Noah Labhart
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
QA Wolf gets engineering teams to 80% automated end-to-end test coverage and helps them ship five times faster by reducing QA cycles from hours to minutes. With over 100 five-star reviews on G2 and customer testimonials from SalesLoft, Grotta, and Autotrader, you're in good hands. Join the Wolfpack at QAwolf.com. Elkin Shabanov was born in the Soviet Union and started out in the tech world.
QA Wolf gets engineering teams to 80% automated end-to-end test coverage and helps them ship five times faster by reducing QA cycles from hours to minutes. With over 100 five-star reviews on G2 and customer testimonials from SalesLoft, Grotta, and Autotrader, you're in good hands. Join the Wolfpack at QAwolf.com. Elkin Shabanov was born in the Soviet Union and started out in the tech world.
He eventually left tech to try some other types of businesses, but eventually returned. He has done a few early stage startups in the past, in particular in the 3D printing space before it was cool. Six years ago, he joined his current venture, but outside of tech, he enjoys traveling and is in a competition with his daughter to see how many countries he can visit.
He eventually left tech to try some other types of businesses, but eventually returned. He has done a few early stage startups in the past, in particular in the 3D printing space before it was cool. Six years ago, he joined his current venture, but outside of tech, he enjoys traveling and is in a competition with his daughter to see how many countries he can visit.
He eventually left tech to try some other types of businesses, but eventually returned. He has done a few early stage startups in the past, in particular in the 3D printing space before it was cool. Six years ago, he joined his current venture, but outside of tech, he enjoys traveling and is in a competition with his daughter to see how many countries he can visit.
When he reads, he prefers to go back to the books he has read and enjoyed before. And being in Texas, he's a big fan of grilling out on his big green egg. As I mentioned, six years ago, Elkin joined a company that wanted to be more than a software development shop.
When he reads, he prefers to go back to the books he has read and enjoyed before. And being in Texas, he's a big fan of grilling out on his big green egg. As I mentioned, six years ago, Elkin joined a company that wanted to be more than a software development shop.
When he reads, he prefers to go back to the books he has read and enjoyed before. And being in Texas, he's a big fan of grilling out on his big green egg. As I mentioned, six years ago, Elkin joined a company that wanted to be more than a software development shop.
He and the founder of the company wanted to build a company that did more than throw bodies at a problem, but actually become a long-term partner to their clients. This is the creation story of DigiCode.
He and the founder of the company wanted to build a company that did more than throw bodies at a problem, but actually become a long-term partner to their clients. This is the creation story of DigiCode.
He and the founder of the company wanted to build a company that did more than throw bodies at a problem, but actually become a long-term partner to their clients. This is the creation story of DigiCode.
Let's dive into what you would consider, you know, the MVP when you joined the company, right? The first version of Digicode, you know, where was the company at? What you offered? How are you approaching what you offered and how you were offering it? And tell me a little bit about those early stories when you joined.
Let's dive into what you would consider, you know, the MVP when you joined the company, right? The first version of Digicode, you know, where was the company at? What you offered? How are you approaching what you offered and how you were offering it? And tell me a little bit about those early stories when you joined.
Let's dive into what you would consider, you know, the MVP when you joined the company, right? The first version of Digicode, you know, where was the company at? What you offered? How are you approaching what you offered and how you were offering it? And tell me a little bit about those early stories when you joined.
Let's dive into that. So, you know, OK, so that's the first version. Right. And and I'm I'm curious about that evolution that probably fits into what might be considered a roadmap. Right. Or how you're going about evolving that business or addressing what's important. So tell me a little bit about that.
Let's dive into that. So, you know, OK, so that's the first version. Right. And and I'm I'm curious about that evolution that probably fits into what might be considered a roadmap. Right. Or how you're going about evolving that business or addressing what's important. So tell me a little bit about that.
Let's dive into that. So, you know, OK, so that's the first version. Right. And and I'm I'm curious about that evolution that probably fits into what might be considered a roadmap. Right. Or how you're going about evolving that business or addressing what's important. So tell me a little bit about that.
This episode is sponsored by Speakeasy. Whether you're growing the user adoption of your public API or streamlining internal development, SDKs can turn the chore of API integration into effortless implementation. Unburden your API users from guessing their way around your API while keeping your team focused on your product.
This episode is sponsored by Speakeasy. Whether you're growing the user adoption of your public API or streamlining internal development, SDKs can turn the chore of API integration into effortless implementation. Unburden your API users from guessing their way around your API while keeping your team focused on your product.
This episode is sponsored by Speakeasy. Whether you're growing the user adoption of your public API or streamlining internal development, SDKs can turn the chore of API integration into effortless implementation. Unburden your API users from guessing their way around your API while keeping your team focused on your product.