Viral for Content Startups
How 13 content companies used viral to get traction. Real revenue data, growth timelines, and replicable strategies.
How They Got First Customers
Content Companies Using Viral
Connor (actor-turned-rapper) and Brianna (marketing strategist) built a viral music career on TikTok by combining creative skits with original hip-hop/rap songs. Starting from under $1,000/month, they hit a six-figure month after their "Spin the Globe" series went viral (72M views), and now average 60M Spotify streams monthly, generating approximately $240K MRR ($2.88M ARR) across streaming, YouTube, brand deals, syncs, and publishing. They operate independently, own 100% of their catalog, and have scaled to a family operation with multiple team members.
Connor and Breanna Price are music creators who went from warehouse work to generating over $200k per month through Spotify streams. Their viral 'Spinning The Globe' series and a video with 140M+ views catapulted them to fame, with recognition from artists like T-Pain and Russ. They've built a sustainable revenue stream through streaming and are discussing catalog sales worth $50M over 3-4 years.
MrBallen, founded by John Allen (a former Navy SEAL), is a content creator and storytelling platform that went viral on social media through compelling storytelling. The channel launched after a single story about the Dyatlov Pass gained traction on TikTok, which led to the creation of Ballen Studios as a broader creative venture.
Jenny Hoyos is an 18-year-old content creator who has mastered the art of creating viral short-form videos, accumulating over 100M views. In an episode of My First Million podcast, she breaks down her step-by-step process for viral content creation, covering techniques like crafting compelling hooks, foreshadowing, storytelling through change, and audience analysis.
Khan Academy is a free, non-profit educational platform founded by Sal Khan in 2009 that offers hundreds of tutorials in fifty languages. Starting from helping cousins with math homework, Khan posted tutorials on YouTube which went viral, eventually reaching 170 million monthly global users and becoming one of the world's most trusted teaching tools.
Dude Perfect started as a side project by Texas A&M students in the mid-2000s who posted trick shot videos on YouTube. After their first video went viral on Good Morning America, they spent five years building ad revenue and brand deals while working day jobs before committing fulltime in 2014. Today, their YouTube channel has more subscribers than the NBA, NFL, and NHL combined, and they've expanded into books, TV, live events, and a robust entertainment platform.
Dhar Mann Studios is a content creation powerhouse that produces bite-sized, live-action morality tales. Despite initial criticism and slow adoption, the channel has grown to 60 billion views across YouTube, Facebook, and other platforms, with a full production studio in Burbank and dozens of employees.
Nick DiGiovanni is a creator and entrepreneur who has built a massive following of over 15 million across YouTube and TikTok through viral food content featuring record-breaking culinary creations. Beyond his creator platform, he has launched analog business ventures including a DTC salt and seasoning company and a cookbook titled Knife Drop. His growth demonstrates the power of social media virality and content-driven audience building.
Hank and John Green started Vlogbrothers in 2007 as a way to stay connected via daily video blogs on YouTube, which became an early viral hit. The success led to the creation of Complexly, a production studio that creates educational content across multiple platforms. The brothers' philosophy of pursuing what's exciting and stressful has driven continuous expansion into books, media, and educational entertainment.
The Sorry Girls is a media company co-founded by YouTubers Kelsey MacDermaid and Becky Wright, who met as film students in 2010. Starting with DIY videos created for fun, they grew to over 2 million YouTube subscribers. The company navigates the creator economy through brand deals while maintaining their values.
DropIn Blog is a content platform co-founded by Jesse Schoberg that gained viral attention when a CNBC 'Make It' article about affordable living in Bangkok was shared widely both in Thailand and internationally. The piece sparked significant engagement and discussion across expat and travel communities, though it also attracted criticism regarding cost of living perspectives.
Emerson Spartz is a viral media entrepreneur who started MuggleNet at age 12, growing it to 50 million monthly page views through link swaps, content curation, and recruiting a 120-person team. He later founded Dose, a data-driven content platform that now reaches 15 million unique monthly visitors and 27 million social followers with just 6 writers and 50 total employees by leveraging machine learning algorithms (Kepler, Dante, Lindell, Lovelace, Darwin) to predict viral content and optimize headlines and thumbnails. The company has raised $35 million and monetizes through programmatic advertising while building native advertising products for brands.
Mr. Ballin Studios is a content media company founded by Navy SEAL veteran John Allen that creates mysterious and dark storytelling content. After a viral TikTok video about Dyatlov Pass garnered 5 million views in hours, Allen pivoted to content creation full-time, growing to 7 million TikTok subscribers and scaling to a 50+ person company with multiple shows, billions of views across platforms, and a podcast generating eight figures in monthly downloads.