How Startups Grow with content marketing
360 startups used content marketing to grow. Average MRR: $290k.
Pricing Model Breakdown
Category Breakdown
Case Studies (360)
Full Contact, founded by Bart Lorang in 2010, started as Rainmaker—a tool to enrich Google contacts with social network data. After pivoting through multiple product ideas and receiving guidance from Techstars' David Cohen to focus on a single core mission, the company rebranded around its API that turns partial contact records into complete unified profiles. The company grew to seven figures in MRR through content marketing (viral blog posts), direct sales to founders and product managers, and eventually raised over $55 million in funding.
Fresh Chat (formerly Konotor, later Hotline.io) is a modern messaging platform that helps businesses communicate with customers across mobile apps and web. Founded by Sri Ganesan and co-founders in 2012, the startup initially pivoted from a WhatsApp competitor to an in-app messaging solution. After bootstrapping and winning a $125k Qualcomm prize, the team grew through content marketing and cold outreach, eventually reaching product-market fit. The company was acquired by Freshdesk in December 2015 and rebranded as Fresh Chat, seeing exponential growth when they finally prioritized web alongside mobile—generating more revenue in three months than the previous product's entire lifetime.
Nathan Contney is an experienced serial entrepreneur who has founded or co-founded multiple startups including Inkling (a prediction market platform acquired and still operating), CityPosh (a gamified advertising platform that failed), and Draft (a writing application built as a solo founder). He now serves as CEO of HiRISE, a CRM application originally developed by Basecamp (formerly 37 Signals). Contney emphasizes the importance of the 'done is better than perfect' philosophy and building products to solve personal pain points, using cycles and momentum to maintain productivity.
HelpScout is a customer service platform founded in 2011 by Nick Francis and two co-founders who previously ran a consulting business. Starting with a free RSS tool that accumulated 200,000 users, they identified their own pain point in managing customer support and built an invisible help desk that feels like personal email rather than a traditional ticketing system. Through deep customer research, content marketing, and a focus on execution quality, the company grew to serve over 8,000 business customers in 140 countries, raised approximately $13 million in funding, and maintains a culture of product excellence and community education.
Jungle Scout is a product research and market intelligence tool for Amazon sellers, founded by Greg Mercer in 2015. Starting with just $1,000 and no coding experience, Greg built a Chrome extension to automate his own product research process, then validated demand by posting demos in Facebook seller groups. The business has grown to 35+ remote team members with multiple seven figures in annual revenue through content marketing, educational resources, and influencer partnerships, despite higher-than-average churn rates due to the episodic nature of product research.
Hurdler is a free mobile app founded in 2012 by Raj Paskar that helps independent workers (Uber drivers, Airbnb hosts, freelancers, real estate agents) manage their business finances in real time with an automated tax calculation engine. The company grew to over 100,000 users primarily through content marketing—creating high-value resources like tax deduction guides and then distributing them through community relationships. Revenue comes from value-added services like H&R Block tax filing partnerships and an API consumed by other financial institutions.
InnerTrends is a growth analytics platform founded in 2015 by Claudio Mororio that uses data science to help SaaS companies understand their user onboarding process and convert more first-time visitors into paying customers. Rather than just providing data reports like traditional analytics tools, InnerTrends answers specific business questions and provides actionable insights on where companies should focus optimization efforts. After launching a private beta in January 2015, the company achieved 10 closed customers by September 2015 public launch.
Price Intelligently is a bootstrapped SaaS company founded in 2012 by Patrick Campbell, Aaron White, and Christopher O'Donnell that helps SaaS businesses optimize their pricing strategies using econometric models and proprietary algorithms. Starting with just Campbell working full-time for nine months after he cashed out his 401k, the company achieved $130k in revenue in its first six months through a hybrid managed-service model and content-driven inbound marketing. By 2016, Price Intelligently had grown to 30 employees with major customers including Wistia, BigCommerce, Optimize.ly, and Zapier, charging a minimum of $30,000 per month.
CoSchedule is a content marketing and social media publishing calendar built by Garrett Moon and Justin Culey, two entrepreneurs who transitioned from running a web design consulting business. They identified the problem while serving clients, validated it through blog posts and customer interviews, and grew to 7,000+ paying customers and 100,000+ blog subscribers primarily through content marketing—publishing 500+ in-depth, actionable blog posts and building a free headline analyzer tool that drove significant traffic and email signups.
Omar Khan's SAS Podcast is a free content platform where he interviews B2B SaaS founders and industry experts about their businesses and strategies. Over the past year, the show has grown to 100 episodes with a loyal audience and has generated significant engagement through word-of-mouth and community support. The podcast supports a broader SaaS Club ecosystem that includes a free newsletter with over 5,000 subscribers, a growth calculator, and a mastermind group for founders scaling to seven figures.
Keeping is a Gmail extension that adds helpdesk functionality directly into Gmail, allowing teams to manage customer support without leaving their inbox. Founded by Vincent Casar, the startup validated product-market fit through early cold email outreach to potential customers, then grew primarily through content marketing (the 'Growth Hacking Experiment' blog) and high-converting Quora answers (30-35% conversion rate). Vincent's approach emphasizes simple but disciplined tactics: persistent email follow-up (achieving 36-40% response rates after 3 emails), strategic Quora engagement, and early customer feedback.
Ninja Outreach is a SaaS tool that helps businesses find, identify, and contact influencers at scale. Founded by Dave Schneider, who built a travel blog generating six figures annually before launching the product, the company uses influencer marketing as its primary growth channel. Since launching in January 2013, the company scaled to 9,000 monthly sessions through guest posts, product reviews, and affiliate partnerships.
TimeDoctor is a time management and team productivity SaaS tool that Rob Rawson grew to over $1M ARR through organic, low-cost marketing strategies. Rob, a former medical doctor turned entrepreneur, leveraged content marketing tactics including Quora answers (300+ total), competitor comparison articles, infographics with strategic distribution, and community engagement to acquire customers without significant ad spend. His approach emphasized creating genuinely valuable content and building grassroots communities rather than paid acquisition.
Pendo began in 2015 when co-founders Eric Bourne and Todd Olson (who met in college) pivoted from web consulting to product. Starting with their first customer ShowClicks paying $5.97 in January 2015, they scaled to $13.4M ARR by 2017 and over $200M revenue by 2021 through strategic marketing focused on webinars, brand building (associating the company with the color pink), and product positioning against competitors like WalkMe. Eric left Pendo around $130-140M ARR in 2022 to start 24andUp, a venture studio.
Patrick Campbell bootstrapped ProfitWell to 8-figure ARR and 30,000 customers without raising venture capital by offering a free analytics product that matched paid competitors in accuracy and features. He funded two years of product development through Price Intelligently's consulting services while competing against well-funded rivals like Baremetrics and ChartMogul. ProfitWell was acquired by Paddle for $200 million in 2022.
WP Curve is one of the world's fastest-growing WordPress support companies co-founded by Dan Norris, an entrepreneur with a strong focus on content marketing. Dan has built significant credibility as Australia's top small business blogger and authored 'The 7 Day Startup', leveraging content marketing as a core growth strategy for the business.
Spencer Haws founded Longtail Pro in 2011, a keyword research software tool designed to help users generate long tail keywords at scale. The product grew into a 6-figure revenue business, demonstrating strong market demand for SEO and niche research tools. Spencer's success with the product led him to build an audience and community around entrepreneurship through his Niche Pursuits brand.
Neil Patel is a Seattle-based entrepreneur and analytics expert who co-founded two successful SaaS analytics companies: KISSmetrics and CrazyEgg. His blog, QuickSprout, generates over $1 million in annual revenue, demonstrating the power of content-driven business models in the digital marketing space.
aHref is a bootstrapped SaaS company generating over $100M in ARR with 100 full-time employees, achieving $900,000 in revenue per employee. They've built their growth primarily through content marketing, generating millions of website hits per month while eschewing traditional metrics like conversion rate tracking and delaying their first sales hire until reaching $90M ARR.
Kevin Van Trump transformed his background as a rural farm kid and commodities trader into The Van Trump Report, a farm newsletter generating $18M in annual revenue while operating with just 4 people. The newsletter provides valuable insights on agricultural markets, farming economics, and industry trends, resonating with farmers and agricultural professionals. His success inspired others, including Shaan Puri, to launch related ventures like Milk Road in the same space.