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Heroku Startups

12 case studies with real revenue and traction data from heroku startups.

12
Case Studies
$29k
Avg MRR
$70k
Highest MRR
6
With Revenue Data
ProcessKitby Brian Casel

Brian Casel spent 1 year learning to code (Ruby on Rails) while running his profitable productized service business AudienceOps. He launched ProcessKit in June 2019 as a process-driven project management SaaS for client service teams, leveraging his existing audience of 40,000+ newsletter subscribers and course community to acquire first customers. The product grew through word-of-mouth and organic traffic, with Brian maintaining a bootstrapped, lean team approach focused on sustainable growth.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Failory
Phoenixby Enrique Benitez

Phoenix was a SaaS app that allowed users to send final messages to loved ones after death, with an annual check-in mechanism to verify users were still alive. Despite launching on Product Hunt and Hacker News, the startup failed due to lack of product-market fit: 45 sign-ups from thousands of visits and $0 revenue. Enrique learned critical lessons about building an MVP fast and keeping things simple, which he applied to his next successful project, Spoil Your Enemies, which generated $37 in profit in just 2 weeks of development.

SaaSproduct-hunt-launchsubscriptionvia Failory
Muunby Eelco

Muun was a SaaS platform designed to help co-working space owners manage their businesses more effectively. Eelco built and launched the product within a month after validating the idea through interviews with space owners, but faced immediate headwinds: the launch generated no traction, and after pivoting to focus only on community-building features, the product peaked at $200 MRR with high churn before ultimately shutting down due to intense competition from better-funded, feature-rich competitors.

SaaScold-emailsubscriptionvia Failory
$200/mo
Headlimeby Danny Postma

Danny Postma built Headlime, an AI-powered copywriting SaaS, in just one month and grew it from $1K to $20K MRR in 3 months through viral Twitter content and the 'build in public' strategy. The product gained massive traction after pivoting to use GPT-3, and Danny sold the company in March 2021 for a seven-figure sum to Jarvis.ai after just 8 months of operation.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Failory
$20k/mo
StatusGatorby Colin Bartlett

StatusGator is a status page aggregator that monitors 6,000+ services and sends early outage alerts before official status pages acknowledge issues. Started as a side project in 2015, it took 11 years and a TinySeed investment to reach seven-figure ARR, growing from a developer tool to an enterprise IT operations platform used by organizations to reduce support tickets. The company's breakthrough came from accidentally discovering programmatic SEO as its primary acquisition channel and evolving its product positioning around the insight that 'status pages lie.'

SaaSseosubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us
Bear Metricsby Josh Pigford

Josh Pigford built Bear Metrics in just 7-8 days in November 2013 to solve his own pain point: tracking key SaaS metrics from Stripe data. He launched directly on Twitter without a landing page or beta, sold his first $250/month customer within 8 days, and grew to $14k MRR in 6 months. By 2017, Bear Metrics had reached $70k MRR through a combination of strategic partnerships (like Buffer), transparency (public dashboards), and content marketing, while raising $800k from the Stripe Platform Fund.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Indie Hackers Podcast
$70k/mo
Stormapperby Tyler Tringus

Tyler Tringus built Stormapper, a store locator SaaS for e-commerce businesses, in just 36 hours on a flight from San Francisco to Buenos Aires. He leveraged his year of freelance experience with Shopify store owners to identify the problem and immediately land paying customers by emailing existing clients. Within five years, Stormapper crossed $25,000 MRR through a combination of B2B app store listings and organic SEO, while maintaining extremely high retention and low support overhead.

SaaSplatform-parasiticsubscriptionvia Indie Hackers Podcast
$25k/mo
Wedding Lovelyby Tracy Osborne

Tracy Osborne built Wedding Lovely, a marketplace connecting couples with wedding vendors (designers, planners, photographers), after teaching herself Python and Django out of necessity when her co-founder fell through. The site languished for six years at $15-20k ARR while she worked on books and speaking, until she hired passionate team members and stepped back, sparking sudden growth to $60-80k ARR. Her journey demonstrates how perseverance through repeated setbacks—failed YC interviews, a lowball Etsy acquisition, burned-out solo operation—eventually pays off.

Marketplaceword-of-mouthfreemiumvia Indie Hackers Podcast
Banner Bearby John Yongfook

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.

SaaScontent-marketingsubscriptionvia Indie Hackers Podcast
$16k/mo
Rails Autoscaleby Adam McCrea

Rails Autoscale is a Heroku add-on built by solo founder Adam McCrea that automatically scales Rails applications. Over three years of bootstrapped development, McCrea grew the product to 100+ active users and $300k ARR, while working on it as a side project. In Spring 2021, he joined TinySeed accelerator to address platform risk and experiment with new pricing models.

SaaSplatform-parasiticfreemiumvia Startups For the Rest of Us
HiRISEby Nathan Contney

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.

SaaScontent-marketingvia The SaaS Podcast
Store Mapperby Tyler Trinkus

Store Mapper was a bootstrapped micro-SaaS that provided store locator functionality for e-commerce merchants, built by Tyler Trinkus over five years (2011-2016). Starting with an MVP coded on a 30-hour flight, the product grew from 5 paying customers in the first 24 hours to $40K MRR through platform parasitism (Shopify App Store), organic search, and a viral referral loop. Tyler maintained <1% monthly churn by obsessively optimizing onboarding, providing exceptional customer service, and adding features only when necessary—eventually selling the profitable, sustainable business after five years.

SaaSplatform-parasiticsubscriptionvia The SaaS Podcast
$40k/mo

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