How Startups Grow with community
79 startups used community to grow. Average MRR: $48k.
Pricing Model Breakdown
Case Studies (79)
90.io is a bootstrapped SaaS platform built by veteran entrepreneur Mark Abbott that provides an integrated suite of tools (meeting, planning, goal-setting, feedback, process management) designed to help companies build on the EOS (Entrepreneurial Operating System) framework. With 1,920 paying customers at $140 average monthly revenue and $250K MRR, the company has achieved impressive unit economics ($3M ARR from a bootstrapped model with only 50% net burn between $50-100K monthly) and exceptional retention with 136-140% net revenue retention, primarily driven by organic growth within entrepreneurial communities like EOS coaching networks and organizations like Vistage and YPO.
Yannick Silver is a serial entrepreneur who bootstrapped seven businesses to seven figures and is now building Maverick 1000, a peer-to-peer member-driven organization of 120+ game-changing entrepreneurs paying $1,500/month ($150/month of which goes to impact initiatives). The group has deployed over $2 million in impact funds while generating $1.8M+ ARR, combining business growth, experiential retreats, and social impact through a carefully curated ecoverse of entrepreneurs.
SafeWo Labs built a passwordless authentication plugin SDK that enables banks, e-commerce platforms, and cryptocurrency exchanges to authenticate users without passwords or one-time codes. Starting from zero in February 2021 with first code written in July 2020, they grew to $130,000 MRR in 12 months through product-led growth and community engagement, primarily via their 12,000-developer Discord and Slack communities. The company raised $1M total across pre-seed and seed rounds and is closing a $9M Series A at a $65M valuation.
BigchainDB, founded by Bruce Poon, is a blockchain database platform designed to handle data-driven enterprise use cases that Bitcoin and Ethereum cannot efficiently support. Currently serving 5-10 customers at $5-10k/month with $50-60k MRR (targeting $100k by year-end), the company has raised $6 million and employs 20 people (mostly PhDs) to solve supply chain tracking, regulatory compliance, and data provenance problems across industries like pharmaceuticals, energy, and automotive.
Hire Club started as a bootstrapped Facebook group in 2011 with five simple rules inspired by Fight Club, growing organically to 10,000 members by 2017 without spending money on marketing. After raising $47,000 through crowdfunding on the TV show "Meet the Drapers," founder Ketten pivoted to a subscription-based career coaching marketplace in June 2018, reaching $10,000 MRR in just 150 days through a Product Hunt launch. The company has grown to $31,000 MRR with 20% month-over-month growth driven by community trust, product quality, and relentless user feedback.
Ketan Anjaria built HireClub after experiencing multiple startup failures, including a funded startup that shut down despite winning TechCrunch Disrupt awards. He emphasizes community as an underrated foundation for building a business. HireClub has achieved 20% month-over-month growth and reached $30,000 in monthly revenue.
Skiff is a Web3-native, end-to-end encrypted collaboration platform positioned as a privacy-first alternative to Notion. Founded in late 2019 by Andrew Millic (former SpaceX engineer) and Jason (Stanford electrical engineer), the company has achieved tens of thousands of monthly active users through organic community-driven growth in privacy and crypto spaces. With $14.6M raised across seed and Series A rounds, Skiff is targeting 30% month-over-month growth while maintaining a lean 15-20 person engineering team.
Puppet Pelts manufactures and sells hand-dyed nylon fleece fabric for professional puppet builders worldwide. Laurie Nickerson and his mother Cindy bootstrapped the business without significant funding by negotiating 6 months prepaid rent with their landlord and sharing studio space with a costume maker. The business now generates $9,000/month primarily through organic community engagement in niche Facebook groups and strategic Facebook ads, particularly in Mexico.
Content Snare is a SaaS tool that helps agencies collect content from clients efficiently. James Rose and his business partner validated the idea through a pre-sale landing page, sold 25 spots in 2 hours, and spent 6 months building the MVP with Angular 2 and Ruby on Rails. The business has grown to over $5,000/month MRR through a combination of community building (Facebook group), giveaways, podcasts, and content marketing.
Mike Rubini bootstrapped Engage.net in December 2017 to help e-commerce drop shippers identify trending products by analyzing sales data across thousands of online stores. Starting with just €600/month revenue in January 2018, he grew to 74 paying customers generating €3,000/month MRR by the interview date (~January 2019), while maintaining profitability at ~€300/month profit with only himself full-time and two part-time contractors. He's now transitioning from low-end drop shipper customers (high 15% monthly churn) to mid-market and enterprise e-commerce brands through cold outreach, using tools like Hunter.io and LinkedIn.
Kaya.gs was a modern online Go server built by Gabriel Benmergui and a co-founder in 2011, reaching $2,000/month in revenue through a crowdfunding campaign that raised $20,000. Despite building innovative features and creating an engaged community of 10,000+ registered users with 100 concurrent players, the startup failed after one year due to a combination of product reliability issues, engineering inexperience, and founder morale problems. Gabriel's story illustrates how vision without execution, technical debt, and team friction can derail even a passionate project with real traction.
Weekend Club is a weekend co-working space for bootstrappers and indie founders that evolved organically from a popular London Indie Hackers meetup called IndieBeers. The founder, who transitioned from ad agencies to tech as a Product Manager and UX Researcher, leveraged their community leadership to launch the venture, which currently generates $2,000 MRR.
Nathan Latka runs a daily podcast interviewing SaaS founders about their metrics and growth tactics, having produced nearly 1,000 episodes. Facing frequent legal threats from boards demanding episode removal due to transparency concerns, he shut down the show but then pivoted to a Patreon-based monetization model. In a test of customer commitment, he raised $527 from 9 patrons willing to pay for exclusive content, validating audience demand and launching a tiered subscription offering exclusive episodes, metrics calls, and monthly data exports at $5-$500/month.
AirGPU is a bootstrapped cloud gaming service that lets users play the latest games on low-spec devices by streaming from a powerful cloud PC. Founded by Ben Frieza in December 2023, the product gained its first five paying customers ($125 MRR) within five months through targeted outreach in the CloudGamer Reddit community. Currently a side project alongside Frieza's day job, the service is in beta with plans to scale through content marketing and YouTube.
Moz is a Seattle-based SaaS company founded in 2004 as a consulting firm that transitioned to software development in 2008, offering inbound marketing and marketing analytics solutions. The company built an online community of over one million digital marketers and has raised just under $20M in funding, establishing itself as a leader in the marketing software space.
Tiger 21 is a peer-to-peer network for high net-worth individuals founded by Michael Sonnenfeldt. The platform facilitates wealth building and preservation through community and knowledge sharing among affluent members. The company operates as a membership-based marketplace connecting wealth individuals.
Chief is a subscription-based platform and vetted community for women in corporate leadership roles, co-founded by Carolyn Childers. The company has achieved a billion-dollar valuation and operates as a membership-based business focused on supporting and driving women leaders in corporate environments. They intentionally avoid social media, relying instead on their community-driven model.
Indie Hackers, founded by Courtland and Channing Allen, was spun out from Stripe and is now being operated independently starting from $0 in revenue. The founders are exploring future revenue models for the platform after separating from the company.
Arvid Kahl built and sold FeedbackPanda, a SaaS company. After the exit, he became highly active in the startup community, sharing insights on Twitter, his blog, and Indie Hackers. His approach demonstrates how involuntary reciprocity and audience engagement can drive business growth and community influence.
Jay Clouse built and grew Unreal Collective, a community that became valuable enough to be acquired by Pat Flynn's Smart Passive Income. The acquisition was notable because communities rarely get sold—they're typically dependent on founders and often decline as they scale. Jay managed to build something that not only grew but maintained quality at scale.