Replit’s Amjad Masad on the Cursor deal, fighting Apple, and why he’d rather not sell
The AI coding assistant company went from $2.
On the question of independence, Masad was firm.
We’ve been gross margin positive for over a year.
We’re slightly more expensive, but we provide a lot more.
We handle security, databases, database migration.
And we’ve been doing this long enough that we’ve built a lot of those primitives into the platform.
We have amazing partners, and they sometimes bring up these topics.
But we’re going to try to stay independent.
I would love for us to remain an independent company.
It just feels like we can take it much further.
You work closely with Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI.
If you had to rank them — who’s doing it best?
Anthropic is still undefeated on the core agentic loop.
They have the best tool calling; the agent can stay coherent much longer.
Google’s Flash family of models is just amazing on price-performance.
If you want something fast and cheap, they’re actually beating open source right now.
We use all three, and honestly I wouldn’t discount the newer labs either.
Reflection AI is coming out with open-source models we’re hearing great things about.
When you’re in a bake-off for an enterprise deal, what wins it for you?
Most of our sales are inbound or organic — very product-led.
We’ve acquired customers like Zillow and Meta purely through people adopting the product and then raising their hand to buy an enterprise plan.
When it does go top-down and there’s a formal bake-off, we usually win on product.
Every time you deploy an app on Replit, we create an entirely new isolated project on Google Cloud.
We inherit Google’s security model.
Churn is very, very low, and net retention is incredibly high — 300% in some cases.
Bain & Company, for example, replaced Tableau and Power BI with Replit and Databricks.
That’s good for you [given your usage-based fees].
We don’t have a lot of regrettable spend.
Enterprises are very ROI conscious, and they tell us about the returns they’re getting.
Another rival, Lovable, just got an app-building app approved by the App Store this week.
Replit has been in App Store purgatory, with Apple blocking your updates for months.
But it’s an app people genuinely love.
We’ve been on the App Store for four years.
Kids in underprivileged communities learn to code on Replit on their Android devices.
Executives use it in meetings.
The reason Replit got blocked when others weren’t, we believe, is that Replit makes iOS apps.
We think Apple feels threatened by that.
And we can prove it in court if we have to.
I hope not.
I’m a fan of Apple, and I’d love to collaborate and build something great together.
We’re happy to send customers to Xcode [Apple’s own development environment].
Just wondering if, like Nvidia, OpenAI and others, you’re thinking about investing in your own customers in exchange for equity.
We’ve thought a lot about it, and it is a consideration.
I’ve personally invested in a few startups that started on Replit before they made any money.
Some of them, like Magic School — a teacher decided to take his time during COVID to learn a little bit of vibe coding and built an AI app for other teachers.
He found this problem that in America, we burn out a lot of teachers.
He wanted to use AI to reduce the workload.
He did that, and he made $20 million in the first year.
Other companies that started on Replit, I think, are valued at half a billion dollars.
The entrepreneurship happening on Replit right now is genuinely exciting.
Pretty soon, our customers will be making more revenue than we are.
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