Browse Case Studies
Category
Pattern
freemium
Lennys Podcast
14 case studies found
Product Hunt
by Ryan HooverProduct Hunt started in late 2013 as a side project and newsletter, growing organically within the tech community before being incorporated 4-5 months later. Ryan Hoover built it as an experiment to help founders and tech enthusiasts discover new products, initially funded by his own capital before raising seed and Series A funding. The platform became a launchpad for thousands of startups and eventually was acquired by Angel List.
Sneak
by Guy, Danny, AsafSneak is a developer-first security platform founded in 2015 that makes it easy for developers to find and fix vulnerabilities in code, dependencies, containers, and infrastructure. The company grew to a $8.6B valuation (Series F) with 2,000+ paying customers and 1.3M developers secured through a product-led growth strategy centered on the Node.js community, leveraging innovative GitHub integration loops and programmatic SEO to drive adoption without reliance on traditional sales early on.
The Pragmatic Engineer
by Gergé OrosGergé Oros is a former Uber engineering manager who left his $320-330k compensation package to build The Pragmatic Engineer, a paid newsletter on Substack about software engineering. In under a year, the newsletter grew to 189,000 subscribers (with 80,000 added in the last 90 days) and now generates more revenue than his former Uber salary, with subscribers paying for in-depth weekly content.
Bravado
by Sahil MansuriBravado is a community-driven SaaS platform for B2B tech salespeople with over 300,000 members, including 50,000 VPs of Sales/CROs, 150,000 account executives, and 40-50,000 SDRs. Through its Seller Portfolio product (a real-time quota tracking tool similar to Mint.com for sales) and War Room community feature, Bravado provides benchmarking data on sales performance across the industry. In the current market downturn, Bravado is helping sales teams and founders rethink their go-to-market strategies, comp plans, and retention focus.
All the Hacks
by Chris HutchinsAll the Hacks is a top-tier business podcast launched by Chris Hutchins, a former PM and founder who left Wealthfront to pursue content creation full-time. The podcast explores financial optimization, travel hacks, and life improvement through interviews with interesting people. In 18 months, it reached top 5-10 in business podcast rankings through authentic content, guest curation, and consistent weekly releases.
TikTok
This is not a startup pitch but rather an interview with Ray Cao, Global Head of Monetization Product Strategy and Operations at TikTok, discussing how TikTok operates as a company, its culture, and strategies for success on the platform. TikTok is valued at over $80 billion with parent company ByteDance valued at over $200 billion, generating nearly $10 billion in advertising revenue. The conversation covers TikTok's unique culture principles like "context no control," their global product development approach, and insights on creating successful content and ad campaigns.
Anchor
by Mike McNamara, Nir ZichermanAnchor was a podcast hosting and creation platform founded by Mike McNamara and Nir Zicherman that evolved from a voice messaging app (Anchor 1.0) to a podcasting tool (Anchor 2.0) and finally to a distribution-focused platform (Anchor 3.0). Acquired by Spotify, Anchor now powers over 75% of all new podcasts created globally by making podcast creation and distribution frictionless. The company's success came from relentless focus on reducing friction for creators, willingness to pivot when data and intuition aligned, and an unscalable but effective early strategy of using interns to manually submit podcasts to Apple Podcasts.
NotebookLM
NotebookLM is an AI-powered tool incubated within Google Labs that lets users upload documents, PDFs, articles, and other content to generate interactive summaries, study guides, and notably, AI-hosted podcast episodes called 'Deep Dives.' Launched about a year before this interview, the product went viral on social media with its surprisingly engaging audio overviews, attracting educators, students, and professionals. Built by a tiny team (3 engineers, 1 PM, 1 designer initially) operating like a startup within Google, the product has achieved strong retention metrics, 60,000 Discord members, and has caught the attention of enterprise companies interested in using it at scale.
Dropbox
by Drew HoustonDropbox, founded by Drew Houston in 2007, experienced explosive viral growth in its first era (2007-2014), doubling and 10xing user counts annually through innovative referral programs and demo videos that leveraged early social media. However, the company entered a difficult second era around 2015 when major incumbents (Apple, Microsoft, Google) launched competing products, particularly Google Photos' free unlimited storage offering, which devastated Dropbox's photo-sharing business. Houston made the strategic decision to kill Carousel and Mailbox, going all-in on productivity, which initially backfired with negative press and internal turmoil before the company eventually stabilized.
Notion
by Ivan ZhaoNotion is a no-code productivity and database platform founded by Ivan Zhao in 2013. After 3-4 years of what Zhao calls "lost years" trying different product directions—initially as a developer tool—the company pivoted to positioning itself as a consumer-friendly productivity suite that hides powerful no-code building capabilities underneath. The company stayed lean and profitable, rebuilt its technical foundation multiple times, and achieved significant traction through word-of-mouth and organic adoption, reaching unicorn status without traditional venture funding.
Codeium
by Varun MohanCodeium started as a GPU virtualization infrastructure company in 2020, pivoted in mid-2023 after recognizing that generative AI would make their infrastructure commoditized, and rebuilt as an AI coding assistant. The company launched Windsurf, a custom IDE built on forked VS Code, four months before this interview, reaching over 1 million developers and hundreds of thousands of monthly active users. They've built a significant enterprise sales organization (80+ go-to-market team members) and differentiate through deep codebase understanding, support for multiple IDEs like JetBrains, and secure/compliant deployments for enterprises.
Revolut
by Nick and VladRevolut is a fintech platform operating in 50 countries that challenges traditional banks by offering multi-currency accounts, P2P transfers, crypto buying, investing, savings accounts, joint accounts, loans, credit cards, and mortgages. Now valued at over $60 billion with 50+ million customers, Revolut is known for hiring and developing exceptional product leaders who go on to become CPOs and founders elsewhere. The company operates with a flat hierarchy, founder-led product reviews, small autonomous teams, and obsessive focus on building 'WoW' products with incredible UX.
Good Inside
by Dr. Becky KennedyGood Inside is a parenting education platform founded by Dr. Becky Kennedy, a clinical psychologist, that teaches evidence-based principles for raising resilient children. The core philosophy—that children are inherently good inside and that behavior issues stem from missing skills rather than bad character—extends to leadership and workplace dynamics. Dr. Kennedy demonstrates how parenting frameworks like repair, boundaries, and sturdy leadership translate directly to managing adults in corporate environments.
Loveable
Loveable is an AI-powered no-code platform that enables anyone to build web applications without traditional coding. Lazar Yovanovich, the company's first official 'vibe coding engineer,' demonstrates how non-technical founders can leverage AI to ship production-quality products fast by focusing on clarity, taste, and judgment rather than code. The platform has gained traction through product-led growth, with users building everything from Shopify integrations and merch stores to complex internal tools with custom integrations.