Browse Case Studies

45 case studies found

Segmentrix

by Keith Parahack

Segmentrix is an attribution and analytics platform that automatically integrates with marketing and revenue tools to give businesses clarity on lead value, customer journeys, and marketing ROI. Built by Keith Parahack over 2-3 weeks in early 2015 as a solution to his own agency's data analysis pain point, it reached $1K MRR in its first month but plateaued for over a year while Keith ran a 7-figure marketing agency. After transitioning full-time to Segmentrix in 2018, letting go his team, and then rebuilding it with a project manager to maintain focus, the company accelerated significantly starting in 2020, with major growth acceleration in April-May coinciding with a repriced, contact-based tier structure that reduced friction around upgrades.

SaaSproduct-hunt-launchsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

Alitu

by Colin Gray

Colin Gray built Alitu, a simple podcast editing SaaS app, on top of an existing audience he'd cultivated through thepodcasthost.com (a content site, blog, courses, and podcast about podcasting). After launching in June 2018 with a large existing audience, growth was slower than expected—reaching only $3,000 MRR after 6 months and $8,000 after a year—because his audience was too technical and preferred DIY solutions. By pivoting content to attract non-technical entrepreneurs and solo founders, Alitu grew to $45,000 MRR within two years, with significant acceleration during COVID.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us
$45k/mo

Bluetik.io

by Mike Taber

Bluetik.io is a cold and warm email follow-up SaaS tool built by Mike Taber, a former co-host of Startup for the Rest of Us. After nearly a year of working behind the scenes on a potential partnership with a complementary field sales CRM product, Mike is now exploring a 3-4 month trial partnership that could lead to merger, tight integration, or a "done for you" service offering Bluetik to the CRM's existing customer base. The company operates on a $50-$500/month subscription model and is currently evaluating an AppSumo deal while managing recurring annual Google security audits.

SaaSpartnershipssubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

Magic Bell

by Hannah Mohan

Hannah Mohan bootstrapped Support Bee to $45,000 MRR over nine years before selling her stake to her co-founder. She then launched Magic Bell in 2020, a notification inbox SaaS for web and mobile applications. After going through Y Combinator Winter 2021, she raised $1.9M in seed funding and grew to sending over a million notifications monthly, primarily through organic content and word-of-mouth marketing.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

Kevee

by Don Pottinger

Don Pottinger joined Kevee as a junior developer in December 2014 and rapidly ascended to CTO within six months following a major product pivot. After a failed fundraising round due to a messy cap table, he boldly negotiated to buy the company for $1 in fall 2016. He then bootstrapped and lifestyled the business as a solo founder, reaching $250k ARR before eventually selling it in 2019 to a venture studio—signing the papers in a hospital after his fourth child was born. His success came from owning nearly all the product code and deeply understanding customer needs.

SaaSproduct-led-growthsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

Reform.app

by Peter Suhm

Peter Suhm is the founder of Reform.app, a form builder focused on clean, brandable forms. After spending three years on Branch (a WordPress CI/CD tool) that failed to achieve product-market fit despite investor interest and partnership approaches, Peter pivoted to Reform by carefully validating the idea through landing page feedback and early customer conversations. In just 45 days from prototype to launch, Reform attracted over 1,300 early access signups and converted 60+ paying customers, demonstrating dramatically easier customer acquisition than his previous venture.

SaaSproduct-led-growthsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

Savvy Cal

by Derek Reimer

Savvy Cal is a bootstrapped scheduling SaaS founded by Derek Reimer that crossed $20k MRR (~$240k ARR) as a solo founder operation. The product achieved its strongest growth month in October after the initial January 2021 product launch, with Derek crediting a strategic product launch with marketing consultant Corey Haynes. Derek is now planning his first engineering hire while maintaining a lean operation with outsourced support and marketing.

SaaSproduct-launchsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us
$20k/mo

Code Submit

by Dominic and Tracy

Code Submit is a SaaS platform that enables better hiring decisions through take-home coding challenges with support for 65+ languages and frameworks. Founded by married couple Dominic and Tracy, they built the MVP in 2-3 weeks while working full-time jobs, got into TinySeed's seed batch, and experienced a hockey-stick growth moment around February 2021 by doubling down on SEO and content marketing, achieving consistent 10-15% monthly growth and landing enterprise customers like Apple, Netflix, and the U.S. Air Force.

SaaSseosubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

SEO Testing

by Nick Swan

Nick Swan built SEO Testing as a free tool to solve his own pain point—manually tracking Google Search Console data for click-through rate testing on his voucher codes website. After a 5-month free beta, he launched paid plans (initially at $10/month, now with 330+ customers at $18k MRR). A major repositioning from his original "Sanity Check" tool to focus on SEO testing (rather than data archiving) and a complete codebase rewrite compressed 2.5 years of growth into 9 months, reaching product-market fit.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us
$18k/mo

Cloud Forecast

by Tony Chan

Cloud Forecast is a bootstrapped SaaS tool for AWS cost forecasting, co-founded by Tony Chan and Francois. The company received ~$100k from Tiny Seed and has grown to approximately $450k ARR, recently adding two large enterprise annual deals. Despite facing challenges including engineer turnover, revenue plateau, and churn, the team has stabilized with three engineers and is focusing on enterprise sales and product velocity.

SaaSenterprise-direct-salessubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

Procurement Express

by James Kennedy

Procurement Express is a bootstrapped SaaS platform (with a small angel round in 2016) that helps mid-market companies (50-500 employees) manage purchasing and procurement workflows. With about 300 customers handling approximately $3 billion in annual spend, the company has grown to ~$2M ARR through a focus on solving real operational pain points for CFOs and finance teams. James Kennedy's unique approach includes implementing predictable annual price increases (5-10%) every September, which he communicates upfront to customers and uses as a forcing function to drive continuous product improvements.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

TypeDesk

by Mike

TypeDesk is a template builder and text expander for entrepreneurs and small teams. The founder Mike shared that while the product has low churn and high stickiness once users invest time creating templates, the main challenge is getting new users to value quickly given the technical nature of the product and unique needs of each company.

SaaSothersubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

DataMove

by Rick Heimanson

DataMove is a no-code data exchange and connectivity platform for payroll and HR data movement, founded by Rick Heimanson after his successful exit from Shugo (acquired in 2018 for multiple millions). Rick bootstrapped Shugo from 2008 to a $1M+ ARR exit over 10 years, then worked at the acquiring company for 2.5 years before founding DataMove in 2021. DataMove has grown to approximately 70 customers as of the interview, with customers processing payroll for hundreds or thousands of clients, and Rick is leveraging lessons from his first venture around IP ownership, saying no to feature requests, and relationship-driven sales.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

EmailEngine

EmailEngine started as an open source project under AGPL license with a paid MIT license option at 250 euros/year, generating virtually no revenue (750 euros in 18 months). The turning point came when the creator implemented a time-limited trial mechanism requiring a valid license within 15 minutes of app startup, shifting from a donation model to a mandatory paid model. This single change transformed the business, growing MRR to 6,100 euros and enabling full-time income for the creator in Estonia.

SaaSproduct-led-growthsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us
$6k/mo

Astalti

by James Mooring

Astalti is a vertical SaaS platform built for NDIS (National Disability Insurance Scheme) service providers in Australia. Co-founded by James Mooring (developer) and Jono (NDIS provider with deep domain expertise), the company bootstrapped to $720K ARR in just 18 months by building exceptionally well-crafted software for a specific niche, focusing first on support coordination rather than trying to build a full CRM, and leveraging in-person events, word-of-mouth, and world-class customer support to drive growth. The combination of domain expertise, product excellence, and deliberate go-to-market choices created explosive word-of-mouth growth in a tight vertical with hundreds of thousands of potential customers.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us
$60k/mo

JimDesk

by Iran Galperin

JimDesk is gym and martial arts management software that Iran Galperin bootstrapped from 2016 to a $32.5 million acquisition by Five Elms Capital in 2024. After 3.5 years of nights-and-weekends development while working full-time elsewhere, Iran went full-time in 2019 and achieved consistent year-over-year doubling of revenue from 2021-2024 by obsessing over product simplicity, exceptional customer service, and organic SEO. The company competed successfully against entrenched incumbents by refusing to mimic their heavy-sales playbook, instead building a self-serve product so intuitive it needed no demos.

SaaSseosubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

Unnamed B2B Security Software Company

by Jeff

Jeff and his co-founder bootstrapped a B2B security software company starting in 2003 with $350k in angel funding, achieving $1M ARR by 2007 and maintaining it for 15 years. The company was sold in three transactions to private equity (2017, 2020, 2022), with the final exit valued at $615M (14x ARR), netting Jeff ~$88M in personal equity sales. Success came from disciplined execution, customer obsession through generous short-term pricing paired with long-term greedy thinking, exceptional customer support, 117% net retention, and avoiding the temptation to raise venture capital early.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

Hammerstone.dev / Hello Query

by Colleen Schnittler

Hammerstone.dev (rebranding to Hello Query) is a developer tools company co-founded by Colleen Schnittler, a self-taught Rails developer, and Aaron Francis, a Laravel expert. The company built a visual query builder product with separate versions for Laravel and Ruby on Rails, initially gaining traction through an enterprise client that needed custom reporting functionality. As of early 2023, the company is repositioning from a developer-focused visual query builder to a product manager-focused custom reports platform after customer feedback revealed stronger demand in that direction.

SaaSenterprise-direct-salessubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us

Heliquary

by Colleen Schnittler

Heliquary, founded by developer Colleen Schnittler, is a SaaS tool for querying and analyzing customer data. After two years of pivots targeting engineering managers and then marketers without finding product-market fit, Colleen discovered a customer willing to pay $150/month for a data query solution, bringing her to $120 MRR with two customers. With six months of runway remaining and a self-imposed December deadline, she's making her final pivot toward direct customer sales with a focus on clarity around value proposition.

SaaScold-emailsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us
$120/mo

StatusGator

by Colin Bartlett

StatusGator is a status page aggregator that monitors 6,000+ services and sends early outage alerts before official status pages acknowledge issues. Started as a side project in 2015, it took 11 years and a TinySeed investment to reach seven-figure ARR, growing from a developer tool to an enterprise IT operations platform used by organizations to reduce support tickets. The company's breakthrough came from accidentally discovering programmatic SEO as its primary acquisition channel and evolving its product positioning around the insight that 'status pages lie.'

SaaSseosubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us