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Content Marketing Playbook

How 360 startups used content marketing to grow. Here's what the data says about what they actually did.

360
Companies
$290k
Avg MRR
$5.0M
Top MRR
48%
$50k+ Hit Rate

Most Used Tools (275 companies)

Twitter57 (21%)
YouTube46 (17%)
Facebook41 (15%)
Slack34 (12%)
LinkedIn24 (9%)
Instagram20 (7%)
Stripe16 (6%)
Google Analytics16 (6%)
Evernote16 (6%)
Facebook Ads15 (5%)
HubSpot13 (5%)
Email marketing13 (5%)
iTunes13 (5%)
Google Docs12 (4%)
Amazon12 (4%)

How They Got Their First Customer

word-of-mouth from listeners telling friends about quality podcast content1
organic signup through free plan with later paywall conversion (2014)1
organic attention from a review of Radiohead's Kid A that went viral online1
inbound through content marketing1
inbound - sponsor found MakerMind on Product Hunt1
discovery sessions with early users1
Zapier partnership - Zapier founders saw the Hacker News post and reached out, leading to integration and referrals1
YouTube tutorial on Halloween costume1
YouTube organic - early subscribers from gaming communities1
YouTube channel comments - viewers asking when he would release a course1

Time to PMF

6 months8
3 years5
4 years3
9 months2
5 years2
4-5 months2
3 weeks2
3 months2
2 years2
under two years1

Top Companies by MRR (360)

Magnificby Vincent Dignan

Vincent Dignan runs Magnific, a growth hacking and consulting agency that helps startups and companies get traffic and customers. He has a small number of high-value clients paying $5,000-$10,000 per month for personalized growth consulting, and is expanding his reach through a book called "The Growth Hacking Playbook" on Kickstarter, speaking engagements, and content marketing. His growth hacking talk was voted best workshop at South by Southwest, and he has established himself as a thought leader by teaching specific, actionable tactics for finding customers and driving traffic.

Agencycontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$5k/mo
Savvy Sexy Social / Social Authority Membershipby Amy Schmetawa

Amy Schmetawa built Savvy Sexy Social, a video content strategy platform, starting with YouTube videos in 2008 and growing a community of 2+ million views. She transitioned from hourly consulting to a membership model (Social Authority Membership, launched May 2015) at $59/month to work only with committed clients willing to execute. Within five months (October 2015), the membership was generating $5K/month with plans to phase out lower-tier offerings and focus on annual premium memberships.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$5k/mo
Pathwaysby Sandip Sekhon

Pathways is a pain-therapy app founded by Sandip Sekhon after he cured his own chronic repetitive strain injury using evidence-based mind-body techniques. Starting at $5k/month MRR through freemium subscription, the app uses a natural approach to help chronic pain patients, backed by a money-back guarantee. Growth came initially through Facebook ads, with organic app subscriber growth and recently an in-depth blog strategy beginning to drive meaningful traffic.

SaaScontent-marketingfreemiumvia Failory
$5k/mo
Seomatorby Nick Sawinyh

Seomator is a technical SEO tool that found product-market fit by positioning itself between basic SEO graders and complex enterprise crawlers. Nick and co-founder Eugene grew it to $4k MRR primarily through SEO and content marketing, achieving near-zero customer acquisition cost by leveraging backlinks, influencer partnerships, and strategic side projects like Curatedseotools.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Failory
$4k/mo
WURAby Mike Ojo

WURA was an on-demand video streaming platform for African and Nollywood movies founded by Mike Ojo in 2013. The platform grew to $3,800/month in revenue with a team of 10 people, but ultimately failed after burning $250,000 when YouTube flooded the market with the same content for free, making the paid subscription model unsustainable.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Failory
$4k/mo
MetricSpotby Angel Diaz

MetricSpot is a bootstrapped Spanish-language SEO toolkit founded by Angel Diaz in 2013 to fill a market gap for affordable, comprehensive SEO tools in Spanish and LATAM markets. Starting with no investment and learning to code from scratch, Angel grew the company through influencer outreach and an affiliate program to reach 45,000+ registered users and $3,000/month revenue by 2019. The company remains 100% remote and indie-focused, prioritizing sustainable growth and lifestyle over VC funding.

SaaScontent-marketingfreemiumvia Failory
$3k/mo
SimpleLoginby Son NK

SimpleLogin is an open-source email alias service that protects user privacy by allowing them to create different email identities for each website. Founded by Son NK after being inspired by Edward Snowden's documentary, the bootstrapped SaaS grew organically through content marketing and endorsements from privacy influencers to reach $3,000 MRR with approximately 1,000 subscribers.

SaaScontent-marketingfreemiumvia Failory
$3k/mo
Magnet 2by Rafa Kahi

Magnet 2 helps companies turn their employees into marketing channels by providing personalized, shareable content tailored to individual personality and company voice. Founded by Rafa Kahi in May 2022, they launched officially in October 2022 and acquired their first paying customer through a podcast appearance. Now with 11 customers across 5 countries generating $2,860/month MRR, they're burning $7k/month with a team of 8 and have raised $255k pre-seed plus a committed $70k extension round.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$3k/mo
Hack the Entrepreneurby John Nastor

John Nastor launched Hack the Entrepreneur podcast on September 5th and grew from 2,600 downloads in month one to 56,000 in month two through aggressive content production (3 episodes/week) and strategic partnerships. He built an email list of 943 engaged subscribers and generates consistent revenue through mid-roll ad spots ($300 per episode) on Midroll.com, earning enough to support a full-time living with a team of VAs, editors, and designers. He later partnered with Copy Blogger Media to create Showrunner.fm, a podcasting course and companion podcast.

Contentcontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$2k/mo
NoCS Degreeby Pete McLeod

Pete McLeod launched NoCS Degree in July 2019 after quitting a minimum wage job to become an indie hacker. The blog interviews successful developers without computer science degrees, generating $70 in first-week revenue and 48,000 page views through a viral Hacker News launch. Within months, Pete scaled to ~$2,000/month MRR primarily through newsletter sponsorships from coding bootcamps and SaaS companies, applying high-ticket B2B sales tactics rather than pursuing low-value subscriptions.

Contentcontent-marketingothervia Indie Hackers Podcast
$2k/mo
Stratascratchby Nathan Rossidi

Stratascratch is a freemium SaaS platform helping aspiring data scientists and analysts prepare for technical interviews through SQL and Python practice questions. Founded by Nathan Rossidi in 2017 as a side project to improve his university students' learning experience, it took two years to reach $1,500 MRR by 2019. Nathan grew the business through content marketing and blogging while maintaining it as a 5-10 hour/week side project alongside his full-time job and adjunct teaching role.

SaaScontent-marketingfreemiumvia Indie Hackers Podcast
$2k/mo
Nest Labsby Ann Law

Ann Law runs Nest Labs, an umbrella for three interconnected products: Make Your Mind (a neuroscience + entrepreneurship newsletter with 5,000 subscribers), Teeny Breaks (a free Chrome extension promoting mindful breaks), and Maker Mag (a community publication celebrating bootstrap founders making money). She generates $1,500/month in sponsorship revenue from Maker Mag and is monetizing Make Your Mind through inbound sponsors, growing from 0 to 5,000 subscribers in 3 months by consistently publishing daily content across Twitter, LinkedIn, Hacker News, and other platforms.

Othercontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Indie Hackers Podcast
$2k/mo
Reroute Lifestyleby Krista Aoki

Reroute Lifestyle is a lifestyle and travel blog founded by Krista Aoki that helps goal-getters achieve financial freedom through remote work and online income streams. Starting in 2017 with zero investment, Krista grew the blog to 11,000 monthly page views and $1,500 MRR in 6 months through Pinterest marketing and content-driven storytelling. The business generates revenue through affiliate marketing, product sales, and services.

Contentcontent-marketingfreemiumvia Failory
$2k/mo
Workyby Ewhor Bauman

Worky is a SaaS platform helping appointment-based freelancers (coaches, therapists, teachers) manage their entire business online with booking, scheduling, payments, invoicing, and client management. Launched in August 2021, they've grown to 3,500 trial users with 50 paying customers generating ~$950/month revenue through content marketing and paid Google Ads. They recently raised $600k in pre-seed funding at a $4-5M valuation.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$950/mo
UX Pilotby Adam Fard

Adam Fard bootstrapped UX Pilot from a Figma plugin to $5.3M ARR in under two years by solving real AI wireframe generation while competitors were faking it. He used his UX agency revenue to self-fund development and grew to 15,000 paying subscribers with a 600,000-subscriber newsletter. The company accelerated from $3M to $5.3M ARR in just 5 months without any external funding.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia The SaaS Podcast
Vismiby Payman Tai

Vismi is an all-in-one visual communication platform for non-design professionals, offering presentations, infographics, videos, and interactive documents. Founded by Payman Tai in 2013 as a side project to replace Flash-based websites, it grew from a bootstrapped experiment to a seven-figure business with 18.5 million registered users and ~100 employees. Growth was driven primarily through content marketing and SEO, with a focus on organic traffic and product-led acquisition.

SaaScontent-marketingfreemiumvia The SaaS Podcast
Modeby Ben Stancil

Mode is a collaborative analytics and data science platform founded in 2013 by Ben Stancil, Derek, and Josh, all first-time founders who previously worked together at Yammer. The company grew from an internal tool used at Yammer into an eight-figure SaaS business with 150-200 employees serving enterprise customers like Anheuser-Busch, Bloomberg, DoorDash, and Zillow. They acquired early customers through content marketing focused on entertaining data-driven storytelling, product launch momentum, and their existing network in the analytics community.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia The SaaS Podcast
Fat Merchantby Sunira Madhani

Fat Merchant is a payment technology platform founded by Sunira Madhani in 2013 that enables businesses to accept payments across multiple channels (online, in-person, invoicing) through a unified platform with transparent, subscription-based pricing. Starting with $16k MRR from white-labeled solution customers and growing to $25M+ ARR, Fat Merchant scaled through an inbound digital marketing engine and later expanded via OmniConnect API for software partners. The company has raised over $100M in venture capital and processes $5B+ annually across 7,000+ customers.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia The SaaS Podcast
Scout RFPby Alex Yakubovich

Scout RFP helps large enterprises automate their strategic sourcing and procurement processes, particularly RFPs (Requests for Proposal). Founded in 2014 by Alex Yakubovich and co-founders after their successful exit from a restaurant ordering platform company, Scout grew from extensive customer research (300 interviews) into a minimal one-page MVP that solved a single critical pain point. The company has since grown to 150+ employees with major customers including Uber, Salesforce, Airbnb, and Adobe, raised over $60 million in funding, and drives growth primarily through content marketing and their own industry event (Spark conference).

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia The SaaS Podcast
AutoCloseby Sean Finder

AutoClose is a sales engagement platform with a built-in B2B database launched in late 2017 by Sean Finder. The company grew from zero to over $1M ARR in approximately 18 months through an aggressive pre-launch buzz strategy, LinkedIn authority positioning, influencer partnerships, and content marketing. Sean's approach of building an audience 6-8 months before launch, asking early customers to determine pricing, and continuously releasing new features every two weeks has made AutoClose a standout player in a crowded sales automation market.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia The SaaS Podcast
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