written on Monday, March 31, 2025
Every ending marks a new beginning, and today, is the beginning of a new chapter for me. Ten years ago I took a leap into the unknown, today I take another. After a decade of working on Sentry I move on to start something new.
Sentry has been more than just a job, it has been a defining part of my life. A place where I've poured my energy, my ideas, my heart. It has shaped me, just as I've shaped it. And now, as I step away, I do so with immense gratitude, a deep sense of pride, and a heart full of memories.
I've known David, Sentry's co-founder (alongside Chris), long before I was ever officially part of the team as our paths first crossed on IRC in the Django community. Even my first commit to Sentry predates me officially working there by a few years. Back in 2013, over conversations in the middle of Russia — at a conference that, incidentally, also led to me meeting my wife — we toyed with the idea of starting a company together. That exact plan didn't materialize, but the seeds of collaboration had been planted.
Conversations continued, and by late 2014, the opportunity to help transform Sentry (which already showed product market fit) into a much bigger company was simply too good to pass up. I never could have imagined just how much that decision would shape the next decade of my life.
For me, Sentry's growth has been nothing short of extraordinary. At first, I thought reaching 30 employees would be our ceiling. Then we surpassed that, and the milestones just kept coming — reaching a unicorn valuation was something I once thought was impossible. While we may have stumbled at times, we've also learned immensely throughout this time.
I'm grateful for all the things I got to experience and there never was a dull moment. From representing Sentry at conferences, opening an engineering office in Vienna, growing teams, helping employees, assisting our licensing efforts and leading our internal platform teams. Every step and achievement drove me.
Yet for me, the excitement and satisfaction of being so close to the founding of a company, yet not quite a founder, has only intensified my desire to see the rest of it.
Walking away from something you love is never easy and leaving Sentry is hard. Really hard. Sentry has been woven into the very fabric of my adult life. Working on it hasn't just spanned any random decade; it perfectly overlapped with marrying my wonderful wife, and growing our family from zero to three kids.
And will it go away entirely? The office is right around the corner afterall. From now on, every morning, when I will grab my coffee, I will walk past it. The idea of no longer being part of the daily decisions, the debates, the momentum — it feels surreal. That sense of belonging to a passionate team, wrestling with tough decisions, chasing big wins, fighting fires together, sometimes venting about our missteps and discussing absurd and ridiculous trivia became part of my identity.
There are so many bright individuals at Sentry, and I'm incredibly proud of what we have built together. Not just from an engineering point of view, but also product, marketing and upholding our core values. We developed SDKs that support a wide array of platforms from Python to JavaScript to Swift to C++, lately expanding to game consoles. We stayed true to our Open Source principles, even when other options were available. For example, when we needed an Open Source PDB implementation for analyzing Windows crashes but couldn't find a suitable solution, we contributed to a promising Rust crate instead of relying on Windows VMs and Microsoft's dbghelp. When we started, our ingestion system handled a few thousand requests per second — now it handles well over a million.
While building an SDK may seem straightforward, maintaining and updating them to remain best-in-class over the years requires immense dedication. It takes determination to build something that works out of the box with little configuration. A lot of clever engineering and a lot of deliberate tradeoffs went into the product to arrive where it is. And ten years later, is a multi-product company. What started with just crashes, now you can send traces, profiles, sessions, replays and more.
We also stuck to our values. I'm pleased that we ran experiments with licensing despite all the push back we got over the years. We might not have found the right solution yet, but we pushed the conversation. The same goes for our commitment to funding of dependencies.
I feel an enormous amount of gratitude for those last ten years. There are so many people I owe thanks to. I owe eternal thanks to David Cramer and Chris Jennings for the opportunity and trust they placed in me. To Ben Vinegar for his unwavering guidance and support. To Dan Levine, for investing in us and believing in our vision. To Daniel Griesser, for being an exceptional first hire in Vienna, and shepherding our office there and growing it to 50 people. To Vlad Cretu, for bringing structure to our chaos over the years. To Milin Desai for taking the helm and growing us.
And most of all, to my wonderful wife, Maria — who has stood beside me through every challenge, who has supported me when the road was uncertain, and who has always encouraged me to forge my own path.
To everyone at Sentry, past and present — thank you. For the trust, the lessons, the late nights, the victories. For making Sentry what it is today.
I'm fully aware it's a gamble to believe my next venture will find the same success as Sentry. The reality is that startups that achieve the kind of scale and impact Sentry has are incredibly rare. There's a measure of hubris in assuming lightning strikes twice, and as humbling as that realization is, it also makes me that much more determined. The creative spark that fueled me at Sentry isn't dimming. Not at all in fact: it burns brighter fueld by the feeling that I can explore new things, beckoning me. There's more for me to explore, and I'm ready to channel all that energy into a new venture.
Today, I stand in an open field, my backpack filled with experiences and a renewed sense of purpose. That's because the world has changed a lot in the past decade, and so have I. What drives me now is different from what drove me before, and I want my work to reflect that evolution.
At my core, I'm still inspired by the same passion — seeing others find value in what I create, but my perspective has expanded. While I still take great joy in building things that help developers, I want to broaden my reach. I may not stray far from familiar territory, but I want to build something that speaks to more people, something that, hopefully, even my children will find meaningful.
Watch this space, as they say.