Community Startups
14 case studies with real revenue and traction data from community startups.
Nikhyl Singhal, a veteran product executive from Meta, Google, and Credit Karma, founded The Skip, a community platform for senior product leaders. The community provides coaching, resources, and networking to help product managers navigate career reinvention and adapt to an AI-first landscape.
RevGenius is a community platform founded by a 15-year sales veteran at the start of the pandemic to connect sales, marketing, and RevOps professionals. The platform grew to 15,000 members in its first year through word-of-mouth and community-driven growth.
No Code Founders is a bootstrapped community platform for non-technical entrepreneurs building businesses with no-code tools, started by Joshua Tiernan in Scotland. The platform grew organically from a Slack community to nearly 10,000 members generating $3k MRR through a mix of PRO memberships and B2B partnerships with no-code tool vendors. Joshua prioritized engagement and community-led development over aggressive marketing, resulting in a lean operation with less than $2k annual costs.
Makerlog is a community platform for makers to ship products in public, maintain productivity streaks, and stay accountable to peers. Founded by Sergio Matei Diaz, it grew through genuine Twitter engagement and word-of-mouth from the maker community, reaching ~$150 MRR through a freemium gold membership model. Sergio learned critical lessons about avoiding echo chamber validation, preventing burnout through rest days, and staying customer-focused rather than vision-obsessed.
ndhackers is a community platform and podcast for indie hackers and online builders, co-founded by Cortland Allen and his twin brother Channing Allen. Acquired by Stripe, the platform hosts a forum and podcast where founders discuss their ideas, opportunities, and growth strategies, with community events like founder conferences bringing members together.
MillionDollarSellers.com is an exclusive e-commerce community with 440 members, each having proven $1M+ trailing 12-month revenue. Founded by Ian Sells with Eugene Cayman as COO, the community charges $6,000/year and generated over $1 million in revenue last year, with an 8-person team. The community focuses on Amazon-focused e-commerce entrepreneurs, differentiating itself through rigorous vetting and high-value events and partnerships.
Property Hub grew from The Property Podcast, co-hosted by Rob Dix for a decade, into a multi-7 figure online community and real estate business. The turning point came when hundreds of listeners showed up to their first in-person meet-up, revealing significant demand. Today the podcast reaches 400,000 downloads weekly, and Rob's strategy centers on creating abundant free content while building monetized community offerings.
CreativeMornings is a free, community-driven event series founded by Tina Roth-Eisenberg that brings local creatives together. Starting from a co-working space in New York City, the platform has grown to over 200 chapters worldwide through organic community building and collaboration.
Rosieland is a community platform run by Rosie Sherry, a community empowerment expert who builds and monetizes multiple communities. Rosie has extensive experience managing communities, including her past work managing the IndieHackers community, and now focuses on education and community-driven business models.
Generalist World is a community platform founded by Milly Tamati dedicated to empowering generalists—people with diverse skills who don't fit into traditional specialist categories. The platform launched a podcast to amplify conversations about the value of generalists in breaking down organizational silos and enabling diverse career paths.
Louie Bacaj, a former Walmart engineer, co-leads a thriving community for bootstrapped entrepreneurs alongside Daniel Vassallo, promoting the 'small bets' philosophy as a path to financial freedom. The community challenges conventional venture capital thinking and emphasizes how strategic side projects, real estate investments, and expertise monetization can provide sustainable alternatives to traditional startup culture.
Rosie Sherry built Ministry of Testing, a tight-knit community for software testers, growing it to $1.2M in annual revenue without relying on paid advertising. Despite being an introvert, she created such a passionate community that members have gotten the logo tattooed on their bodies. She accomplished this while simultaneously raising and homeschooling 5 children.
Jay Clouse built and grew Unreal Collective, a community that became valuable enough to be acquired by Pat Flynn's Smart Passive Income. The acquisition was notable because communities rarely get sold—they're typically dependent on founders and often decline as they scale. Jay managed to build something that not only grew but maintained quality at scale.
Indie Hackers, founded by Courtland and Channing Allen, was spun out from Stripe and is now being operated independently starting from $0 in revenue. The founders are exploring future revenue models for the platform after separating from the company.