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Matching Case Studiesnewest first

Posture Keeper

by Shirley Tan

Shirley Tan, an experienced e-commerce entrepreneur, created Posture Keeper after her own debilitating back pain led her to experiment with backpack straps attached to her chair, which resolved her symptoms in two weeks. Encouraged by Shark Tank's Kevin Harrington, she spent 10 months perfecting the product design through two iterations and extensive factory collaboration before planning a Kickstarter launch. The hardware startup represents Shirley's return to the physical product space after years in digital e-commerce, leveraging her network and research into crowdfunding best practices.

First customers: Pre-launch via Kickstarter campaign

2019HardwareProduct Hunt Launchone-time

Emit

by Stephen Titus, Thushaan

Emit is a productivity-focused smartwatch founded by Stephen Titus and Thushaan that displays countdowns of important tasks and goals rather than traditional time, leveraging the psychology of scarcity to change user behavior. The founders launched on Kickstarter in 2018 and exceeded their goal by 330%, raising $17,000 from 180 backers, validating strong market interest in their novel approach to time management. They grew through community building on social media and Reddit while navigating the complex challenges of hardware manufacturing and competing against both traditional watches and feature-rich smartwatches.

First customers: Kickstarter campaign with pre-orders from backers interested in the concept after seeing campaign videos

2018HardwareProduct Hunt Launchone-time

ONAK

by Thomas Weyn, Otto, Dominique

ONAK is a hardware startup that created a high-performance, foldable origami canoe that can be assembled in 15 minutes and fits in a car or airplane. After 4 years of development, the team launched on Kickstarter in July 2016 and raised €235,000 (157% of goal) through viral media coverage including features in Business Insider Design and Time Magazine. The founders—an engineer, designer, and experienced outdoor sales manager—have grown the business through direct-to-consumer sales on their website plus retail partnerships and an ambassador program.

First customers: Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign

2016HardwareProduct Hunt Launchone-time

BestSelf

by Catherine and Alan

BestSelf is a beautifully designed undated journal that helps people set 13-week goals and build daily habits through a structured framework. The founders, Catherine and Alan, validated their concept on Kickstarter (raising $322,696 and selling 10,000+ units) before launching their Shopify store on January 1, 2016, generating $16,721.43 in sales within 12 days. With 70% profit margins and a highly engaged email list of 19,355 subscribers, they're scaling rapidly with virtual support while maintaining their primary focus on the physical product.

First customers: Kickstarter campaign with 10,000+ units sold at $24-$26 price point

2016HardwareProduct Hunt Launchone-time

Hand Ground

by Daniel Vitello

Hand Ground is a premium manual coffee grinder co-founded by Daniel Vitello that raised $309,000 in pre-sales on Kickstarter in 30 days through a strategic pre-launch campaign. The company built an Instagram following of 5,000 people before launch, then executed a viral referral campaign in December that leveraged direct messaging and a lottery-style rewards system to drive email signups. Post-Kickstarter, Hand Ground continues to generate daily sales through a link embedded on their Kickstarter page, while focusing on product development and manufacturing partnerships in China.

First customers: Kickstarter pre-launch campaign via Instagram direct messaging and email list building

2014HardwareProduct Hunt Launchone-time

Priority Bicycles

by Dave Weiner

Priority Bicycles is a hardware company founded by Dave Weiner in 2014 that creates low-maintenance bikes with rust-proof aluminum frames and carbon fiber belt drives. The company achieved major traction through a Kickstarter campaign that generated 1,500 orders, and has since grown to sell approximately 25,000 bikes annually across 25 models, with partnerships including hotels providing bikes for guests.

First customers: Kickstarter campaign

2014HardwareProduct Hunt Launchone-time

At Minute

by Nils Madison

At Minute, founded by Nils Madison (formerly at Apple's exploratory design group), makes a sensor called Point that monitors homes using sound and environmental data analysis instead of cameras, preserving privacy. The company raised $300,000 from angel investors including notable figures like Hampus Jacobson and Sean O'Sullivan, plus $250,000 from a successful Kickstarter campaign that achieved a 7% conversion rate. They've sold 4,000 units at $99 with plans to scale production while iterating on early feedback.

First customers: Kickstarter campaign validation

2013HardwareProduct Hunt Launchone-time

KOLOS

by Ivaylo Kalburdzhiev

KOLOS was an iPad racing wheel hardware product that burned through $50,000 over 3 years without achieving product-market fit. Founder Ivaylo Kalburdzhiev built the product without validating customer demand first, relying on expensive industrial designers and prototyping instead of lean MVP testing. The Kickstarter campaign in early 2015 raised only $4,000 from 48 backers, leading to shutdown—but Ivo learned from the failure to become a successful crowdfunding consultant.

First customers: Kickstarter campaign

2012HardwareProduct Hunt Launchone-time

Solo Stove

by Spencer Jan, Jeff Jan

Solo Stove grew from a modest DIY camping stove project into a 9-figure brand over nine years. Founded by brothers Spencer and Jeff Jan in 2010, they launched using Kickstarter and Amazon while operating remotely from Shanghai and Dallas. The brand achieved two 9-figure acquisitions, making both founders wealthy.

First customers: Kickstarter

2010HardwareProduct Hunt Launchone-time

Peak Design

by Peter Dering

Peak Design started when founder Peter Dering quit his construction engineering job with $25k in savings to build a camera clip after struggling to carry his camera during a four-month backpacking trip. Using SketchUp and crude prototypes, he validated the idea and launched on Kickstarter in 2011, raising $364,000 in their first campaign and becoming the second most-funded project on the platform at the time. The company has since grown to $65-70M in annual revenue with just 38 employees through disciplined product innovation, bootstrapped growth, and a focus on solving real problems rather than marketing.

First customers: Kickstarter - first backer was a random person from England who backed within 90 seconds of launch

2010HardwareProduct Hunt Launchone-time