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25 case studies found
Potion.so
by NoahNoah is an indie hacker who previously founded CoffeePass, a Starbucks-like app for local coffee shops that was acquired after two years. He is now focusing on Potion.so, a website builder that lets users create custom styled websites directly from their Notion content.
Law Pockets
Law Pockets is a tool designed to empower Atlanta residents with legal knowledge and resources to address racial injustice. The podcast episode discusses how the platform aims to solve systemic legal disparities by making legal information more accessible to underserved communities.
Fig
Fig is a DevOps tool that raised $2.2M in 2020 and has grown to approximately 100,000 monthly active users. The podcast episode discusses the company's trajectory and future plans.
Photopea
by Ivan KutskirIvan Kutskir built Photopea, a free advanced photo editor, starting as a PSD viewer in 2013 while studying computer science. Operating solo and funded entirely by ad revenue, Photopea now generates $100,000/month from 10 million monthly visits and 1.5 million hours of monthly usage, with virtually no operational costs.
PEAR Cards
by Matthew RobertsPEAR Cards is a card-based conversation tool designed to initiate positive and open communication. Matthew Roberts and his co-founder Nathan Anderson raised $19,000 on Kickstarter to manufacture their product on high-quality linen cardstock, which is now used in schools, therapy offices, and homes worldwide. Their growth has been driven primarily by word-of-mouth and social media marketing, despite the Kickstarter campaign not achieving viral status.
Hashtag Pirate
by Nicolas Elec AttallahHashtag Pirate was an Instagram hashtag search engine that allowed users to find posts with multiple specific hashtags. Nicolas built the MVP in two months and achieved SEO success, ranking #1 for three keywords. However, the startup failed when Instagram/Facebook blocked API access in June 2016 to monetize their platform, making the core service non-functional before Nicolas could generate revenue.
MetaFizzy
by Dave DeSandroMetaFizzy is a one-person operation by Dave DeSandro that sells JavaScript libraries and tools to developers. Starting with Masonry in 2009 (a free, open-source grid layout library), Dave launched MetaFizzy in 2010 to monetize related products like Isotope, Packery, Flickety, and Infinite Scroll using a GPL licensing model that requires commercial users to pay for a closed-source license. The business grew from $25k in year one to $120k annually by 2015-2016, allowing Dave to quit his job at Twitter in 2014.
Will Robots Take My Job
by Mubashar IqbalWill Robots Take My Job is a free web tool that analyzes job titles against a 2013 Oxford research report to predict automation risk. Built by Mubashar Iqbal and Tim Matar over 2 months and launched on Product Hunt, the site achieved 6 million page views in less than 3 weeks, demonstrating how a well-executed launch on Product Hunt can drive viral press coverage across major outlets like MSN and AOL.
Laravel
by Taylor OttwellLaravel is a PHP web framework launched by Taylor Ottwell in 2011 that revitalized PHP development by prioritizing accessibility, documentation, and developer experience. Starting as a side project while Taylor maintained a full-time job, Laravel grew to become the most popular web framework in PHP with over 100,000 users, generating over $3M annually across the framework and ecosystem products like Forge, Envoyer, Spark, and Nova. Taylor built an engaged community through authentic engagement, free tools, and ecosystem partnerships, transforming a "dying" language into a thriving ecosystem.
BusyMind
by Kevin LampingBusyMind was a silent meditation app built by Kevin Lamping to enable mindfulness practice in busy environments without audio distractions. The app achieved about 5 purchases per month but ultimately failed due to Kevin's inability to dedicate sufficient time to marketing and growth while maintaining his full-time job. Kevin's core learning was that lack of time and financial runway, rather than market rejection, was the primary cause of failure.
Claude Code
by Boris ChernyClaude Code is Anthropic's AI-powered coding assistant that grew from a terminal prototype to generating 4% of public GitHub commits with daily active users doubling last month. Built by Boris Cherny, the tool represents a fundamental shift in how developers work, with companies like Spotify reporting their best developers haven't written code since December. Claude Code exemplifies product-led growth driven by demonstrable productivity gains and latent demand for AI-assisted development.
The Browser Company
by Josh MillerThe Browser Company, founded by Josh Miller and Hirsch, builds Arc, a web browser focused on optimizing for user feelings rather than pure metrics. The company has grown at over 10% week-over-week for eight months, maintaining D5D7 (Daily Active Users using the product 5+ days per week) retention in the low-to-mid 30s to low 40s range. The company culture emphasizes heartfelt intensity, assuming you don't know, and celebrating team members publicly to rebuild trust in tech companies.
Community Notes
by Keith ColemanCommunity Notes is a crowdsourced fact-checking system on X (formerly Twitter) that allows regular users to add contextual notes to potentially misleading posts. Using a proprietary 'bridging-based agreement' algorithm that rewards notes approved by people who typically disagree, the system has grown to nearly 1 million volunteer contributors and delivered 30 billion note views in 2024—more than double the prior year. The product's success demonstrates that open, decentralized approaches to information quality can outperform traditional centralized fact-checking.
Cursor
by Michael TruhlCursor is an AI-powered code editor that reimagines how engineers build software by moving beyond traditional code writing toward intent-based, higher-level programming. Launched in 2022 after just 3 months of development, Cursor achieved legendary growth reaching $100M ARR in 20 months and $300M ARR within 2 years, driven entirely by product quality and organic word-of-mouth adoption. The team differentiates itself through custom model development, dog-fooding, and a human-in-the-loop philosophy that keeps engineers in control while leveraging AI to automate repetitive tasks.
Bundle
by Kelvin LockwoodBundle is a location-driven mobile app that aggregates local news as users move around their city. Kelvin Lockwood left a £35k account management job in the UK to build the app, which had 50 beta testers in the UK and 20 in the US at the time of this interview. The business model relies on mobile advertising, with projections of £25M annual revenue from 6 million users based on a £5-7 CPM.
NightEye
NightEye is a dark mode browser extension launched in May 2018 that grew to 100,000 users and 4,500 paying customers through organic SEO. The bootstrapped side project from Razor Labs agency charges $9/year for subscriptions and $40 for lifetime licenses, generating approximately $2,500-$2,700 in monthly recurring revenue with an 86% annual retention rate.
NotionTweet.app
by Minfolk TranNotionTweet.app is a Twitter management tool that integrates with Notion, allowing creators to schedule tweets, view analytics, and manage content entirely within their Notion workspace. Founder Minfolk Tran bootstrapped the product as a side project while working as a senior software engineer, gaining his first five paying customers within two weeks of MVP launch through Twitter virality and Indie Hackers promotion. Currently at $30 MRR with plans to pivot toward B2B customers and reach $5K MRR before quitting his day job.
CruiseSheet
by TynanCruiseSheet is a website created by Tynan, a bestselling author and unconventional entrepreneur, that helps travelers find great deals on cruises. The source provides minimal information about the product's traction, revenue, or growth metrics.
Blackmagic
by Tony DinhTony Dinh is an indie hacker known for building aesthetically impressive products and selling them publicly on Twitter. His browser extension Blackmagic gained traction through Product Hunt and was eventually sold to HypeFury. Tony's journey highlights the importance of design, audience building, and navigating platform risk as an independent founder.
NativePHP
by Shane Rosenthal, Simon HampNativePHP is a project by Shane Rosenthal and Simon Hamp that brings PHP and Laravel to mobile devices. They have successfully turned this technical achievement into a profitable business at a very early stage, demonstrating the viability of porting established web technologies to unexpected platforms.