Browse Case Studies

128 case studies found

Celitech

Celitech is an eSIM platform that helps travel and hospitality companies like Expedia monetize connectivity services for their customers. The company is targeting a $1.5M raise to scale their enterprise partnerships and expand their eSIM distribution network.

SaaSenterprise-direct-salesusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

Cargamos

Cargamos is a last mile delivery platform operating in Mexico that has scaled to $12M in annual revenue. The company is currently raising $30M to expand its logistics network and operations.

Otherotherusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

Swag.com

Swag.com is a corporate swag and merchandise platform acquired by CustomInk for over $20 million. The company is projected to do $60 million+ in annual revenue this year with 30% margins, demonstrating strong unit economics in the B2B merchandise space.

SaaSenterprise-direct-salesusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

Pay per car scan model

This startup offers a pay-per-scan model for vehicle inspection technology targeted at insurance companies to reduce fraud. The company has achieved $30k MRR by solving a specific pain point for insurers—automated vehicle damage assessment and verification.

SaaSenterprise-direct-salesusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$30k/mo

DataLab

DataLab is an agricultural SaaS company that charges farmers on a per-cow basis, reaching $15M in annual revenue. Their pricing model aligns customer value with usage, resulting in ACVs as high as $100,000 for large farming operations.

SaaSenterprise-direct-salesusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

Scoop

by Bill Hanks

Scoop is a news discovery network and marketplace connecting journalists with newsmakers/companies. Founded by Bill Hanks, former VP of Corporate Communications at Real Networks and PR director at Microsoft, the platform has 630 registered journalists (6% of business journalism market) after 7 months and recently began generating revenue (~$1,000/month) by charging companies $250 to algorithmically match their news to relevant reporters.

SaaSproduct-led-growthusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

Bellhops

by Cam Doody

Bellhops is a tech-enabled marketplace connecting DIY movers with local, vetted college athletes who provide affordable moving and lifting help at $40/hour. Operating in 128 US cities with nearly 5,000 active service providers and processing 3,000-5,000 bookings weekly, the company has raised $8M+ in funding (including a $600K seed from Lampus Group and a $6M Series A led by Binary Capital).

Marketplaceplatform-parasiticusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

I'm Scalable

by Justin Brooke

I'm Scalable is a digital marketing agency founded by Justin Brooke in August 2011 that manages online advertising campaigns for high-level clients including Trump University, Russell Brunson, and Stansbury Research. Operating as a lean team (primarily himself with contractors as needed), Justin manages approximately $1.5 million in monthly ad spend across clients and earns 5-15% commission on those budgets, generating over $90,000 in monthly revenue. The agency recently transitioned from struggling to reach $100K/month to rapidly scaling to $1.5M in managed spend, with plans to expand into media and content networks to capture higher margins.

Agencyenterprise-direct-salesusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$90k/mo

Onboy

by Anthony Zhang

Onboy is an on-demand food delivery app exclusively focused on the college market, founded by 20-year-old Anthony Zhang. The company has processed nearly 10,000 orders and generates just over $10k in monthly revenue with 45% month-over-month growth, powered by a 100% student delivery workforce and exclusive restaurant partnerships that allow deliveries in under 30 minutes. Anthony pitched Mark Cuban and got funded $100,000 on the spot, and is part of the 500 Startups batch in Mountain View.

Marketplaceword-of-mouthusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$10k/mo

Dolly

by Chad Whitman

Chad Whitman is a serial entrepreneur who first built Edranck Checker, a Facebook analytics tool that grew to $60K MRR before selling to Social Bakers for approximately $2.8M in 2014. He then co-founded Dolly, an on-demand moving marketplace that leverages pickup truck owners as a unique asset class, raising $1.7M seed and $8M Series A (valuation ~$50M range) by taking a 20% cut of jobs on the platform.

Marketplaceplatform-parasiticusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

Sellbreaker

by John Colgan

Sellbreaker is a legal-tech SaaS platform founded by John Colgan that helps consumers cancel cell phone contracts without paying early termination fees by identifying carrier breaches in contracts. The company charges 35% of the savings (ETF amounts) and achieved a $13 million annual run rate by August 2015 with 13,000 users, maintaining a 100% success rate. Colgan raised just under $300,000 in convertible notes (partly from 500 Startups) and planned to expand to other consumer contracts under a new vertical-agnostic brand called Vito.

SaaSword-of-mouthusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

Checklist Home Services

by Liz Piccarazzi

Liz Piccarazzi left a six-figure job at American Express to launch Checklist Home Services in 2011, a professionally-run handyman service in Brooklyn and Queens that prioritizes customer experience. Completing 65 jobs in October at an average price of $400 per job with net profit of $60-$75 per job, the business operates with W2 employees rather than 1099 contractors and has expanded into a second venture, Citibin.

Serviceword-of-mouthusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

Borrowell

Borrowell is a Canadian online marketplace lender connecting borrowers with lenders through a proprietary platform. Founded about a year before this interview (circa 2015), the company raised $5.4 million in seed funding and was approaching a significant Series A round. Their growth strategy centers on an innovative product-led approach using a rate-checker widget as their primary customer acquisition tool, exemplifying the "engineering is marketing" principle.

Marketplaceproduct-led-growthusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

Funded Today

by Zach Smith

Funded Today is a crowdfunding agency co-founded by Zach Smith that has raised over $40 million for 300+ campaigns on Kickstarter and Indiegogo. The company started when Zach's consulting client proposed paying via revenue share instead of upfront fees, which evolved into a three-tiered service offering paid media, press landing, and cross-collaborations. With 31 remote employees and $8M in 2015 revenue, Funded Today takes a 30-35% percentage of funds raised and operates with a unique due diligence testing phase to predict campaign success.

Agencyword-of-mouthusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

DealFlicks

by Sean Wycliffe

DealFlicks is a Priceline-style marketplace for discounted movie tickets, partnering with over 600 US theaters (including 13 of the top 50 chains) to sell empty seats at up to 60% off. Founded by Sean Wycliffe in late 2010, the company generates a ~$2.4M annual revenue run rate with 2x year-over-year growth, selling roughly 100,000 tickets and concession packages monthly at an average price of $15. Growth is driven primarily through SEO (people searching for movie deals), AdWords, and affiliate partnerships, with DealFlicks keeping 15-20% of transaction value while theaters capture the remainder.

Marketplaceseousage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$20k/mo

SoundBetter

by Shahar Gilad

SoundBetter is a two-person marketplace connecting self-producing musicians with freelance audio professionals (including Grammy winners) to help them complete professional-quality songs. As of June 2015, the company achieved an $800k annual run rate through a two-sided commission model: freelancers pay $4 per proposal and 5% of completed job value. Their primary growth driver is organic search traffic, bringing in approximately 30,000 unique monthly visitors searching for audio production services.

Marketplaceseousage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

Spring Leap

by Iran Ayel

Spring Leap is a marketplace of 180,000 advertising agency experts offering faster market research and creative testing compared to traditional firms. Founded by serial entrepreneur Iran Ayel, the company launched an MVP in January 2015, generating $20,000 in the first month and scaling to highs of $100,000 per month by the time of this interview. The business charges $50-$150 per expert per hour with markups, and has attracted enterprise clients like Unilever and Sony while preparing to raise a $2.5M seed round at an $8M pre-money valuation.

Marketplaceenterprise-direct-salesusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$100k/mo

GNAP

by Gina Tost

GNAP is an app promotion marketplace from Barcelona that connects app developers and advertisers with bloggers and content creators who promote mobile apps on a cost-per-install (CPI) basis. Founded by Gina Tost, the company processed $750,000 in advertiser spending in 2015 and generated approximately $320,000 in revenue by taking a 30% commission. The company grew entirely through word-of-mouth with no paid marketing spend, and was raising $500,000 at a $5M post-money valuation to scale their operations.

Marketplaceword-of-mouthusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$30k/mo

YouStake

by Scott Hansberry

YouStake is a marketplace where fans can buy equity stakes in professional poker players competing in live tournaments. Launched in June 2015, the platform has processed $2.8 million in stakes from 335 poker players and attracted 1.4 million in pledges from 2,700 users, generating approximately $70,000 in revenue through an 8% commission (5% to YouStake, 3% to payment processors). The team is targeting 50,000+ users and 20% month-over-month growth to hit a Series A by end of 2016.

Marketplacepaid-adsusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast

June

by Lane Campbell

June is a recruiting marketplace founded by serial entrepreneur Lane Campbell that connects recruiters with candidates willing to take calls for payment. The platform addresses the high cost of hiring (which Lane found had ballooned to $26,000 per hire) by letting recruiters search for candidates by skill and location, then pay them directly for phone interviews. Though the initial launch between August-November 2015 didn't resonate with the technical community as hoped, Lane is relaunching with new partnerships and positioning the platform as a solution to the broken recruiting economy.

Marketplaceotherusage-basedvia Nathan Latka Podcast