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Matching Case Studiesnewest first
Organize.app
by Andrew FanOrganize.app, launched in March 2024 by Andrew Fan, is a Slack application that brings org charts and HR tools into Slack for smaller, growing teams. With 5 paying customers across ~200 seats generating ~$400 MRR, the product was bootstrapped as a side project within Andrew's 55-person consulting and agency business (Upsilon). All customers came organically from the Slack App Exchange through keyword optimization.
First customers: Slack App Exchange organic search - customer found them by searching 'org' related keywords in the Slack marketplace
Threads
by Mark ZuckerbergThreads is Meta's text-based social network launched in July 2023, reaching 100 million users in its first week by leveraging Instagram's existing user base. The platform positioned itself as a kinder, more moderated alternative to Twitter, with Meta's 20 years of experience managing abuse and spam. Early traction shows potential to disrupt Twitter despite questions about long-term retention and whether it can sustain growth beyond early adopters.
First customers: Instagram integration - existing Instagram users imported directly
Cars and Bids
by Doug DeMuroDoug DeMuro, a popular YouTube car reviewer with 4 million subscribers, launched Cars and Bids in June 2020 as a modern alternative to Bring a Trailer. The platform focuses on 1980s-onward cars and generated 75 million in gross sales in 2021. In 2022, Doug sold a majority stake to Churn Group (a PE firm specializing in creator-led businesses) for approximately 40 million dollars, allowing him to scale operations while maintaining creative control.
First customers: Incentivized submission program - offered $1,000 for first 50 cars and $500 for next 50 cars listed on platform
Pull Reminders
by Abi NodaAbi Noda bootstrapped Pull Reminders from a side project into a SaaS product serving over 400 companies including Pivotal, Instacart, WeWork, and Trivago. Launched in January 2019 and acquired its first paying customers through direct outreach to early Slack App Directory users, with significant growth acceleration after being featured in the GitHub Marketplace in April 2019. The product uses a per-developer subscription model ($2/month per developer across $10, $49, and $99 monthly plans) and Abi intentionally focused on solving a real pain point he experienced as an engineering manager.
First customers: Personal outreach to early users who signed up through the Slack App Directory; Abi emailed them to understand their needs, made product improvements based on feedback, then asked if they would pay.
Amazon FBA Business (Confidential)
by PaulPaul built and sold a private-label e-commerce business on Amazon FBA, starting with $5,000 and no employees while working full-time. His first product failed, but his second product launched in fall 2016 and generated almost six figures in revenue in the first partial year. He grew the business to seven figures in revenue by 2017, then sold it in early 2019 via Quiet Light Brokers for a 3x EBITDA multiple, prioritizing freedom and family time over continued scaling.
First customers: Amazon organic search/algorithm after pricing product competitively and generating initial reviews
Reamaze
by Lou WangReamaze is a multi-channel customer support platform serving primarily e-commerce brands, with 60-70% of its 2,500+ paying customer logos in that vertical. The company has grown from ~$1M ARR in 2017 to $3M ARR by 2020, with 10,000 seats across customers, while maintaining profitability with just an 18-person team. Growth has been driven primarily through the Shopify and Big Commerce app marketplaces, supplemented by paid advertising and direct sales efforts.
Dev Slopes
by Mark PriceDev Slopes is a learn-to-code platform founded in March 2016 that generated $600k in first-year revenue primarily through affiliate partnerships on Udemy (90% of revenue) with over 100k students. They recently launched their own SaaS subscription model at $20/month, acquiring 130 subscribers in the first month ($2.6k MRR), with a goal to reach $1M annual revenue. The company raised $500k total ($190k from Kickstarter and $300k from private investor) and operates with an 8-person team.
First customers: Community blast from existing audience built through Kickstarter campaign
Monticelli Band
by Elijah MonticelliElijah Monticelli, 23, went from being $5,000 in debt living in his parents' basement to launching a handmade Apple Watch cuff band business in September 2015. Within two months (by mid-November 2015), he had sold over 30 bands at $169 each for ~$6,000 in revenue, with 70% of sales coming from Etsy. His bootstrapped business grew primarily through the Etsy marketplace after initial customers came via Google Ads, though he intentionally slowed growth to focus on product development rather than scaling sales.
First customers: Google Ads through Shopify's AdWords credit program
Aircall
by Olivier R. PayeesAircall is a cloud-based phone support software founded by Olivier R. Payees that launched in June 2015. The company grew from $10,000 in first month revenue to ~$100,000 MRR by December 2015 (30% month-over-month growth) through a combination of direct outreach and strategic product integrations. They've achieved negative churn and recently raised $2.8M in seed funding on top of an initial $500K investment.
First customers: Direct outreach to identified verticals (marketplaces, SaaS companies)
Privy
by Ben JiboiePrivy is a freemium SaaS platform launched in January 2015 by Ben Jiboie to help e-commerce brands convert more website traffic into leads and sales through exit-intent offers and lifecycle email automation. The company achieved explosive growth by becoming the #1 marketing app on the Shopify App Store, reaching 5,000+ paying customers with $250k MRR and $3.1M ARR by the time of this interview. Growth doubled year-over-year through platform partnerships, strong product-market fit for SMB e-commerce, and exceptional customer support that drives organic reviews and trust.