SaaS Interviews with CEOs, Startups, Founders podcast

From $7M to $70M Revenue: How RealDefense Scaled Through Acquisitions | Gary Guseinov

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How do you rebuild a declining cybersecurity company into a $70M revenue platform with ~$25M EBITDA after buying it back for under $10M, while scaling primarily through acquisitions and debt instead of venture capital?

Gary Guseinov is the CEO of Realdefense, a consumer cybersecurity and privacy platform that generates roughly $70M in annual revenue with $20–25M in EBITDA. Gary originally founded the business in 2003 as Cyber Defender, grew it to $70M in revenue, took it public, then later bought the company back in 2017 when it had declined to about $7M ARR.

Today, Realdefense operates as a platform of security and privacy products that monetize partner user bases through software subscriptions, telemetry-driven product offers, and cross-sell expansion. The company has completed six acquisitions since the buyback and now scales growth through a capital-efficient M&A strategy instead of traditional venture capital.

What makes this business interesting is its unconventional growth model. Instead of building new SaaS products from scratch, Realdefense acquires small or declining companies, integrates them into a shared technology and billing stack, and compounds revenue by increasing LTV through cross-product distribution.


You'll learn:

  • How Gary bought back his own company for under 1x ARR and rebuilt it through acquisitions.
  • The platform strategy Realdefense uses to monetize partner user bases in cybersecurity software.
  • Why telemetry-based product triggers outperform traditional advertising monetization.
  • The pricing ladder strategy that starts with $20 products and scales customers to hundreds per year.
  • How cross-selling security tools like VPN, identity protection, and device optimization increases LTV.
  • The debt financing strategy Gary uses instead of giving up equity to venture capital.
  • How lenders evaluate SaaS acquisitions using EBITDA multiples.
  • Why buying flat or declining software companies can be a scalable growth strategy.
  • The operational advantages of integrating multiple software products into a single platform.
  • How founder ownership and liquidity decisions change when companies go public.


Gary started his career in direct marketing before launching his first cybersecurity company in 2003 with roughly $50K–$75K of his own capital and an initial $250K raise. After raising significant venture capital and eventually going public, he saw the risks of dilution firsthand. When the business declined under new leadership, he bought it back in 2017 and rebuilt it with a very different capital strategy focused on debt, acquisitions, and ownership preservation.

If you're a SaaS founder thinking about capital efficiency, acquisition-driven growth, or alternative scaling strategies outside of venture capital, this episode is a masterclass in operator-led capital allocation.

Watch this episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/ebkYMcJcpg0 

Connect with Gary: https://www.realdefen.se/home/ 

Connect with Nathan: https://founderpath.com/ 

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