I’m often asked how to win when your product strategy spans both open source and closed source. My short answer: treat community, product, and go-to-market as one system, then sequence each move with ruthless clarity. Reflecting on Neha Narkhede’s journey helped crystallize a practical playbook for building, monetizing, and scaling category-defining platforms.
Neha Narkhede is a co-founder at Confluent, a data streaming software that raised at a $9.1b valuation in 2021. Neha later co-founded Oscilar, a no-code platform that helps companies detect and manage fraud. Before building these two companies, Neha was a Principal Software Engineer at LinkedIn where she co-created Apache Kafka. Neha is ranked #50 on Forbes’ list of “America’s Richest Self-Made Women 2023” with an estimated net worth of $520m.
Here’s what stood out to me as a product leader: the origin of Apache Kafka inside LinkedIn wasn’t just a technical breakthrough—it was an obsessive response to a clearly defined, acute infrastructure pain. Open sourcing it wasn’t a marketing move; it was a distribution masterstroke that built trust, accelerated adoption, and seeded a future enterprise business.
On company-building, the “Zero to One” at Confluent was uniquely disciplined: build for a specific customer early on, earn credibility with developers through education and evangelism, and simultaneously position as an enterprise-grade solution. I’ve seen this duality—developer-first credibility with enterprise posture—unlock velocity in complex platform markets.
Monetizing open source product works when you’re intentional about what to license and what to open source. Commercial value clusters around enterprise security, governance, scalability, observability, and reliability features—plus SLAs customers can’t get from the community. That’s how you can run two businesses within one company: a software business and a SaaS business that remove operational burden and expand the addressable market.
Confluent’s approach to SaaS versus software is instructive. Confluent Cloud delivers a consumption SaaS model where pricing aligns to value realized, not just time elapsed. Subscription SaaS versus consumption SaaS requires different GTM motions, different product telemetry, and different revenue operations. I’ve found success by matching pricing units to customer mental models and by instrumenting usage early to drive product-led expansion.
Developer evangelism played a pivotal role in category creation. It’s not merely about talks and tutorials—it’s a systematic way to collapse time-to-value, reduce perceived risk, and compress a buyer’s learning curve. When you blend education with hands-on pathways—demos, sandboxes, quickstarts—you transform top-of-funnel curiosity into bottom-of-funnel conviction.
Founder-led GTM was another powerful theme. Early on, I prioritize direct customer conversations, hands-on discovery, and live deal support. The order of operations matters: validate the ICP, close lighthouse customers, codify the repeatable sales narrative, then operationalize outbound once the signal-to-noise ratio is high. That sequence prevents premature scaling and preserves momentum.
For second-time founders, the takeaway is focus and speed. Build differently the second time by compressing cycles from speculation to product realization. Neha’s “proactive research sprint” resonates with my own practice: pressure-test the problem, define must-have requirements with real users, and ensure you’re solving problems people are actually willing to pay for—before building full-stack.
Oscilar exemplifies this clarity. A no-code platform to detect and manage fraud aligns to an urgent, quantifiable pain with measurable ROI. That’s founder-market fit: where your experience, the market’s urgency, and the product’s capabilities directly reinforce one another.
If you’re navigating open source and SaaS together, here’s the practical synthesis I use: define your ICP early; decide what to open source versus license based on enterprise risk and operational burden; invest in developer experience and evangelism to power category creation; choose pricing that mirrors value realization (consumption when possible); and keep founder-led sales at the forefront until the narrative is truly repeatable. Done well, you can run two businesses inside one company without diluting focus.
Apache Kafka: https://kafka.apache.org/
Confluent: https://www.confluent.io/
Confluent Cloud: https://www.confluent.io/confluent-cloud/
Jay Kreps, co-founder at Confluent: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jaykreps/
Jun Rao, co-founder at Confluent: https://www.linkedin.com/in/junrao/
MongoDB: https://www.mongodb.com/
Oscilar: https://oscilar.com/
Where to find Neha:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nehanarkhede/
Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/nehanarkhede
Website: https://www.nehanarkhede.com/












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