Station was a Paris-based desktop productivity application that operated from 2017 to approximately 2021. Built inside eFounders, a B2B SaaS startup studio, and later accelerated through Y Combinator's Winter 2018 batch, Station aggregat…
Station was a Paris-based desktop productivity application that operated from 2017 to approximately 2021. Built inside eFounders, a B2B SaaS startup studio, and later accelerated through Y Combinator's Winter 2018 batch, Station aggregated a user's entire suite of SaaS web applications — Slack, Gmail, Notion, Airtable, and hundreds more — into a single unified interface with a sidebar dock, universal search, and consolidated notifications. At its peak, the product supported 600+ app integrations and reached 40,000 weekly active users spending an average of six hours per day inside it.[1]
Station failed because it built a genuinely beloved free product and never found a way to charge for it. Its planned monetization model — selling promotional placement and deeper integrations to large SaaS vendors — required distribution leverage that 40,000 free users could not provide. Meanwhile, the core product category was structurally commoditized by open-source alternatives and gradually absorbed by browser and OS-level features.
The company quietly wound down commercial development around 2021 without a public post-mortem or acquisition announcement. The codebase was open-sourced, and the product now exists as a community-maintained project. Hexa, the parent company of eFounders, lists Station as "Inactive."[2] Founder Julien Berthomier subsequently co-founded CraftNow and relocated to Singapore.[3]
Station's origins trace not to a founder's personal frustration but to a deliberate product thesis developed inside eFounders, a Paris-based startup studio that has also incubated companies like Aircall, Front, and Spendesk. In 2016, Julien Berthomier and Alexandre Lachèze joined eFounders specifically to build what would become Station.[4] The studio model gave them structured early support — office space, operational scaffolding, and a network of B2B SaaS operators — but it also meant the founding insight was partly institutional rather than purely founder-driven.
The thesis was straightforward: knowledge workers in 2016 were managing an average of a dozen or more SaaS tools simultaneously, switching between browser tabs constantly, losing notifications across apps, and struggling to search across fragmented data silos. The browser had become the de facto operating system for work, but it offered no intelligence layer on top of that chaos. Station's answer was to build that layer: a dedicated desktop application that would wrap every web app a team used into a single, organized, searchable environment.
Berthomier took the CEO role; Lachèze, who had studied engineering at Télécom ParisTech and previously worked as a Product Manager at Work4, became CTO.[5] Daniel Putsche joined as a third co-founder, and Georges Abi-Heila led growth.[6] The team was small — nine employees at the time of the YC listing — and remained Paris-based throughout its commercial life despite the Silicon Valley credibility that YC participation conferred.[7]
The company formally incorporated in 2017 and launched publicly in October of that year with 300 app integrations already built.[8] The speed of that integration build-out — 300 apps before a public launch — reflected the studio's ability to resource early development, but it also set a precedent: Station would prioritize breadth of integration over depth of monetization.
Quentin Nickmans, co-founder of eFounders, joined as an advisor in December 2017.[9] Station entered Y Combinator's Winter 2018 batch the following month, giving the team access to the YC network and a Demo Day audience of investors. The YC application described users spending six hours per day in the product — a metric that would prove both Station's greatest asset and, ultimately, its most misleading signal.[10]
2016 — Julien Berthomier and Alexandre Lachèze join eFounders in Paris to begin building Station.[4]
2017 — Station officially founded; incubated by eFounders.[11]
October 26, 2017 — Station publicly launches with 300 app integrations and 2,500 weekly active users; TechCrunch covers the launch, describing it as "the first smart workstation for busy people."[8]
December 2017 — Quentin Nickmans (eFounders co-founder) joins as advisor.[9]
January 2018 — Station joins Y Combinator Winter 2018 batch; team reports thousands of users spending an average of six hours per day in the product.[7]
March 2018 — Sam Hickmann joins Station's board.[12]
2018 — Station raises a $3.25M seed round led by Accel, with participation from Kima Ventures and Webb Investment Network.[13]
October 8, 2018 — Station publishes its "Launch HN" post on Hacker News after completing YC W18; team announces focus on collaboration features and a third-party developer platform.[14]
February 3, 2020 — Yahoo Finance reports Station has 30,000+ users worldwide, including employees at Uber, Atlassian, Airbnb, and Spotify.[15]
~2021 — Effective end of commercial development, inferred from GitHub issue threads noting approximately two years without updates as of April 2023.[16]
April 14, 2023 — GitHub issue thread documents the desktop app has had no updates for approximately two years; users actively migrating to Ferdium.[16]
2025 — Hexa lists Station as "Inactive"; getstation.com describes the product as an open-source community project.[2]
Station's core product was a desktop application — available on Mac, Windows, and Linux — that replaced the browser as the primary interface for work.[17] Rather than asking users to manage dozens of browser tabs or toggle between standalone apps, Station loaded each web application inside its own dedicated pane, organized within a persistent sidebar dock. The experience was closer to a curated operating system for SaaS tools than a traditional browser.
Core features at launch included:
The integration count grew from 300 at launch to 500+ and eventually 600+ — a figure that required sustained engineering investment to maintain, since each integration depended on the underlying web app's structure remaining stable.[1]
Technically, Station was built using Electron (or a comparable webview-based framework), which allowed it to render web applications natively on the desktop without requiring each SaaS vendor's cooperation. This approach enabled rapid integration breadth but carried inherent costs: Electron applications are memory-intensive, and wrapping third-party web apps meant Station had no control over the underlying app's performance or UI changes.
After completing YC W18 in 2018, the team announced a strategic shift toward collaboration features and a third-party developer platform — an attempt to create ecosystem lock-in beyond the core aggregation function.[18] The YC company description also referenced an "automated knowledge base" capability: auto-organizing content shared across Google Drive, Notion, Airtable, and task managers into a team-accessible repository. Whether this represented a genuine product pivot or a reframing of the original value proposition for enterprise buyers is unclear from the public record.
The product's final commercial form was eventually open-sourced. The getstation.com website now describes it as "the first open-source smart browser," maintained by its community.[19] The open-source pivot preserved the product's existence but confirmed that the commercial thesis had been abandoned.
Station's primary users were knowledge workers at technology companies — product managers, engineers, designers, and operations staff who used eight or more SaaS tools daily. The presence of users from Uber, Atlassian, Airbnb, and Spotify[15] suggests the product resonated most with employees at high-growth tech companies where SaaS tool sprawl was most acute. The user base skewed toward individual prosumers adopting the tool bottom-up, rather than IT departments purchasing it top-down — a distribution pattern that generated impressive engagement metrics but made enterprise sales difficult.
The YC description's pivot toward "automated knowledge base" for teams suggests a late-stage attempt to reframe the buyer from individual contributor to team lead or department head, which would have unlocked higher willingness to pay. No evidence exists that this repositioning produced enterprise contracts.
The addressable market for workplace productivity tools was large and growing. The global enterprise software market exceeded $500 billion by the early 2020s, and the SaaS management and integration subcategory attracted significant venture capital throughout Station's operating period. The specific problem Station addressed — SaaS app overload — was real and well-documented: by 2018, the average enterprise used over 1,000 cloud services, according to Netskope research cited widely in the industry. However, the relevant market for a free desktop aggregator was narrower: technically sophisticated individual users willing to install a third-party application to manage their workflow. That segment, while passionate, was unlikely to support a large standalone business without a clear path to team or enterprise pricing.
Station competed along two axes simultaneously: against other multi-app aggregators, and against the platforms that owned the underlying apps.
On the aggregator axis, the competitive set included Franz, Rambox, Tangram, and eventually Ferdium — all of which offered functionally similar multi-app browser experiences.[20] Critically, most of these alternatives were free and open-source, meaning they had no monetization pressure and could sustain indefinitely on community contribution. Station's commercial model required it to out-execute free software on product quality while simultaneously building a revenue engine — a structurally difficult position. The fact that Ferdium became the community's preferred migration destination after Station's commercial wind-down confirms that the underlying need persisted but that users were unwilling to pay for it.
On the platform axis, Station faced a different kind of threat: the gradual absorption of its core features by incumbents with superior distribution. Browser vendors — particularly Arc, which launched in 2022 — began offering native tab management, app organization, and cross-site search that replicated Station's value proposition without requiring a separate application install. Operating system notification centers on macOS and Windows absorbed the unified notifications use case. Slack's own "connected apps" features and Google Workspace's integration ecosystem addressed the multi-app context-switching problem from within the apps themselves.
This dual competitive pressure — commoditization from below by open-source alternatives, and absorption from above by platform incumbents — left Station in a shrinking middle. The company's strongest differentiator was its universal search across apps, but this feature was both technically difficult to maintain (dependent on each app's DOM structure) and increasingly replicated by browser-native search tools. Station competed on product depth in a market where incumbents had decisive distribution advantages and open-source alternatives had a structural cost advantage. Neither dimension favored a small, venture-backed team trying to build a paid product.
Station launched free and remained free for its entire commercial life. As of October 2017, the team acknowledged it was "working on a paid offering for teams" but had not yet launched one.[21] No paid tier was ever publicly announced in the years that followed.
The planned monetization strategy, as described in Crunchbase, was a B2B2B model: selling promotional placement and deeper integrations to large SaaS companies that wanted their apps to be more discoverable within Station's interface.[22] This model had precedent — app stores and distribution platforms have charged vendors for featured placement — but it required Station to have sufficient distribution leverage over SaaS companies to justify the spend. At 40,000 weekly active users, Station was a niche tool; a SaaS vendor with millions of users had little incentive to pay for placement in a product used by a fraction of their customer base.
Inferential unit economics: Station raised $3.25M in seed funding[13] and employed approximately nine people at its YC listing.[7] Assuming a Paris-based team with average all-in costs of roughly €80,000–€100,000 per employee annually, total annual burn was likely in the range of €720,000–€900,000 (~$800K–$1M USD at 2018 rates). At that burn rate, $3.25M would have provided approximately three to four years of runway — consistent with the inferred 2021 wind-down date. These are estimates, not disclosed figures; the company never reported revenue or burn publicly.
The absence of any revenue disclosure across Station's entire operating period is itself a signal. The company never disclosed revenue because it had none to disclose.
Station's engagement metrics were genuinely exceptional for a productivity tool. At launch in October 2017, the product had 2,500 weekly active users who used it at least four days per week, according to CTO Alexandre Lachèze.[23] By the time of YC W18 in early 2018, the team reported thousands of users spending an average of six hours per day and four days per week in the product.[10] Crunchbase records an intermediate milestone of 11,000 weekly active users spending more than 4.5 hours per day in the app.[24] Lachèze's LinkedIn profile states the company ultimately reached 40,000 weekly active users and 600+ integrations.[1]
The gap between the 11,000 WAU figure (Crunchbase) and the 40,000 WAU figure (founder LinkedIn) is unresolved in the public record — the two figures likely reflect different measurement periods rather than a discrepancy, with 40,000 representing the peak before commercial wind-down.
Station received a Product Hunt "Product of the Year" award following its launch,[25] and its user base included employees at Uber, Atlassian, Airbnb, and Spotify.[15] These are strong signals of product-market fit among a specific user archetype: technically sophisticated knowledge workers at high-growth companies.
What the traction record does not contain is equally important: no conversion rate to paid, no team adoption figures, no enterprise contract announcements, and no revenue milestones. Every metric in the public record measures usage, not monetization. Six hours per day of engagement is extraordinary — but only if it converts to revenue.
Station's fundamental failure was building a high-engagement product with no viable path to revenue, then running out of time before bridging that gap.
The company launched free in October 2017 and acknowledged it was "working on a paid offering for teams" at that moment.[21] Four years later, when commercial development effectively ceased around 2021, no paid tier had ever been publicly launched. The team had approximately $3.25M in seed funding and no revenue — meaning the entire commercial life of the company was funded by a single capital event that was never followed by a Series A.
The free-forever positioning that drove user growth directly undermined the urgency to monetize. Users who adopted Station because it was free had no expectation of ever paying for it, and introducing a paid tier to an established free user base is one of the most difficult transitions in consumer software. The team appears to have recognized this — the pivot toward "automated knowledge base" features and team collaboration tools after YC W18 suggests an attempt to build enterprise-grade functionality that could justify a team subscription price. But no evidence exists that this functionality shipped in a form that generated revenue.
The attempted remedy — building toward a B2B2B model where SaaS vendors paid for promotional placement — was structurally misaligned with Station's actual leverage. At 40,000 free users, Station was not a distribution platform; it was a niche tool. A SaaS vendor with a million-user customer base had no rational incentive to pay for featured placement in an app used by 40,000 people, most of whom were already using that vendor's product.
Station's core product — a webview-based wrapper that aggregated SaaS apps into a unified interface — was technically replicable by any developer with Electron experience and a weekend. The open-source alternatives that competed with Station (Franz, Rambox, Tangram, and eventually Ferdium) proved this point: they offered functionally equivalent experiences at zero cost, sustained by community contribution rather than venture capital.[20]
This is a structural problem, not an execution problem. When the core product is a thin wrapper around third-party web apps, there is no proprietary data, no network effect, and no technical moat. Any differentiation Station achieved — better design, smarter notifications, more integrations — could be replicated by a motivated open-source community within months. The post-Station migration of users to Ferdium, documented in GitHub issue threads from April 2023,[16] confirms that the user need was real but that users were unwilling to pay for it when a free alternative existed.
Station's decision to eventually open-source its own codebase was the logical endpoint of this dynamic: if the product cannot be monetized commercially, releasing it to the community at least preserves its existence and the team's reputation. But it also represents a formal acknowledgment that the commercial thesis had failed.
Beyond open-source competition, Station faced a more powerful threat from above: the gradual absorption of its core use cases by platform incumbents with vastly superior distribution.
Browser vendors began building native tab management and app organization features that replicated Station's sidebar dock. Arc Browser, which launched publicly in 2022, offered a fundamentally reimagined browser experience — spaces, pinned apps, cross-tab search — that addressed the same SaaS overload problem Station had identified, but from within the browser itself and without requiring a separate application install. Operating system notification centers on macOS and Windows absorbed the unified notifications use case. Slack's own app directory and Google Workspace's integration ecosystem addressed multi-app context-switching from within the dominant platforms.
This is the classic "feature vs. product" problem: Station built a product around a feature that incumbents could absorb as a marginal addition to their existing platforms. When Arc or a browser extension can replicate 80% of Station's value proposition for free, the remaining 20% must be extraordinarily defensible to justify a standalone paid product. Station's universal search across apps was its strongest candidate for that defensibility, but maintaining cross-app search required constant engineering effort as each underlying app's DOM structure changed — a treadmill that became harder to sustain as the team's runway shortened.
Station's incubation inside eFounders provided genuine advantages — early capital, operational support, and a network of B2B SaaS operators. But it may also have delayed the hard monetization conversations that a capital-constrained founding team would have faced earlier.
A team that bootstrapped Station from zero would have needed to charge for the product within months to survive. Station's studio backing and subsequent YC participation and seed round gave the team a multi-year runway to optimize for engagement rather than revenue. By the time the $3.25M was approaching exhaustion — likely around 2020–2021 — the product had 40,000 free users with no expectation of paying, a competitive landscape full of free alternatives, and no enterprise sales infrastructure. The institutional scaffolding that enabled Station's early growth may have insulated the team from the market signal that the product could not be monetized at its current scale.
No founder post-mortem has been published. The absence of a public reflection on what went wrong is itself a data point: the wind-down appears to have been experienced as a quiet dissolution rather than a learning moment worth sharing.
Free distribution and paid monetization require separate product strategies, and Station never built the second one. Station reached 40,000 weekly active users spending six hours per day in the product — metrics that would justify a Series A in almost any other context. But every user had been acquired on a free-forever promise, and the planned B2B2B monetization model (charging SaaS vendors for placement) required distribution leverage that 40,000 free users could not provide. The lesson is not "charge early" in the abstract; it is that Station's specific monetization model required a user base an order of magnitude larger than it ever reached, and the team never resolved that gap before runway ended.
Electron-based SaaS aggregators are structurally indefensible against open-source communities. Station's product was a webview wrapper around third-party web apps — a technically replicable architecture with no proprietary data layer, no network effect, and no switching cost beyond user habit. The post-Station migration to Ferdium demonstrated that the user need was real but that users would accept a community-maintained free alternative over a commercial product. Any startup building in this category must either own a proprietary data layer (cross-app search index, team knowledge graph) that open-source alternatives cannot replicate, or accept that the product will eventually be commoditized.
Studio incubation can delay the monetization pressure that forces product-market fit clarity. Station's eFounders origin and YC participation provided a multi-year runway to optimize for engagement. A bootstrapped team with the same product would have been forced to charge within six months or shut down — and that pressure would have revealed earlier whether 40,000 users would pay $10/month for a team tier. The institutional scaffolding that enabled Station's early growth may have masked the absence of a viable revenue model until the runway was nearly exhausted.
"Product of the Year" on Product Hunt is a signal about consumer enthusiasm, not enterprise willingness to pay. Station's Product Hunt recognition and its presence among employees at Uber, Atlassian, and Airbnb validated the product's appeal to a specific user archetype: technically sophisticated individual contributors at tech companies. This cohort is excellent at discovering and adopting new tools, and poor at converting to paid plans or advocating for enterprise procurement. Station's traction metrics were optimized for the wrong buyer.
When a product's core use case is being absorbed by platform incumbents, the window for monetization is shorter than the engagement metrics suggest. Station identified a real problem in 2017 — SaaS app overload — and built a genuinely useful solution. But Arc Browser, native OS notification centers, and browser-native tab management were all converging on the same use case from platforms with hundreds of millions of users. Station had a window of perhaps three to four years to monetize before platform absorption made the standalone product redundant. It spent that window growing a free user base instead.