapse
- Building domain expertise distribution systems using AI-powered LMS fed by sales call recordings
GTM Lessons For B2B Founders:
- Choose problems where you can capture 100% of addressable market, not fractional share: Alex deliberately avoided competing in CRM, sales order automation, or accounts payable—categories where even dominant players cap at 25-30% market penetration. Instead, he targeted multi-party reverse logistics, a greenfield problem no one else was solving. This strategic choice eliminates competitive displacement risk and allows every prospect conversation to focus on change management rather than competitive differentiation. Founders should map their TAM against competitive saturation: markets where you can own the entire category create fundamentally different growth trajectories than fighting for fragments.
- Sequence network businesses: independent value → critical mass → network activation: Alex was told by investors 18 months in that network effects ”weren’t going to work.” His insight: ”When you don’t have a network, you don’t sell the network. It’s just in your plans and how you’re building.” Continuum sold P&L impact, manual labor reduction, and customer experience improvements to early adopters while building network infrastructure invisibly. Only after achieving density in specific verticals (HVAC, electrical, plumbing) did they surface the network value proposition. This sequencing prevents the cold-start problem—founders building marketplace or network businesses must design standalone value that makes the first 100 customers successful independent of network density.
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Front Lines — We help B2B tech companies launch, manage, and grow podcasts that drive demand, awareness, and thought leadership. www.FrontLines.io
The Global Talent Co. — We help tech startups find, vet, hire, pay, and retain amazing marketing talent that costs 50-70% less than the US & Europe. www.GlobalTalent.co
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