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Aisha Salaudeen's avatar

This is very well written. You've created the definitive guide to understanding how Paystack was built. Nothing like this, in depth, currently exists. Well done, I am proud of you.

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Lawrence's avatar

If you knew a “Stack”, you’d know that they are a bit different; for lack of an apter word to capture the unique weirdness, openness and camaraderie they seem to all share. It is a difference you cannot help but notice watching them interact with each other and the rest of the world. The best thing about this essay for me is that it captures that difference in words. It is one long “aha” moment. Thank you for this, Fuad.

To my mind, this essay is a story of a company built by seemingly ordinary people thinking extraordinary things. Why is a Nigerian kid writing to a Norwegian agency to get an internship? Why are they moving into a flat and coding their lives away in the hopes of making it easier to pay my favourite Instagram vendors? It is a story of infecting other people with that belief that extraordinary is not only welcome but encouraged.

It is good to know this commitment to extraordinary was baked into the culture of the company at the beginning of the company, it is even more impressive that they seem to have kept it hundreds of new hires, a Stripe acquisition, and a round of layoffs later. Regardless of whether this culture holds its own against the cold facts of doing business in other companies, it is helpful to have a well-documented model to at least consider.

Finally, it is one thing to collect and document these stories (a service to posterity) and quite another to tell them so beautifully in a way that takes you on a journey through time (a gift to every reader). Thank you for doing both.

P.S Grateful to the Stacks (still think it’s a crappy name) for opening their doors to Fuad, you really cannot write this from a distance. Thank you Fuad for showing your working, the references make things make sense. And thank you to the army of editors, fact-checkers and thankless helpers that helped make this the first thing I’m reading on my way to work on a Tuesday morning.

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