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Matching Case Studiesnewest first
Hoppin
by Johnny BafferatHoppin is a virtual event platform founded by Johnny Bafferat that achieved unicorn status (over $1 billion valuation) in approximately 10-12 months. Launched in February 2020 just as COVID-19 forced events online, the company scaled from 6 people to nearly 300 employees in 9 months by leveraging remote hiring, employee referrals, and a viral product with a 3-5% conversion rate from event attendees to event organizers. The company raised $180 million total and was valued at $32 million in January 2020.
First customers: Waitlist - companies contacted them requesting to move events online during COVID-19 in February 2020
SwagUp
by Michael MartocciSwagUp is a branded swag creation and distribution platform that Michael Martocci bootstrapped from his mom's house to over $500k/month revenue in under 4 years. With 2,500+ clients and a team of 150+, the company leveraged an inherent viral loop where recipients of swag inquire about the source, driving inbound leads. The business was built with a scrappy initial tech stack (Wix, Typeform, Trello) and scaled through obsessive focus on customer experience and viral growth rather than traditional marketing channels.
First customers: Google Ads - early testing that led to validation and initial customers like Soylent
Dollar Shave Club
by Michael DubinDollar Shave Club started when Michael Dubin, a marketing professional with improv comedy training, met Mark Levine who had razors to sell. Dubin created a viral launch video that became iconic, attracting investors and customers. Five years after launching, the company sold to Unilever for $1 billion in cash, becoming one of the most well-known early DTC brands.
First customers: Viral launch video
Rightly
by Sam SchalacheRightly was a groundbreaking web-based word processor founded in 2005 by Sam Schalache and co-founders that pioneered real-time collaborative document editing in the browser. The product gained rapid traction after advertising on Google and being featured on TechCrunch, becoming one of the first points on the curve that demonstrated viable web-based office applications. Google acquired Rightly, and it became the foundation for Google Docs, which now has over 1 billion active monthly users.
First customers: Organic/word-of-mouth from early users who discovered it through Google advertising and technical press coverage
Flodesk
by Martha BitarFlodesk is a bootstrapped email marketing SaaS that reached $27M ARR with 80,000 paying customers and just 51 employees—no VC funding required. Co-founder Martha Bitar hit $1M ARR in just 4 months by obsessively validating customer pain, stripping features down to their essence (simple "flows"), and embedding a viral "Made in Flodesk" footer that turned every customer email into a distribution channel. Their flat-rate $35/month unlimited pricing became an accidental competitive moat against per-subscriber competitors like MailChimp.
First customers: Viral loop strategy with 'Made in Flodesk' footer that turned customer emails into distribution channels; got first 500 customers in days
Revos.ai
A founder who exited his first company launched Revos.ai, a revenue operations platform, after his Customer Health Tracking excel template went viral on LinkedIn. The viral post directly converted to 6 paying customers at $500/month, demonstrating strong product-market fit validation through organic social discovery.
First customers: LinkedIn viral post of excel template
Captions
by Gorav MisraCaptions is an AI-powered video creation platform founded by Gorav Misra, a former design engineering lead at Snap. The app enables anyone to generate and edit talking videos with AI, democratizing video creation for non-professionals. With over 10 million users and $100M+ in funding, Captions achieved viral growth by shipping innovative features like AI eye contact correction and maintaining a unique product development methodology where every engineer ships a marketable feature weekly.
Umax
Umax is a viral mobile app that uses AI to rate users' physical attractiveness and provide personalized grooming and fitness advice to help them improve their appearance. Founded by an entrepreneur who observed the lookmaxxing trend on Reddit, the app has achieved 3.5 million downloads with 5,000 new signups per day and is generating $6M ARR through a $3.99/week subscription model, capitalizing on the growing cultural shift of men investing in personal aesthetics.
First customers: Reddit communities (lookmaxxing and male grooming subreddits)
Miss Excel
by Miss ExcelMiss Excel is a creator who went viral on TikTok teaching Microsoft Excel tips and tricks through entertaining short-form videos. After getting featured in major publications, she created a course business that now generates six figures per month with minimal overhead (just a $97/month Thinkific subscription and a virtual assistant). She's expanding into the full Microsoft suite and using paid ads to amplify already-viral content, with a goal to reach $1M/month in revenue.
First customers: TikTok viral content
Salesbricks
by Jonathan FestejoSalesbricks, founded by Jonathan Festejo (former RevOps lead at multiple unicorns), raised $250K in friends-and-family funding before building any product. After spending two years unsuccessfully targeting enterprise buyers with 3-month sales cycles, Jonathan pivoted down-market to founders doing $500K-$2M ARR, cutting sales cycles from 3 months to 5 days. Today the company serves 100+ customers at $1M ARR, with viral growth driven by a "Powered By" button embedded in contracts.
First customers: Early adopters from RevOps network and direct outreach to founders doing $500K-$2M ARR