Browse Case Studies

148 case studies found

Legit Check By Ch

by Ch Daniel

Ch Daniel (23) and his brother David (17) built Legit Check By Ch, an authentication service for luxury items that has accumulated 6,000,000 all-time users. The company generates $200,000 annually through a simple business model leveraging e-commerce order notes, demonstrating strong product-market fit in the authentication space.

SaaSproduct-led-growthothervia Nathan Latka Podcast

Diapers.com

by Marc Lore

Marc Lore built Diapers.com into a DTC ecommerce giant by leveraging diapers as a loss leader category, using guerilla marketing tactics like buying out P&G's inventory to gain attention. After Amazon's aggressive pricing forced him to sell Diapers.com, Lore launched jet.com which achieved a $3.3 billion acquisition by Walmart within a year, demonstrating his ability to scale rapidly.

Marketplaceotherothervia How I Built This

Vital Farms

by Matt O'Hayer

Vital Farms is the #1 pasture-raised egg producer in the US, founded by Matt O'Hayer with just 20 hens and used trailers. The company grew to a network of 600 farms with projected revenue of nearly $1B by reimagining eggs as a premium branded product focused on humane farming practices and superior quality. Success came through building trust with early adopters, securing Whole Foods as a critical partner, and letting customers become brand advocates.

Otherword-of-mouthothervia How I Built This

Zogics

by Paul LeBlanc

Zogics is a B2B and B2C e-commerce company founded in 2006 that designs and markets cleaning, disinfecting, and sanitizing products for health, fitness, hospitality, educational, and aviation industries. The company grew from a founder's personal pain point (needing to clean bike grease) into a $20M revenue business through direct sales, product expansion, and content marketing focused on technical product education. Listed on Inc. 5000 as one of the fastest-growing private businesses in the US, Zogics now employs 40+ people and leverages SEO and blog content as their most effective marketing channels.

SaaScontent-marketingothervia Failory

WedMap

by Tauras Sinkus

WedMap was an online marketplace for wedding locations and service providers founded in 2015 by Tauras Sinkus and two co-founders. Despite reaching $2k monthly revenue and $20k in year three revenue, the startup failed after nearly 3 years due to team friction, resource constraints, lack of customer validation, and over-engineering the product before achieving product-market fit.

Marketplacepaid-adsothervia Failory
$2k/mo

The Nerd Cave

by Dave Desi

The Nerd Cave was a hybrid retail/community center space for gamers in Sydney that blended retail, hobby store, and community gathering in one location. Operating for 4 years, it achieved $16,000 AUD/month in revenue through strong word-of-mouth and community partnerships, but ultimately failed due to location changes, increased competition from gaming bars and similar venues, lack of strong brand differentiation, and demographic shifts after relocating away from universities.

Otherword-of-mouthothervia Failory
$16k/mo

spothrides

by Jessica Blanda

spothrides is a ready-to-deploy Gojek clone solution designed for startups wanting to launch a multi-service super app within 7 days. The platform supports multiple revenue streams including commission on bookings, surge pricing, subscriptions, and in-app ads, with fully customizable branding and a scalable architecture for efficient operations.

SaaSproduct-led-growthothervia Indie Hackers

Sharkius

by David Kramaley

Sharkius was a social games company founded in 2007 that achieved $60-80k/month revenue in its first year by building compelling text-based games on the Facebook platform. The startup failed due to over-expansion, poor management, lack of marketing expertise, and algorithmic changes to Facebook that reduced organic reach. David Kramaley learned critical lessons about team building, marketing diversification, and staying lean that he applied to his later venture, Chessable.

Otherplatform-parasiticothervia Failory

Rayna Tours

by Manoj Tulsani

Rayna Tours is a bootstrapped travel marketplace founded in 2006 by Manoj Tulsani and Kamlesh Ramchandani that grew from a small travel boutique in Dubai's Flora Grand Hotel to a premier destination management company operating in 10 countries. The founders identified a market gap: hotel guests in Dubai booked accommodations but overlooked tour reservations, allowing them to offer quality tours at competitive prices. Over 10 years, they scaled through a combination of owned assets (desert camps, luxury vehicles, yachts), an all-inclusive online booking platform, social media presence, and a mobile app, while maintaining traditional marketing alongside digital channels.

Marketplaceword-of-mouthothervia Failory

Onepagetrip

by Ana Santos

Onepagetrip was a travel itinerary sharing marketplace that failed after over a year of development. The startup struggled to monetize, trying hotel affiliate bookings and pay-to-access itineraries without success. The founders' biggest mistakes were building without validating the idea first, not having a monetization plan from the beginning, and competing against billion-dollar travel companies while maintaining day jobs.

Marketplacepaid-adsothervia Failory

NoGood

by Mostafa ElBermawy

NoGood is a growth and performance marketing agency founded by Mostafa ElBermawy in 2017 that has doubled in size every year by focusing on word-of-mouth referrals and content marketing. The agency works primarily with early-stage SaaS and DTC brands, delivering exceptional results that drive client retention and organic growth through SEO and the NoGood blog (630% YoY organic traffic growth). Rather than traditional sales tactics, NoGood works directly with clients through experienced growth marketers to define success metrics and deliver measurable outcomes.

Agencyword-of-mouthothervia Failory

NerdPilots

by Kevin Pereira

NerdPilots is a design and development agency founded by serial entrepreneur Kevin Pereira that grew to $25,000/month by pivoting from a subscription model to project-based work with larger clients. The agency found its best customer acquisition channel through Craigslist daily postings and focuses on bigger projects rather than small subscriptions. Kevin plans to launch TaskJoyy, a SaaS product based on the agency's backend, to help other agencies manage clients and projects more efficiently.

Agencyword-of-mouthothervia Failory
$25k/mo

Leilo

by Sol Broady

Leilo is a relaxation beverage company founded by 21-year-old Sol Broady, featuring kava as its star ingredient to provide 'calm in a can.' After a COVID-delayed March 2020 launch, the company pivoted to DTC sales and has grown to $80k/month revenue, now available in 200+ retailers across 20 states with plans to 10x revenue. Success came through relentless on-the-ground sampling, community building, and a focus on the human element of marketing over digital ads alone.

Otherword-of-mouthothervia Failory
$7k/mo

Gameslog

by Michael Hebenstreit

Gameslog was a gaming affiliate site founded by Michael Hebenstreit that failed to gain traction despite significant time and money investment. The site suffered from market saturation, poor keyword rankings against established competitors, and minimal traffic (peaking at around 900 unique visits per month), which made monetization through affiliate commissions and ads impossible. The failure taught Hebenstreit the importance of thorough market research and competitive analysis before launching an online business.

Otherotherothervia Failory

Gadget Flow

by Evan Varsamis

Evan Varsamis launched Gadget Flow in just 24 hours on August 15, 2012, as a product discovery platform to help users find high-quality products without endless scrolling or long reviews. Growing organically without paid ads or external funding, he scaled the platform to serve 25M+ people monthly across web, apps, and social channels by 2019, reaching $2M+ in annual revenue through a business model centered on brand advertising and partnerships.

Marketplaceword-of-mouthothervia Failory

FreshConnect

by Tarun Gupta

FreshConnect was an online B2B marketplace for fresh agricultural produce that achieved ₹2.5M MRR (₹25M ARR) through offline sales and WhatsApp-based customer engagement, but failed to scale due to poor hiring decisions, lack of focus, insufficient capital, and inability to raise external funding. Co-founder Tarun Gupta and his team eventually accepted an acqui-hire deal after 19 months of full-time work, during which the startup burned ₹100,000-150,000 monthly while bootstrapped.

Marketplaceword-of-mouthothervia Failory
$2500k/mo

Flexiple

by Suvansh Bansal

Flexiple is a marketplace connecting startups with top remote freelance developers and designers through a rigorous multi-stage screening process. Founded by Suvansh Bansal and two co-founders, the company grew from failed iterations to $80K/month MRR through cold outreach and content marketing, remaining self-funded with lean operations. The team also launched remote.tools, a curated repository of 100+ remote work tools that became a marketing channel and landed 4 new clients via a Product Hunt #2 Product of the Day launch.

Marketplacecold-emailothervia Failory
$80k/mo

Black Hops Brewing

by Dan Norris

Black Hops Brewing is a craft brewery in Australia founded by Dan Norris that has achieved over $10M annual revenue through a content-driven, community-focused marketing approach. Rather than traditional beer industry marketing (which typically spends 11% of revenue on ads), Black Hops applies startup-style brand building through transparency, storytelling, and community engagement—including podcasts, blogs, home brew competitions, equity crowdfunding, and financial transparency.

Othercontent-marketingothervia Startups For the Rest of Us

SaasTok

by Alex Thuma

SaasTok is a multi-stage SaaS conference founded by Alex Thuma, bootstrapped through sponsorships and community credibility built via a blog (SaaScribe), podcast (SaaS Revolution Show), and local meetups. The first event in Dublin in 2016 lost money but generated immediate sponsor re-commitments, allowing Alex to scale the event year-over-year by nearly doubling in size while maintaining a curated experience with multiple tracks (Bootstrap Stage, Accelerate Stage, workshops, and networking events).

Otherword-of-mouthothervia Startups For the Rest of Us

Ernest Capital

by Tyler Trinkus

Ernest Capital is a novel investment fund that provides capital to bootstrapped founders and indie hackers building profitable, sustainable businesses outside the venture capital model. Founded by Tyler Trinkus (former StormMapper founder), the fund uses a shared earnings agreement structure and provides mentorship from successful bootstrap founders. The fund raised its first checks within 6 months by attracting support from its own mentor-investor base, including founders like Jason and David from Basecamp, Chris and Natalie from WildBit, and others.

Otherword-of-mouthothervia Indie Hackers Podcast