Browse Case Studies

18 case studies found

Zapstream

by Devan Sood

Zapstream was a social live streaming platform founded in Q1 2015 that grew to 100k users by leveraging influencer marketing, particularly through a network of 30 smaller Vine and Instagram influencers. The startup raised $1M from angels but failed to secure additional funding due to an overly ambitious Series A valuation, and ultimately shut down after spending the entire $1M+ without generating any revenue due to intense competition from Meerkat, Periscope (Twitter), and Facebook Live.

Otherinfluencer-marketingfreevia Failory

Syria Airlift Project

by Mark D. Jacobsen

Mark D. Jacobsen founded the Syria Airlift Project, a nonprofit moonshot effort to deliver humanitarian aid using drone swarms to break starvation sieges in Syria. Despite achieving significant technical milestones—including reliable autonomous 100km round-trip drone flights and professional demonstrations—the project ultimately failed in December 2015 due to lack of a viable business model, reliance on volunteer labor, and inability to navigate the complex political and logistical challenges of the Syrian conflict.

Otherword-of-mouthfreevia Failory

ndLondon

by Jislan Gayat

ndLondon is a free quarterly meetup community for bootstrapped entrepreneurs and indie hackers in London, founded by Jislan Gayat in February 2018. Starting with just 5-10 people responding to a forum post, the meetup has grown to regularly attract 80-100 attendees through speaker-driven formats, workshops, and hands-on sessions that deliver actionable value. The meetup has become one of the largest in the Indie Hackers global meetup program, with notable success stories including attendees launching projects and even co-founders meeting at the events.

Othercommunityfreevia Indie Hackers Podcast

Free Code Camp

by Quincy Larson

Free Code Camp is a non-profit online learning platform founded by Quincy Larson that has helped over 40,000 people learn to code and get jobs in tech companies. Operating with just 12 full-time staff and thousands of volunteers, it delivers an incredible product and community while maintaining a non-profit structure. In 2020, with a budget of $498,000, Free Code Camp delivered 1.3 billion minutes of learning (equivalent to 2,500 years of learning), or about 50 hours of learning per dollar spent.

Othercontent-marketingfreevia Indie Hackers Podcast

Pioneer

by Daniel

Pioneer is a founder-scouting platform that identifies promising people working on interesting ideas around the world using psychometrics and machine learning, then creates and funds companies for them on the spot. Founded by Daniel (age 28), a former Apple executive and Y Combinator partner with angel investments in companies like Uber, Coinbase, and Figma, Pioneer operates as a venture capital generator rather than a traditional accelerator, having invested in approximately 90 people in its first year with check sizes in the tens of thousands of dollars. The company is partially funded by Daniel and investors including Stripe co-founders and Marc Andreessen.

Otherproduct-led-growthfreevia My First Million

Clubhouse

Clubhouse is an audio-based social app in beta that exploded in popularity among Silicon Valley tech executives and VCs in early 2021. The app allows users to join audio rooms and either speak on stage or listen as audience members, creating a real-time conversation experience. Despite rapid viral adoption among tech elites, the founders expressed skepticism about its long-term viability as a business, comparing it to similar failed apps like Blab and HQ Trivia.

Otherviralfreevia My First Million

Wordle (The App)

by Zach Schachkeed

Zach Schachkeed built a mobile app version of the viral Wordle game over a weekend and achieved 30,000 organic downloads in just days, reaching the top of the App Store. However, his public celebration of this success on Twitter—despite previously tweeting against app clones—led to significant backlash from the tech community and ultimately resulted in Apple pulling all Wordle-branded apps from the store.

Otherword-of-mouthfreevia My First Million

Blueprint

by Brian Johnson

Blueprint is Brian Johnson's publicly documented personal health experiment aimed at reversing biological aging faster than chronological aging progresses. Johnson, the bootstrapped founder of Braintree (sold to PayPal for ~$800M) and early Venmo investor, launched Blueprint as an open-source health protocol shared via blog and data, applying his system-thinking approach to human longevity and achieving measurable physical transformation through data-driven nutrition, exercise, and biometric tracking.

Othercontent-marketingfreevia My First Million

Charity Water

by Scott Harrison

Charity Water was founded by Scott Harrison in 2006 after he transitioned from being a nightclub promoter in New York to volunteering on a humanitarian hospital ship in Liberia. Witnessing the water crisis firsthand, he pivoted to solving global water poverty using an innovative nonprofit model: 100% of donations go directly to water projects while overhead is funded separately by entrepreneurs and major donors. The organization has raised $750 million, provided clean water to 16.8 million people across 22 countries, and pioneered donor engagement through birthday fundraising campaigns that have raised over $100 million.

Otherword-of-mouthfreevia My First Million

Spazless (proposed)

Spazless is a proposed nonprofit Reddit alternative that would operate similarly to Reddit but as a nonprofit that funnels revenue back to communities and moderators. The idea emerged during a major Reddit protest in 2023 when 93% of subreddits went dark to protest API pricing changes that would kill third-party apps like Apollo. The domain was registered as a conceptual project to capitalize on user discontent.

Otherword-of-mouthfreevia My First Million

Clues.Life

by Andy Johns

Andy Johns is a former VP of Growth and product leader at Facebook, Twitter, Quora, and Wealthfront who left a high-six to low-seven-figure income and a path to CEO to focus on mental health advocacy after experiencing severe burnout and a heart scare at 35. Through Clues.Life and his newsletter, he helps high-achieving tech professionals and military veterans understand and heal from trauma-driven burnout using a four-step transformation framework: suffering, seeking truth, self-compassion, and compassion for others.

Othercontent-marketingfreevia Lennys Podcast

TBH

by Nikita Beer

TBH was a viral polling app that allowed teens to give each other anonymous positive feedback. After 15 failed app launches over 4-5 years, Nikita Beer's team finally hit product-market fit with TBH, which reached 360,000 installs per day at its peak and was the #1 app in the United States within 9 weeks. The app was acquired by Facebook for over $30 million.

Otherviralfreevia Lennys Podcast

Never Search Alone

by Phil Terry

Never Search Alone is a free community-driven platform founded by Phil Terry that helps job seekers find employment through peer-support councils of 6-8 people. The program uses a product-lens methodology called 'candidate market fit' to help people narrow their job search and includes practical frameworks like the Manukin two-pager and listening tours. With 2,000 volunteer moderators and widespread word-of-mouth adoption, the platform reports an average job search duration of 3 months, at the low end of the national average.

Otherword-of-mouthfreevia Lennys Podcast

Colin Huggins - Street Piano Performance

by Colin Huggins

Colin Huggins is a classical pianist who performs on the streets of Washington Square Park in New York, earning approximately $100,000 annually through donations. Over nine years, he refined his performance strategy—from making $100-150 per day initially to rarely making less than $1,000 per day by understanding audience psychology, strategic music selection, and crowd dynamics. Beyond street performance, he works with the Reciprocity Foundation, writing songs for homeless youth in New York City.

Otherword-of-mouthfreevia Nathan Latka Podcast

New Story

by Brett Hagler

New Story is a nonprofit that transforms slums into sustainable communities by building homes for $6,000 each through a digital crowdfunding platform. In 17 months, Brett Hagler and his 6-person team generated over $3 million in donation revenue, built 4 communities with over 300 homes, and secured backing from philanthropist 'investor donors.' The company differentiates itself through radical transparency—donors see exact family profiles and know exactly where their money goes.

Othercommunityfreevia Nathan Latka Podcast

Zcash

by Zouko Wilcoxie

Zcash is a privacy-focused cryptocurrency that adds enhanced data security to Bitcoin by protecting transaction confidentiality and preventing pattern analysis. Founded by Zouko Wilcoxie, it raised $3 million from Silicon Valley angels and launched as an independent blockchain in October 2016, quickly achieving global adoption with daily transaction volumes around $20 million across 15-20 international exchanges. The project has gained significant traction through mining accessibility worldwide and strategic partnerships including JP Morgan's blockchain security solution.

Otherviralfreevia Nathan Latka Podcast

GAIF (Global AI Internet Freedom Fund)

by Simon Gillett

GAIF is a micro private equity fund built by AI researcher Simon Gillett that invests in Amazon sellers. The fund operates ATEM, a free proprietary demand forecasting and analytics tool for Amazon merchants that uses the same technology as Amazon.com, serving as a warm lead generation engine. With $20M+ in capital raised, the fund has deployed capital into at least one acquisition (Territory, an industrial supplies brand) and tracks hundreds of thousands of SKUs worth nine figures in GMV annually.

Otherproduct-led-growthfreevia Nathan Latka Podcast

Snapchat

by Evan Spiegel

Snapchat began as a Stanford design project by Evan Spiegel and rapidly became one of the world's most-used social media platforms. The company achieved such significant traction that Mark Zuckerberg made a multi-billion dollar acquisition offer within two years, which Spiegel declined. Today, Snap is valued at over $13 billion with ambitions extending beyond its flagship mobile app.

Otherviralfreevia How I Built This