Partnerships for SaaS Startups
How 119 saas companies used partnerships to get traction. Real revenue data, growth timelines, and replicable strategies.
Pricing Models
How They Got First Customers
SaaS Companies Using Partnerships
Living Security is a cybersecurity awareness training SaaS company that achieved 10X year-over-year growth, scaling from $10K MRR to $115K MRR in one year. Their unique hybrid model combines in-person escape room experiences (1/4 of revenue) with a SaaS platform for online training, driving exceptional economics: 1% gross revenue churn and 300-400% net revenue retention with 6-month CAC payback. The company is raising a Series A at a 10X+ revenue multiple to scale their direct sales model.
BOT platform is a no-code enterprise SaaS solution that enables HR and employee experience teams to build custom bots, digital assistants, and automated workflows within internal communication platforms like Microsoft Teams and Workplace from Facebook. Bootstrapped with only a small $300k friends and family round in 2018, the company has scaled to $110k MRR ($1.32M ARR SaaS + $800k in professional services) with 35 customers and strong 118% net revenue retention, maintaining founder control with 75% founder ownership.
JobPath is a SaaS-enabled marketplace that connects nonprofits, governments, and companies to support diversity and inclusion hiring. Founded in 2013 and pivoted to a licensing/SaaS model in 2018, the company grew from $600k ARR last year to $1.2M ARR this year while remaining bootstrapped. They serve 25 customers (major cities, nonprofits, and enterprises like Amazon, Uber, and Apple) and have 200,000 active job seekers in their system.
Muscat is a marketing performance management SaaS platform founded in 2014 by Oscar Nelson and a co-founder. After bootstrapping for a year with $200k in personal savings, they launched a beta product in 2015 with $100k in revenue, then grew 5x to $500k in 2016. By mid-2017, they reached $100k MRR with 60 customers and a $25k average annual contract value, having raised $1.2M from angels and seed funds.
Rank K.O. is a reputation management and monitoring service founded by Chris San Filippo that helps brands control how they appear online. Operating for one year with 50 active customers paying $1,000-$5,000 monthly (averaging ~$2,000-$2,500), the company generates approximately $100,000 in monthly recurring revenue. Chris acquired the first customer through Facebook ads targeting real estate agents and has since built partnerships with PR firms and criminal defense attorneys to drive growth.
GNU is a bootstrapped marketing automation and email marketing SaaS platform launched in 2008 by Kim Albee, serving small and mid-sized businesses with deep WordPress integration. Currently operating at $85k MRR with ~500 customers paying an average of $170/month, the company has achieved healthy 42% YoY growth while maintaining less than 5% monthly churn through a partnership-driven growth strategy focused on niches like continuing education and entrepreneurship.
Keytext, founded in 2010 by Narjesu Buffadin, started as a professional services firm focused on natural language processing before pivoting to a SaaS product in 2015. The platform helps businesses understand customer and employee disengagement by analyzing unstructured text feedback from multiple sources. With 30 customers, 20 employees in Montreal, and $4M raised, they're approaching $1M ARR with 5X year-over-year growth, driven primarily through partnerships with survey platforms and marketing agencies.
Packet Zoom is a mobile networking SaaS company founded in 2013 that optimizes mobile application performance in areas with poor network connectivity. CEO Shlomi Gian joined in mid-2016 when the company was pre-revenue and has grown it to ~$1M ARR with 68 customers through enterprise sales and strategic partnerships with CDN companies. The company plans to scale rapidly through partnerships with resellers and CDN partners, targeting millions in ARR by end of 2017.
CakeEquity is a cap table management platform for startup founders built by Kim Hansen after struggling with equity management in his previous ventures. The company launched in 2019, pivoted from blockchain, and achieved $70K MRR with 650 paying customers through a product-led growth shift and strategic partnerships. They've raised $4.5M total ($500K pre-seed, $1M seed, $3M series round) and are expanding globally across the US, UK, and Singapore.
RUPAfi is an embedded lending platform providing BNPL credit to small businesses in India's B2B marketplaces. Launched in July 2020, the company grew from $5,000 MRR in June to $60,000 MRR by September (10x growth in 3 months) by partnering with major platforms like Flipkart and Walmart's B2B divisions. The company operates as a managed marketplace, handling customer acquisition, underwriting, and collections while balance sheet partners provide the capital, with RUPAfi keeping 40% of transaction fees.
Seva Unistov spun LeanAnalytics out from his 100-person digital marketing agency in 2018, creating an omnichannel attribution platform. Starting with six customers from his agency network, the company grew from $25,000 MRR a year ago to $50,000 MRR today ($600K ARR), with 30 customers paying an average of $20,000 annually. The company raised $360K in pre-seed funding at a $5.3M post-money valuation and is targeting $1.5M in ARR for 2023.
Travel Flan is an AI-powered travel advisory service founded by Kenneth Lee that generates revenue through three streams: consumer subscriptions ($10/month), airline commissions (up to 30%), and data sales to airlines and OTAs ($60k/year). As of June 2016, the company had 2,000 paying customers, was generating approximately $50,000 MRR, and had raised $125,000 from 500 Startups with plans to raise $1.5M at a $5M pre-money valuation.
Shine is a pre-hire recruitment and screening SaaS platform founded by David Koppel in 2016 that uses video interviewing and values-based recruitment to reduce time and cost to hire by up to 70%. With 55 paying customers at $10k ARR each, the company has grown from $30k MRR to $45-50k MRR year-over-year with negative 5% net revenue churn and strong expansion revenue. They recently raised a $350k seed round and operate lean with a 10-person team in the UK, focusing on outbound sales and partnerships to scale.
Joseph 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.
Tweet Hunter is a bootstrapped SaaS that helps people build and monetize Twitter audiences. Co-founders Thomas Jacquesson and Tibo grew the product from zero to $41K/month in roughly a year through organic launches, free side products, and a key partnership with Twitter growth expert JK Molina. The tool now includes scheduling, automations, and a searchable tweet library, with the team aiming for $1M ARR.
Weblium is a bootstrapped SaaS platform founded by David Braun (who previously sold Template Monster for $100M in 2013) that subsidizes website creation for $400 and then charges $10/month for ongoing hosting, maintenance, and management. Launched in late 2017, it has grown to 3,250 paying customers generating $425k ARR with 0% churn so far, powered entirely by strategic partnerships with banks, incubators, and business registrars rather than paid advertising.
AnchorMyData, founded by MIT PhD Emre Coxeal, provides zero-trust data security that integrates protection at the file level, allowing secure data access from anywhere. After two years of development funded by a $1.5M pre-seed round, the company launched its POC program in 2021 and scaled to 33 customers and $30k MRR within a year, primarily through a partner-driven go-to-market model with MSPs and resellers earning 30-40% commissions in perpetuity.
Junior Explorers is an edtech social enterprise founded by Wall Street veteran Anarog Agrawal that combines physical mission kits with gamified virtual adventures to inspire kids about wildlife and nature conservation. Launched in December 2014, the company reached $30,000 MRR with over 5,000 global subscribers across 3 countries within 10 months, growing 40-50% month-over-month organically through institutional partnerships with zoos, aquariums, and conservation nonprofits.
WebBoss is a no-code website and app builder launched in 2015 that positions itself as a true WordPress alternative. Operating primarily through referral partnerships with large enterprises like Reach PLC, the company generates approximately $20,000 MRR from around 200 SaaS customers with nearly nil churn, while supplementing revenue with custom services work. Though growth has been flat due to limited marketing budget and COVID-19 impacts, the company maintains strong retention and is exploring brand awareness through an AppSumo lifetime deal launch.
Shopinpal, founded in 2014 by Shuram Shubhamanian, provides data migration and system integration services for small retailers moving to the cloud. The company operates on a hybrid model combining custom development fees (currently 70% of revenue, targeting under 20% by March) with recurring SaaS subscription revenue. With 153 paying customers spanning 1000+ locations globally, Shopinpal has grown to ~$20k MRR in pure SaaS revenue and expects to hit $1M ARR by July.