In One Of His Final Interviews, Andrew Mason Talked About Building A Business For The Next '20–30 Years'
andrew mason
andrew mason

Just two weeks ago, then-Groupon CEO Andrew Mason did an interview with analyst Greg Sterling in which he showed no sign of concern about his job.

"My intuition has always been starting with the customers and building something that optimizes not for 2-3 months, but 2-3 years or even 20-30 years," he told Sterling during the interview, which was conducted on February 19. "And being convicted about those principles and being unwilling to stray from them is the difference between success and failure."

It may well have been the last time Mason did an interview with a member of the media. (Fast Company writer Elizabeth Spiers met with Mason in Silicon Valley in January; her interview, while not the last interview Mason conducted, is a must-read.)

Sterling's interview will be published on Monday by Yext, a local-information software company, on Monday in its Yext Quarterly, a publication it's creating for its business customers to educate them about trends in the market. With Yext's permission, we're publishing it here.

Cracking the Local Code
An Interview with Groupon Cofounder Andrew Mason

The story of Groupon is well documented. Born out of an earlier social-action startup called The Point, Andrew Mason launched Groupon in Chicago in 2008. The company quickly attracted investment and became the fastest-growing startup in internet history, expanding in the US and internationally through organic growth and acquisitions. Mason led the company to a highly anticipated IPO in November 2011.

More impressively, Groupon accomplished all this in the very challenging local and small business market, effectively bringing e-commerce at scale to local businesses for the first time. Now, in its post-IPO period, Groupon is diversifying beyond deals and seeking to become “the Local Commerce Operating System” for small business. In addition to deals the company now provides a point of sale system, electronic and mobile payments, scheduling and inventory management to local businesses.

In the following interview with Yext, Mason offers his reflections on the digital challenges facing small businesses, what it takes to succeed as an entrepreneur in local and what the market will look like five years from now.

Yext: What is the greatest challenge local merchants face in today’s evolving digital landscape?

Andrew Mason: We’ve found that local businesses aren’t early tech adopters. They are people who want problems solved for them. Evaluating all these different tools that are available to them, especially as we transition to mobile and tablets, is a real challenge.