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Matching Case Studiesnewest first
TimeLift
by Maxime BarbierTimeLift is a dinner club marketplace that connects strangers for weekly curated dinners in 300+ cities. After 3 years and 2 failed app iterations (bucket list and dream-based dating), founder Maxime Barbier pivoted to an ops-heavy, tech-light model in 2024, launching with just Typeform, WhatsApp, and Stripe. In 10 months, the company reached $12.5M ARR, 70 employees, 18,000 dinners per week, and 1M Instagram followers through paid ads and viral organic traction fueled by the resonant mission of combating post-COVID loneliness.
First customers: Founder manually organized and promoted dinners in his city, recruiting first participants directly
Ember
by Kurt AverallEmber is a fractional vacation home ownership marketplace that allows buyers to purchase 1/8th to 1/2 ownership stakes in high-end vacation homes across the West Coast. Founded by Kurt Averall, who previously built Canopy (accounting software) to $70M in funding, Ember has generated approximately $3.6M in one-time uplift revenue in its first 10 months by buying homes, furnishing them, and reselling shares with a 12% markup. The company has achieved strong product-market fit with 100+ families buying in and is on track to exceed $100M in GMV this year.
Live Oak Lake
by IsaacIsaac, a 24-year-old with $19,000 in savings, built Live Oak Lake—a seven-cabin luxury micro resort in rural Texas—in 9.5 months for $2.3M by securing hard money loans from family and profiting from a spec home sale. After Airbnb suspended him two weeks post-launch, he pivoted to direct bookings via Instagram influencer marketing, achieving 95% occupancy with 80% direct bookings in year one, generating $1.1M in annual revenue. He sold the property for $7M in October (2.5 years after construction) to a private equity group, with the strong brand and email list being key value drivers.
First customers: Travel influencer partnership - paid $950 for an influencer post that generated 40,000 in direct bookings after Airbnb suspension
SkilledUp.life
by Manoj RanawiraSkilledUp.life is a two-sided marketplace launched in August 2020 that connects volunteer tech talent with early-stage bootstrapped tech companies. Currently generating $1,000/month in revenue from 30 paying customers while managing a platform of 27,000 volunteer profiles. Founder Manoj Ranawira is bootstrapped with a team of five and plans to build V2 to better track placements and improve customer onboarding.
Restworld
by Luca LotarioRestworld is a recruiting-as-a-service platform that helps restaurants, hotels, and bars in Italy find and hire staff. Founded in February 2020 by four co-founders (two psychologists and two engineers), the company has grown from 8,000 euros to 33,000 euros in monthly revenue in one year through Meta advertising and customer success managers who manage the hiring process. They've raised capital efficiently from customers and investors, with the most recent 265,000 euro seed round at a 3.2 million euro post-money valuation.
First customers: Direct outreach and word of mouth from restaurants where Luca worked and studied
My Auto Shop
by Andy BowieMy Auto Shop is a New Zealand-based marketplace that connects customers with vetted, trusted mechanics—positioning itself as the 'Airbnb for car maintenance.' Founded by Andy Bowie after his tenure at Uber, the startup pivoted from an Uber Eats-style pickup model to a booking platform focused on upfront pricing and trustworthiness during COVID lockdowns. After 11 months of operation, the team is preparing for growth and fundraising in 2021.
First customers: National newspaper coverage led to jobs coming through after launch
GrowthMentor
by Foti PanagioGrowthMentor is a two-sided marketplace connecting entrepreneurs and growth marketers with vetted mentors for 1:1 Skype calls, charging $99/year per mentee. Foti Panagio bootstrapped the platform from his own pain point of rapid skill-building through expert calls rather than courses, launching the public beta in October 2018 after 3 months of customer development and 6 months of development. Through community-focused word-of-mouth marketing via Facebook groups, LinkedIn, and niche communities, the platform grew to $3.5K/month ARR by June 2019, with mentors becoming natural advocates due to their strong networks in the startup ecosystem.
First customers: Facebook group post in SaaS Growth Hacks community where founder shared the platform story
SinOficina
by Bosco SolerSinOficina is an online coworking community for Spanish-speaking freelancers and entrepreneurs that Bosco Soler built to solve his own isolation as a remote worker. Starting with 30 early adopters from his email list, the community grew to 500+ paying members generating €5k/month (approximately $5,500 USD) through word-of-mouth alone, with only 3% churn. The business demonstrates that authentic community-building and trust can drive sustainable growth without paid advertising.
First customers: Email list of 800 subscribers with a time-limited launch offer for early adopters (30 people joined in the first week)
Cameo
by Steven GalanisCameo is a marketplace that lets fans purchase personalized video messages from celebrities and influencers. Co-founders Steven Galanis, Martin Blumenau, and Devin Townsend launched the platform after realizing that meaningful celebrity interaction—even from mid-tier celebrities—was incredibly valuable to fans. The platform grew from zero traction at launch to significant scale by focusing on authentic, low-friction content and discovering that Vine stars and content creators with strong personalities (rather than just fame) drove the most demand.
First customers: A father in Washington whose daughter was a fan of Cassius Marsh reached out via Twitter DM after the launch when he encountered a payment processing issue. He requested the video be created manually, and after receiving it and filming his daughter's reaction, that became the first successful transaction and validation moment for the platform.
Autto.in
by Deepak MurthyAutto.in was an on-demand doorstep car maintenance service operating in Hyderabad, India, founded by Deepak Murthy in 2017. The startup acquired customers through guerrilla marketing at apartment complexes but faced unsustainable unit economics with a $12 customer acquisition cost and long 10-12 month retention cycles. The business failed after burning $15,000 in initial investment against only $5,000 in revenue, eventually shutting down due to high burn rates and concern about the Indian government's announcement to phase out gasoline vehicles by 2030.
First customers: Leaflet distribution across a community of 2000 houses, which converted only 1 customer