DiscoverOpen Source UnderdogsEpisode 70: Early-Stage Venture Capital, OpenOcean, with Patrik Backman
Episode 70: Early-Stage Venture Capital, OpenOcean, with Patrik Backman

Episode 70: Early-Stage Venture Capital, OpenOcean, with Patrik Backman

Update: 2024-05-31
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Intro





Mike: Hello and welcome to Open Source Underdogs! I’m your host Mike Schwartz, founder of Gluu, and this is episode 70 with Patrick Backman, General Partner, CEO and Co-Founder at OpenOcean, and Co-Founder of MariaDB.





This episode uncharacteristically diverges from the normal format. It’s more of a general interview than a discussion on the business model of a specific company. We recorded it a few weeks back on March 1st. The release was delayed because I wanted to prioritize Kevin Muller’s pitch for attending the Open Source Founder Summit in Paris this coming May.





And if you’re on the fence about the Founder Summit, there’s still time. Last night, I had some barbecue with Frank Karlitschek, founder of NextCloud, and he told me that NextCloud did 80% growth on a revenue base in excess of $10M. So, if you want to find out how we did that, and you have the resources, go hang out with him and lots of other talented founders in Paris at the Open Source Founder Summit.





And, as this is a bit of an unconventional episode, maybe now is a good time to set some expectations for The Underdogs podcast for the next couple of years. My plan is to complete around six episodes per year for the next five years and finish at around 100 episodes.





The 100th episode will be Gluu, and you’ll find out how I was able to put all these years of feedback to work in my own startup.





I’ll be recording in person at FOSDEM, SO-CON and All Things Open. If you feel like your startup should be on the Underdogs podcast, or you have a suggestion for a startup that I should reach out to, send me a message on LinkedIn. I’m always on the lookout.





The other reason I’m slowing down is that Emily Omier’s podcast The Business of Open Source is doing a great job, documenting firsthand accounts from business leaders in the open-source world.





If Emily’s podcast existed in 2018, I might not have even started Underdogs. So, if you haven’t listened to her podcast, you should add it to your queue. And thanks Emily for all the hard work, a lot of logistics preparation and post-production work goes into each episode, so 200 episodes doesn’t just happen without a lot of commitment.





With that lengthy intro behind us, let’s finally get back to the interview with Patrik Backman. He’s a bit of walking internet history. And it was a lot of fun to get an opportunity to chat with him, so here we go. Patrik, thank you so much for joining us today.





Career Overview





Patrik: Yeah, it’s a pleasure, thank you.





Mike: Maybe just for the audience you could tell us a little bit about your background, and how you ended up entering the database business.





Patrik: I started actually out of school, out of university, I got recruited into MySQL, or MySequeL, as they say in the US, in 2003, and then I worked six years as part of MySQL database company. From couple of million in revenue, or almost 100, from 50 people to about 600, and then, in the last couple of years, I was part of the management team, I run a large part of product development, and also some business development.





And then, following the MySQL time, we exited to Sun Microsystems in 2008 for $1 billion – that was a great achievement, at least in the European, so to say, start of ecosystem. Following that, we started exploring how to build a venture-capital business. And parallel with that, we co-founded a company called MariaDB, which is a successor company to MySQL. But since 2011, I’ve been operating as a general partner, together with two other partners with OpenOcean, which does kind of invest in the early-stage data software in Europe.





Years at Sun





Mike: I have a Sun Microsystems’ coffee cup. I’m just curious, as somebody who had actually worked at Sun for a while, if you could talk a little bit about what was Sun like?





Patrik: It was quite a remarkable journey. After being acquired by Sun, I was part of the Sun for almost a year, and also part of the integration kind of tasks force to integrate the MySQL company into Sun Microsystems. But I think there was extraordinary talent around engineering overall in the business – it was of course a huge company – 35,000 people – but extraordinary talent, especially a software team which I met a lot, however, the commercial side was quite awkward to me. At the time, much of the philosophy seemed to be — what I noticed was that software was open-source, and for free. And then, the point was to sell hardware.





So, me coming in, with MySQL and still thinking that, ‘hey, it’s an interesting scaling business, there’s a lot of good ways to make business around open source’, Sun didn’t really have that mentality. And we were quite a lot discussing their how could kind of the commercial side be developed around the open-source products that Sun had and many, many great ones.





But then, I think the business side of that was a bit lacking, and they never really got to build that out – the company almost went into insolvency, or big difficulties, and then Oracle acquired it at a quite low price.





Inevitability of Oracle Owning MySQL





Mike: Do you think it’s somewhat ironic that Oracle, the prototypical commercial database company, ends up owning MySQL in the end?





Patrik: Well, what I’ve heard, and this is just ,of course, a rumor – so, “maybe” what people suspect – but I heard rumors that Larry Ellison always kind of wanted MySQL, to have control of it, because it was so popular and it had such a huge impact in the database industry, in terms of popularity, and in terms of power in the web and internet overall.





So, I think there was even some rumors that Oracle even earlier tried to get their hands on it, so to say, one way or the other, especially Sun Microsystems acquisition. Supposedly, it was much tied to the fact that that way they got control over MySQL.





More restrictive licenses resulting from Foss strip mining





Mike: I want to Pivot to MariaDB. I spoke with Michael Howard in 2018, and he was promoting BSL, or Business Source License, which HashiCorp later adopted also after a billion downloads of Terraform. Do you think that companies moving to these new restrictive licenses is a signal that the industry is standing up for itself, and that it’s sort of growing tired of the exploitive use of its software?





Patrik: Yes, absolutely. I think it’s a clear signal. At MySQL, 15 years ago, there was this — maybe today it seems naive thinking that ‘hey, if AWS, for instance, and Google, and Facebook use a lot of MySQL, somehow it will drive a commercial relationship down the line’, which is kind of beneficial to both parties and grateful for everyone.





However, it never really got there. It turned out that nowadays AWS has millions of these installations for their customers, and making a lot of money on them, but still paying really nothing for it. So, it has been clear that big players out there, they really want to use open source as far as they can for free, but themselves making a lot of money on it.





As this has become very evident that money will easily come to this popular open-source platform, then the restrictive license is what you need to go for, so to say. You need to be smart about your licenses so that it drives things to your business needs. Then, a question comes up, of course, for founders out there: what is the business need and the business ambition that the founder has, and different licenses serve different business models.





What is the best open-source license?





Mike:  So, let’s say I invent a new database called PigeonDB, and I want to license it somehow. Well, MariaDB used BSL licensing. Did that work? Like, what license should I use?





Patrik: As a founder, if you want to build a small kind of services business, you can use a free license as you want, very permissive. In that way, it gets maximum popularity, and spread, and awareness and adoption. Then, you can sell some support, or some fixes, or some advisory, or consultancy to users out there. And that’s a good business. You can even hire a few people, maybe tens of people, making even a few millions a year, and that’s a nice lifestyle business. That is a perfectly safe and good choice to make.





However, if you want to do more of a product-oriented business and earn licenses, or earn kind of product revenue for your product, then you need to have some restrictions on that distribution that you have. And I think that MongoDB is a perfect example of that. In popularity, I think MySQL and even MariaDB might be even more popular than Mongo. However, Mongo is making much more money than MySQL or MariaDB for that matter. So, having a restrictive license that prevents, so to say, kind of AGPL preventing the big player from just kind of hosting their own service database services and taking all the money for it.





Do we need a new open-source movement?





Mike:  Bruce Perens at State of Open mentioned the idea that maybe we need a new category of licenses. Do you have any idea if we did, what that would look like?





Patrik: I don’t know directly. I think there’s a good variety of licenses, and of course

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Episode 70: Early-Stage Venture Capital, OpenOcean, with Patrik Backman

Episode 70: Early-Stage Venture Capital, OpenOcean, with Patrik Backman

Marina Andjekovic