Browse Case Studies
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Nathan Latka Podcast
47 case studies found
Scam Stuff (Modern Rogue Gear)
by Brian BrushwoodBrian Brushwood is an entertainer and content creator with over 400 Discovery Channel episodes, 1M+ YouTube subscribers, and multiple podcasts. Three years ago, he launched Scam Stuff (Modern Rogue Gear), an online store selling magic equipment, lockpicking sets, and bar culture products. The online store has become his highest revenue stream, complementing his diversified income from podcasts ($2,000/episode via Patreon), corporate speaking ($10,000+/gig), stage shows, and TV production work.
Personal Trainer Development Center / Viral Nomics
by Jonathan GoodmanJonathan Goodman is a 29-year-old entrepreneur who built the Personal Trainer Development Center and Viral Nomics brand, selling courses, books, and training programs to fitness professionals. His 1K Extra course launch from September 28-October 6 generated $299,962.15 in revenue with $285,433.38 in profit by using social-gated content (an Instagram operations document), email list leverage, and strategic $3,012 retargeting spend that drove 78-118 additional sales. He travels the world full-time with his girlfriend, using revenue to fund experiences across Hawaii, Thailand, Uruguay, Iceland, and Costa Rica.
MindTalk Technology
by Rob BurkeRob Burke founded MindTalk Technology to create communication devices built into mouth guards that let users hear through vibrations transmitted via their jawbone and teeth. The company has soft commitments for 5,000 units and is working with professional teams like the Dallas Cowboys and Dallas Stars. Rob is raising $1.7 million on a convertible note with 6% interest, having already secured $100,000 in soft commitments.
Baby Bathwater Event Series
by Hollis CarterBaby Bathwater Event Series, co-founded by Hollis Carter and Michael Lubbidge, is a high-end mastermind event that brings together 100 carefully curated entrepreneurs and founders. The second official event generated approximately $330,000 in revenue from 110 attendees paying $3,000-$5,000 per ticket, with all profits reinvested into the community and future events.
Systemized.ly
by David AbramsSystemized.ly is a boutique marketing automation and systems consulting agency founded by David Abrams in 2014. The agency builds custom high-end funnels and marketing systems, charging $5,000-$20,000 per project, and generated $35,000 in October with a mix of professional services and recurring consulting packages. David intentionally keeps the team small (8 people, mix of full-time and contractors) and operates at a 40% cost-to-revenue ratio to maintain profitability while reinvesting in building scalable software products like Demio, a webinar platform launching in beta.
Buy My Future
by Jason ZookJason Zook is a creative entrepreneur who sold his last name twice (first for $45,000 to headsets.com) and is known for making over a million dollars wearing t-shirts for brands. His latest venture, Buy My Future, launched with a unique 60-day transparent journal on Medium documenting the entire project, followed by 44 customer interviews to craft messaging. In just two weeks, he sold 165 lifetime access units at $1,000 each, generating $165,000 in revenue with $120,000 in profit after $8,900 in expenses, building a community around guaranteed access to his future projects.
Ziglar Corporation
by Zig Ziglar (Tom Ziglar - CEO)Ziglar Corporation, led by Tom Ziglar, is a legacy personal development and training company that has modernized its distribution through digital channels. The company offers a $7,500 five-day Ziglar Legacy Certification course and generates significant traction through 4 million Facebook fans, 400,000-500,000 unique weekly visitors to the Ziglar Vault content hub, and a top-100 US podcast with 35,000+ downloads per episode, adding 3,000-5,000 email subscribers weekly.
Razor
by Chris MerkelChris Merkel founded Razor agency in 2008 at age 20, starting with his first client deal ($60-70k) from his mom's basement. By age 28, he grew the agency to over $3 million in annual revenue through word-of-mouth referrals, scaling from solo work to a team of 8-16 people across Atlanta and New York offices. The agency specializes in conceptual prototyping, iPhone apps, custom websites, and backend systems for startups and Fortune 100 brands.
Jordan Gray Consulting
by Jordan GrayJordan Gray is a sex and relationship coach who built a seven-figure business primarily through content marketing and syndication. Over 2.5 years, he wrote 10 books and ~250 articles, syndicating 180+ pieces across major publications (Entrepreneur.com, Cosmo, Thought Catalog) that funnel traffic back to his website where customers discover his $97 Supercharge Your Sex Life video course.
iStabilizer
by Noah RashetaNoah Rasheta built iStabilizer, a smartphone and tablet accessories company, after struggling to film his young son at the park with his iPhone 3GS. Starting with a universal smartphone tripod adapter costing $1 to make and retailing for $19.95, he grew the business from $60-70K in first-year revenue to $400-500K after landing a Walmart deal. Today the company has 15 SKUs and generates significant revenue from major retailers like AT&T Wireless ($600K annually) and Walmart ($400K annually), with 75% of revenue from retail partnerships and 25% from online sales.
The One Thing
by Jay PapasanJay Papasan and Gary Keller launched 'The One Thing' book with a concentrated, strategic month-long campaign that sold 27,000 copies in a single week, exceeding their 20,000-copy best-seller threshold. They leveraged three core channels: their internal network of 4,300 real estate agents, an email list of 35,000+ subscribers built on permission-based marketing, and 35 live training events across locations that reached approximately 16,000 people. The book achieved sustained growth year-over-year with sales up 43% in July and 26% annually, driven by word-of-mouth and timeless content strategy rather than short-term promotional tactics.
Forever Jobless
by Billy MurphyBilly Murphy built Forever Jobless into a content platform with 96,000 Instagram followers by organizing shout-for-shout cross-promotion groups and direct outreach to influencers. He converted his Instagram audience into a 26,000-person email list and launched an Instagram course at $397 one-time payment, generating $20,000-$30,000 in revenue in August alone. His strategy demonstrates how organic Instagram growth through peer promotion can be significantly more cost-effective than paid advertising.
Barn and Willow
by Trisha RoyBarn and Willow is a vertically integrated home decor brand founded by Trisha Roy in December 2014 that designs, manufactures, and sells premium custom window treatments and accessories directly to consumers at accessible prices. The company reached $22,500-$25,000 in monthly revenue within 9-10 months through a bootstrapped model with strong 85% gross margins, primarily driven by influencer partnerships and word-of-mouth marketing. After joining 500 Startups, the company achieved cash-flow positivity while building a 25% repeat purchase rate among early customers.
Sparks Entertainment
by Gil WellsfordSparks Entertainment is a creative lighting design and event production agency founded by Gil Wellsford at age 21, now operating across New York, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C. The company generates approximately $1.2M in annual revenue by providing lighting, audio, audio-visual, and staging services for corporate events, tours, and social events. Growth is primarily driven through personal relationships and referrals, with 70-80% profit margins on events before capital equipment purchases.
Ryan Moran's Amazon Business (Freedom Fastlane)
by Ryan MoranRyan Moran builds physical product businesses on Amazon, treating the platform as a customer acquisition funnel rather than the final destination. In October, his main business generated $500,000 in monthly revenue with approximately 50% net margins, while running a separate yoga products business that he previously sold for below $500k. He focuses on extracting customers from Amazon through in-package messaging and email capture to build recurring relationships beyond the platform.
Be True Brand U
by Kimra LunaKimra Luna launched Be True Brand U, a $2,000 digital course program, in May 2014 and generated $880,000 in first-year revenue (May 2014-February 2015) through a combination of Facebook ads and webinars. She grew her email list from 5,000 to 10,000+ people and built a 20,000-member Facebook community, using a strategy of list-building with a free mini course, retargeting existing audience members through webinars, and aggressive email campaigns on launch closing days.
Monticelli Band
by Elijah MonticelliElijah Monticelli, 23, went from being $5,000 in debt living in his parents' basement to launching a handmade Apple Watch cuff band business in September 2015. Within two months (by mid-November 2015), he had sold over 30 bands at $169 each for ~$6,000 in revenue, with 70% of sales coming from Etsy. His bootstrapped business grew primarily through the Etsy marketplace after initial customers came via Google Ads, though he intentionally slowed growth to focus on product development rather than scaling sales.
Ashley Bridget
by Scott HutchisonAshley Bridget is an e-commerce jewelry brand founded by Scott Hutchison in 2013 that scaled to $8.2 million in annual revenue by 2015 through Instagram influencer partnerships and viral promotional campaigns. The company grew from $1.5 million in 2013 to $4.5 million in 2014 (the year they raised $800K for 10% equity) and $8.2 million in 2015, moving approximately 25,000 orders per month with strong customer retention focus. Scott's model emphasized acquiring customers through discounted offers on Instagram and deal sites, then converting them into repeat purchasers through product quality and customer experience.
Learn Scrivener Fast
by Joseph MichaelJoseph Michael built Learn Scrivener Fast, a one-time-purchase online course teaching writers how to master Scrivener software, generating $500,000 in revenue in 2015 (averaging $40-42k/month). Starting from a $60k/year casino job with no email list, he grew the business through strategic JV partnerships with influential writers, leveraging a 30% conversion rate on webinars and building a targeted email list of 60,000+ subscribers. His model demonstrates how teaching strategy around an existing tool can be more profitable than the software itself.
Electric Styles
by NickElectric Styles sells light-up clothing including LED shoes, hoodies, ties, and flower headbands primarily targeting the EDM and music festival scene. Starting with light-up bras on Etsy, the company scaled to over 100,000 units sold across 65,000 customers, generating $1.25M in revenue last year and tracking toward $2.5M this year through a mix of marketplace and direct-to-consumer sales.