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Top Growth Channels in This Segment
Matching Case Studiesnewest first
Xpovi
by Mustafa HishamXpovi is an Egypt-based SaaS platform that automates financial business planning for startups through an AI-driven questionnaire. Launched in January 2024, they've sold 20 one-time licenses at $249 each ($4,980 revenue) to customers like TGS, a grocery delivery company. The founders are planning to pivot to a subscription model within months, adding a dashboard for continuous financial modeling and reporting.
First customers: Direct sales to TGS (a grocery delivery startup in Egypt)
Rebase
by Peter LevelsRebase is an immigration-as-a-service platform that helps remote workers and digital nomads establish residency in Portugal. Founded by Peter Levels, it went viral on Twitter when he shared a casual photo of building the landing page, generating thousands of sign-ups. The platform now serves approximately 9% of all people moving to Portugal annually, processing around 400-500 sign-ups per month with $30-50k MRR.
First customers: Twitter viral tweet - Peter posted a photo of himself building the landing page with tweet 'POV building an immigration as a service startup' which went viral
Thanksbox
by Val HinoffThanksbox is a digital card and cash collection platform that lets teams celebrate occasions (birthdays, departures, weddings) without the friction of physical cards. Founded by Val Hinoff in May 2020 during the pandemic, the bootstrapped SaaS reached $18,000 MRR within 15-16 months by identifying a strong product-market fit with built-in viral loops (users must share the card to use it) and scaling via Google Ads with a $2 cost per acquisition against a $5.99 base price point.
First customers: Direct outreach to known contacts in tech community; first paying customer was a University buddy working at Ubisoft who bought within an hour of launch
SoloSuit
by George SimonsSoloSuit helps consumers fight debt collection lawsuits by allowing them to generate legal response documents for free, then paying $197 to have an attorney review and file the document. Started in 2018 as a free service during law school, the company pivoted to a paid filing service in 2019 and has grown to process 400 cases per month ($80k/month revenue) through almost entirely SEO-driven customer acquisition. The team of 6 recently raised less than $1 million in seed funding from Y Combinator to scale engineering and automate filing across thousands of U.S. courts.
First customers: SEO - people searching for 'how to respond to debt collection lawsuit' on Google or YouTube
Thrive Cart
by JoshThrive Cart is a platform for selling digital products online that generated over $1 billion in annual GMV at exit. Founded by Josh in 2016 as a bootstrapped company with no outside funding, it grew steadily and profitably to $5M revenue before being acquired for $35 million in an eight-figure deal. The buyer tripled revenue post-acquisition by renegotiating partnership terms with Stripe, demonstrating significant unexplored growth potential.
VidHug
by Zemir KhanVidHug is a one-time payment B2C platform that lets users create and share group video compilations for special occasions. After years of slow growth as a side project ($600-$1,000/month from 2018-2020), the COVID-19 pandemic triggered exponential viral growth as people couldn't celebrate in person. Revenue went from $1,000/month in February 2020 to six figures in April 2020, with daily active users growing from 250 to 80,000. The company was acquired by Punchbowl Networks in 2021 for an undisclosed amount.
First customers: Manual service offering to family and friends, validating demand before building automated solution
Be True Brand U
by Kimra LunaKimra Luna launched Be True Brand U, a $2,000 digital course program, in May 2014 and generated $880,000 in first-year revenue (May 2014-February 2015) through a combination of Facebook ads and webinars. She grew her email list from 5,000 to 10,000+ people and built a 20,000-member Facebook community, using a strategy of list-building with a free mini course, retargeting existing audience members through webinars, and aggressive email campaigns on launch closing days.
First customers: Webinar attendees from Facebook ad-driven list building and retargeting campaigns
Yo Shirt
by Ben WilliamsonYo Shirt is a mobile app enabling users to design and order custom on-demand apparel directly from their iOS device. Founded in 2014 by Ben Williamson (former senior-level Apple engineer), the company raised $1.1M in a priced equity round in early 2015 and reached $3M in revenue by end of 2015, with projections to hit $10M in 2016. Growth was driven primarily through strategic brand partnerships (notably Fallout Boy, which generated over 1,000 units in a single tour activation) and organic marketing including Apple App Store features.
Learn Scrivener Fast
by Joseph MichaelJoseph Michael built Learn Scrivener Fast, a one-time-purchase online course teaching writers how to master Scrivener software, generating $500,000 in revenue in 2015 (averaging $40-42k/month). Starting from a $60k/year casino job with no email list, he grew the business through strategic JV partnerships with influential writers, leveraging a 30% conversion rate on webinars and building a targeted email list of 60,000+ subscribers. His model demonstrates how teaching strategy around an existing tool can be more profitable than the software itself.
First customers: JV partnership webinar with Jeff Gawins (GawinsRider.com)
Ashley Bridget
by Scott HutchisonAshley Bridget is an e-commerce jewelry brand founded by Scott Hutchison in 2013 that scaled to $8.2 million in annual revenue by 2015 through Instagram influencer partnerships and viral promotional campaigns. The company grew from $1.5 million in 2013 to $4.5 million in 2014 (the year they raised $800K for 10% equity) and $8.2 million in 2015, moving approximately 25,000 orders per month with strong customer retention focus. Scott's model emphasized acquiring customers through discounted offers on Instagram and deal sites, then converting them into repeat purchasers through product quality and customer experience.
First customers: Instagram influencer outreach - paid $50-100 to influencers with over 1 million followers to promote a 50% off accessory offer