KEY POINTS
  • Toast's first backer, Steve Papa, invested in the company because no venture capital firm would write the initial check.
  • By the time Bessemer Venture Partners led the first institutional round in 2015, the company had millions in revenue, 170 employees and was deployed in thousands of restaurants.
  • "We intentionally chose not to put reps in Silicon Valley," Papa said.

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Chris Comparato, CEO, the Toast, Inc. IPO at the New York Stock Exchange, on September 22, 2021.

Not long after selling software company Endeca to Oracle in 2011 for over $1 billion, Steve Papa called Bessemer Venture Partners with a hot tip. He said three of his best engineers were working on something new that Bessemer, which had previously backed Endeca, would be crazy not to fund.

Kent Bennett, who'd been a junior associate on the Endeca deal, fielded the call. He told Papa there was some empty space at the firm's office in Boston that his people could use. But Bennett knew he couldn't get his firm, one of the biggest and most successful in the venture industry, to write a check to three engineers with an unspecified project.

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