Kiren Sekar is the CPO of Samsara, a company that brings real-time visibility, analytics, and AI to physical operations. Before Samsara, Kiren was an early leader at Meraki, which was acquired by Cisco for $1.2B.
In this episode, he walks us through Samsara’s origin story: from hardware hacking in a basement to scaling a cross-industry IoT platform. He shares how early customer feedback loops led to the company’s first product, why starting with the mid-market was a deliberate choice, and how Samsara kept a startup mindset even as it scaled.
In this episode, we discuss:
- Lessons from Meraki’s acquisition by Cisco
- How Kiren hires for intrinsic motivation
- Why Samsara was built for operations industries
- The early hardware prototype and the Cowgirl Creamery insight
- Building broad vs. niche from day one
- The shift from founder-selling to a scalable sales motion
- Organizing product teams around revenue vs. experience
- How Samsara uses LLMs and AI today
- What Kiren learned from longtime co-founder Sanjit Biswas
Where to find Kiren:
Where to find Brett:
References:
Timestamps:
(01:27) Meraki’s growth and acquisition by Cisco
(03:25) The "evaporating" exit strategy from Meraki
(04:42) Identifying the IoT market gaps
(07:38) The early keys to success at Samsara
(09:39) What does quality mean to Kiren?
(10:54) Building a customer-centric roadmap
(17:34) Early customer research and the failed fridge monitoring idea
(20:57) How a cheese producer helped create Samsara’s first prototype
(28:06) Balancing depth and breadth in customer profiles
(33:45) Developing customer trust to build feedback loops
(40:27) How “ease of use” became a growth secret
(44:23) Pricing strategies and market positioning
(51:51) How Meraki influenced Samsara’s GTM strategy
(57:19) Helping customers navigate change management
(1:00:48) How Samsara’s team evolved during rapid growth
(1:04:03) What AI means for an IoT giant