Photoshop Startups
7 case studies with real revenue and traction data from photoshop startups.
MotionThink was a productivity tool startup founded by Andrew Chen and co-founders met through an accelerator program focused on serving freelance workers. After six months of prototyping and $100,000 in seed funding, the company shut down due to co-founder misalignment on vision, goals, and business direction, never achieving revenue.
Tracy Osborn self-published Hello Web Design, a book teaching design fundamentals to non-designers, after launching it successfully on Kickstarter (raising $22,000). She later partnered with No Starch Press to republish it as a hardcover, shifting from self-publishing to a traditional publisher to offload marketing while maintaining her evergreen content. The book focuses on 80/20 design principles like typography, color, spacing, and layout that enable developers and founders to design interfaces themselves.
Duarte Incorporated, founded by Nancy Duarte, has become the world's leading presentation design and storytelling agency, having crafted over 250,000 presentations for iconic brands including Apple, Google, TED, the World Bank, and Al Gore's groundbreaking 'An Inconvenient Truth.' The company pioneered modern presentation design in the early Macintosh era and continues to help Fortune 500 companies and world leaders master the art of persuasive communication through story structure, empathy-driven design, and visual clarity.
Brian Baderra founded Amplify Relations (originally Grassroots 2.0) in 2009 at age 19 after being laid off from a political ad agency, bootstrapping the startup on student loans with his first client being a former employer client offering a few hundred dollars monthly. The company grew to 13 full-time employees and nearly $2 million in revenue by 2015, specializing in high-margin political campaigns, robocalls, and mass-market advertising for political entities, corporations, and startups. Their differentiation came from licensing a robocall system from Canada that yielded 90% margins on certain projects, while positioning themselves as a full-service agency of record.
Clap is an asynchronous meeting platform founded by Pierre Tuzovic and Robin that allows teams to share video updates, collect in-context feedback, and make decisions without being in the same room at the same time. After a viral LinkedIn announcement in January 2024 that garnered 45,000 views, the startup raised $3 million at a $17.5M post-money valuation while still in private beta with 3,000 waitlist signups and 100 monthly active users.
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.
Adproval was a marketplace connecting bloggers and influencers with brands, founded by Matthew Anderson in 2011. Despite raising $300k and eventually generating over $200k in annual revenue through consulting services, the company failed after 6 years due to poor revenue model focusing on small commissions, lack of focus on the advertiser side, and founder burnout from depression and anxiety.