Browse Case Studies

13 case studies found

QOR360

by Turner Osler

QOR360, founded by 71-year-old Turner Osler (a former trauma surgeon and epidemiologist), designs and manufactures active chairs that encourage movement while sitting to prevent back pain and other health issues caused by passive sitting. The company grew from $100K to $1M in revenue over two years, primarily through earned media coverage (notably a Wall Street Journal article and mentions at Google) and word-of-mouth marketing, while maintaining an affordability-focused pricing strategy.

Hardwareword-of-mouthone-timevia Failory

Posture Keeper

by Shirley Tan

Shirley Tan, an experienced e-commerce entrepreneur, created Posture Keeper after her own debilitating back pain led her to experiment with backpack straps attached to her chair, which resolved her symptoms in two weeks. Encouraged by Shark Tank's Kevin Harrington, she spent 10 months perfecting the product design through two iterations and extensive factory collaboration before planning a Kickstarter launch. The hardware startup represents Shirley's return to the physical product space after years in digital e-commerce, leveraging her network and research into crowdfunding best practices.

Hardwareproduct-hunt-launchone-timevia Failory

ONAK

by Thomas Weyn, Otto, Dominique

ONAK is a hardware startup that created a high-performance, foldable origami canoe that can be assembled in 15 minutes and fits in a car or airplane. After 4 years of development, the team launched on Kickstarter in July 2016 and raised €235,000 (157% of goal) through viral media coverage including features in Business Insider Design and Time Magazine. The founders—an engineer, designer, and experienced outdoor sales manager—have grown the business through direct-to-consumer sales on their website plus retail partnerships and an ambassador program.

Hardwareproduct-hunt-launchone-timevia Failory

Okami Pack

by Tim Chard

Okami Pack was an ultra-compact 72-hour disaster survival kit pitched as "if Apple were to build a survival kit." Tim Chard spent 10 months (August 2014–July 2015) developing the product and building a team, but the project never launched due to insufficient capital and lack of genuine passion for the industry. The venture ultimately cost Tim $59,660 in direct investment, living expenses, and opportunity costs.

Hardwareothervia Failory

Narcine

by Ognyan Bozhilov

Narcine is a hardware startup building micro-electric vehicles for urban commuting, founded by Bulgarian industrial engineer Ognyan Bozhilov in 2016. Starting as a side project with cardboard prototypes, the team iterated through multiple designs over three years, eventually settling on a two-wheel configuration after abandoning an initial three-wheel model. They gained traction through live test-drive events and early adopters, planning to launch an Indiegogo campaign to validate the business model and scale production.

Hardwareword-of-mouthvia Failory

MotoBox

by Joe Stech

MotoBox was an automotive telematics platform consisting of an OBD-II reader with WiFi, cloud servers, and APIs that would allow developers to build applications using vehicle data. The startup failed to reach its Kickstarter funding goal due to poor customer outreach and messaging, despite generating significant interest from backers and a potential enterprise customer in Denmark.

Hardwareproduct-hunt-launchvia Failory

Mongoose Cricket

by Marcus (designer/founder); Thomas Evans (co-founder/operations)

Mongoose Cricket launched a radically new cricket bat design in 2009 with a glitzy PR campaign at Lord's that generated massive media coverage across British newspapers and TV. The company spent over $130,000 sponsoring professional cricketers like Matthew Hayden in the Indian Premier League, betting heavily that the innovative product would disrupt a tradition-bound sport. Despite early revenue success (£130,000 in the 2011 season), the business ultimately failed due to the conservative cricket market, fragmented Indian distribution challenges, and unsustainable player sponsorship costs that far exceeded sales.

Hardwareproduct-hunt-launchone-timevia Failory

Mishra Motors

by Naveen Mishra

Mishra Motors was an ambitious electric sports motorcycle startup in India that aimed to be the Tesla of motorcycles. Founded by Naveen Mishra, a software engineer, the company reached prototype stage and was set to launch at the New Delhi Autoshow in 2014, but ultimately failed due to insufficient capital, lack of hardware experience, poor regulatory relationships, and unfavorable market timing despite having proven technology.

Hardwareothervia Failory

Lockpick Entertainment

Lockpick Entertainment was a small Swedish game studio that created Dreamlords, a hybrid MMO RTS game that achieved thousands of players and millions in revenue after launching in 2006. However, the company failed after 6 years due to a combination of scope creep, lack of product-market fit, and an inability to sustain development velocity post-launch. The founder's key lesson was that overshooting scope and expanding features instead of iterating on core mechanics proved fatal.

Hardwareviralvia Failory

KOLOS

by Ivaylo Kalburdzhiev

KOLOS was an iPad racing wheel hardware product that burned through $50,000 over 3 years without achieving product-market fit. Founder Ivaylo Kalburdzhiev built the product without validating customer demand first, relying on expensive industrial designers and prototyping instead of lean MVP testing. The Kickstarter campaign in early 2015 raised only $4,000 from 48 backers, leading to shutdown—but Ivo learned from the failure to become a successful crowdfunding consultant.

Hardwareproduct-hunt-launchone-timevia Failory

Emit

by Stephen Titus, Thushaan

Emit is a productivity-focused smartwatch founded by Stephen Titus and Thushaan that displays countdowns of important tasks and goals rather than traditional time, leveraging the psychology of scarcity to change user behavior. The founders launched on Kickstarter in 2018 and exceeded their goal by 330%, raising $17,000 from 180 backers, validating strong market interest in their novel approach to time management. They grew through community building on social media and Reddit while navigating the complex challenges of hardware manufacturing and competing against both traditional watches and feature-rich smartwatches.

Hardwareproduct-hunt-launchone-timevia Failory

CROSSNET

by Chris Meade

CROSSNET is a four-way volleyball net company founded by Chris Meade and two childhood friends that grew from a late-night brainstorming session to a $300k/month business in less than two years. The team built the product by prototyping with Walmart nets, iterating with manufacturers for a year, and strategically distributing units to influencers who created engaging content. Their growth came from repurposing influencer videos into Facebook and Instagram ads while continuously optimizing their Shopify store with conversion tools like Privy, Klaviyo, Hotjar, and Carthook.

Hardwarepaid-adsone-timevia Failory
$300k/mo

Cam.ly

by Dane Jensen

Cam.ly was a wifi camera startup founded by Dane Jensen and Rhett Creighton that aimed to compete with products like Dropcam (which became Google Nest Cams). Despite raising an angel round and spending 5 months building a technically functional product that could stream and store video in the cloud, the startup ultimately failed because the product wasn't polished enough for consumers—even famous electronics critics wouldn't review it due to poor user experience. The founders learned the hard way that they should have either focused entirely on building a consumer-ready product or spent all their time raising money, rather than splitting focus between the two.

Hardwareword-of-mouthvia Failory