← Home

What Works for Startups Like Yours?

Pick your category, pricing model, or growth channel — see what worked for similar founders.

New: Try the Growth Diagnostic — get a specific recommendation based on your startup type, not just a filtered list.Clear all filters
3
Matching Startups
2
With Revenue Data
$18k
Average MRR
$25k
Highest MRR

Matching Case Studiesnewest first

Open Sponsorship

by Ishwin Anand

Open Sponsorship is a two-sided marketplace connecting brands to athletes and sports sponsorship opportunities. Founded by Ishwin Anand (Forbes 30 Under 30), the company grew from a free marketplace to a subscription-based model, generating ~$10K MRR in February 2016 with 25 paying brand customers and 700+ registered users. The founder aims to reach $240K MRR (~$3M ARR) by end of 2016 through building a trained sales team.

2015MarketplaceCold Emailsubscription
$10k/mo

Roost

by Jonathan Gillan

Roost is a peer-to-peer marketplace founded in November 2013 by Jonathan Gillan that allows people to monetize unused spaces (garages, attics, basements, driveways) to neighbors seeking storage or parking. The company takes a 15% cut from transactions and grew from $2 in first month revenue to $25,000 MRR as of May 2016 (running at $300K ARR), with 650-700 unique sellers listing approximately 2,000 spaces and 500-600 buyers. Gillan raised $4.9M in venture capital (with $3.5M in Series Seed at $12M pre-money valuation) and built a 17-person team based in San Francisco, expanding to cities like New York, LA, Washington DC, and beyond.

First customers: Door-to-door outreach and direct sales, including sitting outside a storage facility shutdown in San Francisco with flyers to convert customers moving out of the facility.

2013MarketplaceCold Emailsubscription
$25k/mo

PubLoft

by Mat Sherman

PubLoft was a marketplace connecting writers with companies seeking managed blog services at $2,000/month subscription. Mat Sherman grew it from $0 to $24K MRR in 7 months using cold email outreach and personal sales, securing a $100K investment from Jason Calacanis. The company ultimately failed due to loss of key clients, reckless spending post-funding, and misalignment with co-founder Jeremy on strategic priorities.

First customers: Cold email outreach to YCombinator startups via YCList platform

MarketplaceCold Emailsubscription