AWS Startups
48 case studies with real revenue and traction data from aws startups.
Xena Intelligence is a SaaS platform using proprietary algorithms to help small businesses sell more effectively on Amazon. Founded by Akhil Suresh, the company grew from a side project within a marketing consulting business to $15k/mo MRR by focusing on word-of-mouth, local business engagement, and exceptional customer service. With 4 clients managing $250k/mo in combined sales, the company is now part of MassChallenge and targeting enterprise expansion.
Toki was a SaaS platform for TikTok analytics and trend discovery that Vladimir Esaulov built over 8 months as a side project. After launching on Product Hunt and reaching 6th place, the startup acquired thousands of visitors and dozens of free users, but only one paying customer ($99/month for 2 months), ultimately shutting down due to lack of founder-market fit and motivation.
RepairDesk is a repair management SaaS founded by Usman Butt in 2014 after he experienced the pain of managing his brother's cellphone repair shop. The company grew to over $1M ARR primarily through customer relationships, word-of-mouth, and strategic partnerships with parts suppliers, with Usman's philosophy of 'making friends with customers' driving organic growth and expansion from small shops to international markets.
Refrens is an all-in-one operating system for freelancers and small agencies that provides free invoicing, expense management, and payment collection tools, plus a B2B marketplace for lead generation. Founded by Naman Sarawagi in 2018, the platform has grown to over 100K users with 15% monthly growth by focusing on simplicity and user-centric design. The company is currently generating $10k/month in revenue and aims to reach 1 million users in India over the next 2 years before expanding internationally.
LiveAgent is a bootstrapped SaaS help desk software that started as a spin-off from Post Affiliate Pro and grew from $20k to $250k MRR over 4 years under David Cacik's growth leadership. The company achieved traction through a combination of PPC, content marketing, SEO, and particularly by building a strong presence on software review directories with incentivized customer reviews. Now LiveAgent accounts for 75% of the parent company's revenue, competing successfully against well-funded competitors like Zendesk and Freshdesk.
FreshConnect was an online B2B marketplace for fresh agricultural produce that achieved ₹2.5M MRR (₹25M ARR) through offline sales and WhatsApp-based customer engagement, but failed to scale due to poor hiring decisions, lack of focus, insufficient capital, and inability to raise external funding. Co-founder Tarun Gupta and his team eventually accepted an acqui-hire deal after 19 months of full-time work, during which the startup burned ₹100,000-150,000 monthly while bootstrapped.
Potscan is a podcast intelligence platform that monitors 4 million podcasts in real time to provide analytics, competitive intelligence, and PR insights for founders and brands. The founder, Arvid, has grown the platform primarily through long-term SEO efforts and programmatic content strategy, leveraging podcast transcripts as user-generated content that compounds over 18+ months. Recent improvements include AI-assisted integrations with OP3 data, migration to OpenSearch for scalability, and semi-automated systems powered by AI agents.
Bluetik.io is a cold and warm email follow-up SaaS tool built by Mike Taber, a former co-host of Startup for the Rest of Us. After nearly a year of working behind the scenes on a potential partnership with a complementary field sales CRM product, Mike is now exploring a 3-4 month trial partnership that could lead to merger, tight integration, or a "done for you" service offering Bluetik to the CRM's existing customer base. The company operates on a $50-$500/month subscription model and is currently evaluating an AppSumo deal while managing recurring annual Google security audits.
VidHug is a one-time payment B2C platform that lets users create and share group video compilations for special occasions. After years of slow growth as a side project ($600-$1,000/month from 2018-2020), the COVID-19 pandemic triggered exponential viral growth as people couldn't celebrate in person. Revenue went from $1,000/month in February 2020 to six figures in April 2020, with daily active users growing from 250 to 80,000. The company was acquired by Punchbowl Networks in 2021 for an undisclosed amount.
Jason Grishkoff launched Submit Hub in November 2014 as a solution to the overwhelming number of music submissions he received at Indie Shuffle, his popular music blog. Within 8 months, Submit Hub reached $46,000 MRR by connecting musicians with industry professionals (blogs, labels, radio stations) and incentivizing those professionals to listen. The platform grew to ~250 other platforms using Submit Hub and fundamentally changed how music discovery works in the industry.
Garrett Diamond built Sifter, a bug tracking SaaS for small teams that prioritized simplicity and non-technical user adoption over feature richness. Launched in 2008 after 6 months of development, Sifter grew through word-of-mouth and targeted advertising (notably a $2,500 Daring Fireball ad that brought 30-35 customers). The business generated healthy recurring revenue over 8 years and sold for low six figures in part because recurring revenue allowed Garrett to maintain the business through significant health challenges.
Rank Science is a CDN-based SaaS platform that automates SEO through continuous A/B testing of on-page HTML changes. Founded by Ryan Bednor (a software engineer-turned-SEO consultant) and co-founder Dylan Forest, the company grew from $28K MRR at Y Combinator entry to $80K MRR in just three months through content marketing (case studies on Hacker News), press coverage (TechCrunch), and leveraging Ryan's existing network of SEO-focused companies.
Park.io is a domain drop-catching service for hacker-friendly ccTLDs like .io, .ly, and .me. Founded by Mike Carson in June 2014, the service automatically registers expiring domains for users before competitors can claim them. Starting from $5,000 in first-month revenue, Park.io grew to $1M+ ARR by the following year, all while being run entirely by Carson as a solo founder.
John Yongfook is a solo founder who built Banner Bear, an image and video generation API, after leaving corporate life at Aviva insurance. Starting with $200k in savings, he launched 7 products before finding success with Banner Bear, which now generates $16k MRR by targeting both social media managers and digital agencies with automated creative tasks.
Bunnyshell is a cloud management PaaS founded by Alin Dobra that automates provisioning, deployment, and infrastructure management across multiple cloud platforms. Launched in March 2018 with a 'sell-it-while-you-build-it' strategy using word-of-mouth and network outreach, the company secured €750K in funding and reached $12k/mo MRR by providing services to enterprise clients including pharma and eCommerce companies. The founders emphasize listening to customer feedback, focusing on specific use cases rather than broad feature sets, and building trust through partnerships with major cloud providers.
Observa was a security SaaS tool built by Rob Picard after leaving Robinhood to join Y Combinator in 2020. Over 10 months, Rob pivoted through three different product ideas (intrusion detection, botnet IP sharing, and public database exposure detection) but ultimately failed to achieve product-market fit, generating no revenue before shutting down in September 2021 after raising $462,000.
Deets is a review platform launched by serial entrepreneur Paul English to challenge Yelp's outdated model. Instead of relying on reviews from strangers with different preferences, Deets surfaces recommendations from friends, influencers you follow, and algorithmically similar users using machine learning, inspired by TikTok's recommendation engine. English launched it two weeks before this interview and positioned it as a potential billion-dollar opportunity.
Handshake, a 10-year-old career marketplace with 18M students and professionals, launched a data labeling business in January 2024 by leveraging its massive network of experts (500k PhDs, 3M master students) to create high-quality training data for frontier AI labs. In just 4 months, the new business hit $50M in revenue; by 8 months they're on pace to exceed $100M ARR—rivaling their core business in annual revenue.
Geekatoo was a nationwide tech support marketplace founded by Kevin Davis in 2010 after a frustrating Geek Squad experience. Starting with a bidding model, the company pivoted to fixed pricing and eventually built a network of over 7,000 providers nationwide, generating $275-300k MRR at the time of acquisition. Growth accelerated significantly after focusing on B2B partnerships with hardware manufacturers and real estate companies rather than direct consumer acquisition.
Front is a shared inbox management SaaS platform founded by Matilda Collins in early 2015 that helps teams collaborate on asynchronous communication (email, Twitter, Facebook, Twilio). The company has grown from 240K MRR with 1,200 customers in 2016 to 700K MRR with 1,700 customers by 2017, tripling revenue in 11 months through land-and-expand motions and a newly formed marketing team. Despite raising $14M total (including Series A), Front maintains an 88% gross margin, negative net churn, and operates lean with only ~$250K monthly burn.