Content Marketing for SaaS Startups
How 167 saas companies used content marketing to get traction. Real revenue data, growth timelines, and replicable strategies.
Pricing Models
How They Got First Customers
SaaS Companies Using Content Marketing
LiveAgent is a bootstrapped SaaS help desk software that started as a spin-off from Post Affiliate Pro and grew from $20k to $250k MRR over 4 years under David Cacik's growth leadership. The company achieved traction through a combination of PPC, content marketing, SEO, and particularly by building a strong presence on software review directories with incentivized customer reviews. Now LiveAgent accounts for 75% of the parent company's revenue, competing successfully against well-funded competitors like Zendesk and Freshdesk.
ScholarshipOwl leverages machine learning and AI to match American students with scholarship opportunities, operating as a subscription SaaS product at $15/month. Founded in 2015 and bootstrapped until 2024, the company has grown to 15,000 paying customers and 1.5 million total users, generating approximately $220,000+ in monthly revenue with a 6 million person email list. Growth is driven primarily through content marketing and PPC advertising, with partnerships generating additional revenue through revenue-sharing arrangements.
Adam Robinson launched RB2B in March 2024 as a B2B lead generation tool after building Retention.com to $23.8M ARR with 6 employees. Using controversial LinkedIn storytelling (including posting about a cease-and-desist letter), he generated 1,600+ leads pre-launch with a 10% free-to-paid conversion rate. RB2B grew from $0 to $200K MRR by September 2024, adding an average of $60K new MRR per month, driven primarily by organic LinkedIn content and a simple freemium model.
Rock Ivan launched an outbound sales agency in 2021 that grew to 20 customers and $20k MRR, but the internal cold email tool they built became their real opportunity. After pivoting to Instantly.ai in May 2021, the team of four co-founders (one developer, three marketing/sales) grew to 2,900 customers and $200k MRR in just nine months, entirely bootstrapped. They leveraged their agency success stories, AppSumo distribution, and their own tool for customer acquisition—using content marketing (Twitter, YouTube, Facebook group with 6k members) as their fastest-growing channel.
Stackify is an Application Performance Monitoring (APM) SaaS platform founded by Matt Watson in 2012 to help software developers debug and troubleshoot production applications. The company bootstrapped to $1.2M ARR by 2017 with 900+ customers before raising $3M in outside capital, achieving 80% year-over-year growth driven primarily by content marketing that generates 800,000 website visitors monthly.
Walls.io is a bootstrapped SaaS social media wall platform launched in 2014 by Michael Komleitner in Vienna, Austria. The company aggregates user-generated content from multiple social media platforms and displays it on physical screens for events, retail locations, and websites. With 500 customers generating $166,000 monthly in revenue (up from $70,000 a year prior), Walls.io demonstrates 60-70% year-over-year growth despite 10% monthly churn in its event-focused segment.
Revenue Cat is a SaaS platform providing SDKs and APIs that help mobile app developers implement in-app subscriptions without building complex backend infrastructure. Founded by Jacob Eiting and Miguel in 2017, the company grew from $0 MRR with heavy reliance on content marketing (6-12 hours/week writing technical blog posts) to $400 MRR after 2 months of consistent content, then to $7K MRR by late 2018. After joining Y Combinator and raising a $1.5M seed round, Revenue Cat leveraged a smart pricing structure aligned with customer revenue growth and strong word-of-mouth to reach $161K MRR ($1.93M ARR) by July 2020, with continued month-over-month growth driven by expansion revenue and organic adoption within the developer community.
AdEspresso is a Facebook advertising optimization platform for SMBs spending $5K-$100K monthly on ads. Founded by Armando Beyondi (who had previously founded 5 other companies), it raised $1.2M in convertible notes through 500 Startups and grew to ~1,000 paying customers by August 2015. The company achieved $150K MRR ($1.8M ARR) and profitability primarily through inbound content marketing, with a blog generating 180,000+ monthly uniques.
Channel Grabber is a multi-channel e-commerce SaaS platform founded in 2012 that helps online retailers manage sales across eBay, Amazon, Etsy, and Walmart from a single dashboard. After reaching a plateau, Mike Morgan took over as CEO in April 2017 and drove a 33% year-on-year growth by investing heavily in product development and content marketing, scaling from 85k to 110k MRR and acquiring 800 customers. The company is bootstrapped with $400k in venture debt and is targeting cash flow positivity while preparing a funding round of up to $3M at a $6-9M pre-money valuation.
App Attentive, founded in 2011 by Robi Ganguli and three co-founders, provides a SaaS platform enabling mobile app developers to communicate with users, gather feedback, and conduct customer research. After a two-year gestation period of part-time work following an inspiring conversation in 2008, the team built an MVP in 30 days and spent a grueling year acquiring their first two paying customers through manual outreach and content marketing before pivoting upmarket to enterprise clients like Yahoo, Overstock, and Urban Spoon, eventually reaching over $100k MRR.
Attraction is an industrial IoT and SaaS platform that helps frontline workers and maintenance managers predict and prevent machinery breakdowns through sensor monitoring and asset management software. The company grew from $10,000 MRR a year ago to $100,000 MRR today (10x growth), with 100 customers managing approximately 4,000 sensors across industries like aerospace. They raised a $3.7M seed round at a $15-20M valuation and are experiencing strong unit economics with 118% net dollar retention.
Slide Rule is an online educational institution founded in 2013 that teaches data science and UX design paired with one-on-one mentorship from industry experts. The company generates approximately $100,000 MRR ($1.2M ARR) through a $300/month subscription model with courses lasting 2-3 months. They've grown to nearly 1,000 total students through content marketing, particularly blog posts that rank on the front page of Google for searches like 'Learn UX Design,' with an email list of 80-90k free users converting at 2-3% monthly.
Hubstaff is a bootstrapped SaaS time tracking and activity monitoring platform launched in 2013 by Dave Nevo and his partner Jared. As of March 2016, the company had 2,600 paying customers with an average revenue per user of $34/month, had just crossed $88K MRR (approaching $1M ARR), and maintained a healthy 3.9% customer churn rate. Growth was driven primarily through content marketing (40K monthly blog views) and viral effects as contractors brought in their managers from other companies.
Eola is a management platform and marketplace for activity centers that automates booking, scheduling, and payment processing. Starting from a beta with 5 customers in 2018, the founders grew to £1M/mo through customer-centric content marketing, SEO, and referrals, nearly 5x-ing revenue during the COVID-19 pandemic by positioning their usage-based pricing model as ideal for businesses facing uncertainty.
Event Espresso is a WordPress plugin and SaaS platform that allows users to sell tickets to events, positioning itself as an Eventbrite alternative. Seth Schultz launched the plugin in 2009 to solve his wife's scrapbooking class ticketing needs, and after reaching $2,000/month on his own, he quit his job in 2011 when the business grew to $20,000/month. Today, the bootstrapped company generates $80,000/month from 20,000 paying customers across two platforms (the WordPress plugin and their SaaS offering EventSmart), processing over 100 million in ticket sales per month.
Rank Science is a CDN-based SaaS platform that automates SEO through continuous A/B testing of on-page HTML changes. Founded by Ryan Bednor (a software engineer-turned-SEO consultant) and co-founder Dylan Forest, the company grew from $28K MRR at Y Combinator entry to $80K MRR in just three months through content marketing (case studies on Hacker News), press coverage (TechCrunch), and leveraging Ryan's existing network of SEO-focused companies.
Week Done is a bootstrapped team productivity SaaS founded in 2013 by serial entrepreneur Yuri Kalundi. The Estonian startup charges $7 per user per month for weekly check-in and quarterly goal-setting features, serving 900+ companies with 10,700+ paying users and generating $75k MRR. Growing via content marketing with a lean 12-person team, Week Done maintains a healthy CAC payback period of 7-8 months but faces 50% annual churn, a challenge they're addressing through improved customer training and moving upmarket toward HR departments.
Fizzle is a membership-based training platform for independent entrepreneurs launched by Corbett Barr in late 2012. With 2,000 active members paying $35/month, the company generates approximately $70,000 in monthly recurring revenue through content marketing (blog, free guides, and a weekly podcast that reaches 10,000 listeners) which accounts for over 60% of signups. The team of four maintains a 60-65% free trial to paid conversion rate and achieves steady growth by focusing on simplicity, transparency, and delivering genuine value to aspiring business builders.
Josh Pigford built Bear Metrics in just 7-8 days in November 2013 to solve his own pain point: tracking key SaaS metrics from Stripe data. He launched directly on Twitter without a landing page or beta, sold his first $250/month customer within 8 days, and grew to $14k MRR in 6 months. By 2017, Bear Metrics had reached $70k MRR through a combination of strategic partnerships (like Buffer), transparency (public dashboards), and content marketing, while raising $800k from the Stripe Platform Fund.
Engage Rocket is a SaaS platform using real-time analytics to help mid-market enterprises (500-5,000 employees) improve talent retention and productivity. Founded in October 2016 by Chi-Tung Leong, the company grew from zero to $60,000 MRR through content marketing, PR, and community building, with a 101% net revenue retention rate and 9-month CAC payback period. The company has raised $1.1M seed funding and is currently raising a $3-5M Series A round.