← Browse all

Ruby on Rails Startups

27 case studies with real revenue and traction data from ruby on rails startups.

27
Case Studies
$44k
Avg MRR
$180k
Highest MRR
8
With Revenue Data
Singulutionby Hunt Burdick

Singulution was a point of sale and business management solution for multi-location vendors built by Hunt Burdick after he left his job at Arista Networks. After 10 months of development and $30,000 spent, Hunt failed to launch an MVP and never acquired customers, ultimately being acquired by E-DealerDirect. The failure was driven by overengineering the product, building in isolation without customer feedback, and prioritizing technical complexity over a minimal viable product.

SaaSothervia Failory
Pull Remindersby Abi Noda

Abi Noda bootstrapped Pull Reminders from a side project into a SaaS product serving over 400 companies including Pivotal, Instacart, WeWork, and Trivago. Launched in January 2019 and acquired its first paying customers through direct outreach to early Slack App Directory users, with significant growth acceleration after being featured in the GitHub Marketplace in April 2019. The product uses a per-developer subscription model ($2/month per developer across $10, $49, and $99 monthly plans) and Abi intentionally focused on solving a real pain point he experienced as an engineering manager.

SaaSplatform-parasiticsubscriptionvia Failory
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
Phezby Shanti

Phez was a Reddit clone that rewarded content creators with Bitcoin micropayments, built by Shanti, a 38-year-old Ruby on Rails developer, in summer 2015 as a side project emphasizing free speech. The project failed due to a flawed business model—lack of marketing, poor user engagement motivated only by minimal Bitcoin rewards, and spam/gaming attempts made it unsustainable. Shanti shut down the site after several months, losing approximately $29,014 in opportunity cost when Bitcoin's value surged years later.

SaaSotherfreevia Failory
JustReachOutby Dmitry Dragilev

JustReachOut is a PR SaaS platform bootstrapped by Dmitry Dragilev, a former marketing consultant, to help early-stage startups and marketers execute PR campaigns without traditional agency costs. By pre-selling the product before it was built and gathering continuous feedback from Boston's founder community, Dmitry grew the platform to 5,000 users and $360k/year ARR. The business focuses on educating non-experts to do their own PR through a combination of tools, frameworks, and customer success guidance.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Failory
$30k/mo
GrowthMentorby Foti Panagio

GrowthMentor is a two-sided marketplace connecting entrepreneurs and growth marketers with vetted mentors for 1:1 Skype calls, charging $99/year per mentee. Foti Panagio bootstrapped the platform from his own pain point of rapid skill-building through expert calls rather than courses, launching the public beta in October 2018 after 3 months of customer development and 6 months of development. Through community-focused word-of-mouth marketing via Facebook groups, LinkedIn, and niche communities, the platform grew to $3.5K/month ARR by June 2019, with mentors becoming natural advocates due to their strong networks in the startup ecosystem.

Marketplaceword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Failory
$292/mo
Savvy Calby Derek Reimer

Savvy Cal is a bootstrapped scheduling SaaS founded by Derek Reimer that crossed $20k MRR (~$240k ARR) as a solo founder operation. The product achieved its strongest growth month in October after the initial January 2021 product launch, with Derek crediting a strategic product launch with marketing consultant Corey Haynes. Derek is now planning his first engineering hire while maintaining a lean operation with outsourced support and marketing.

SaaSproduct-launchsubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us
$20k/mo
Code Submitby Dominic and Tracy

Code Submit is a SaaS platform that enables better hiring decisions through take-home coding challenges with support for 65+ languages and frameworks. Founded by married couple Dominic and Tracy, they built the MVP in 2-3 weeks while working full-time jobs, got into TinySeed's seed batch, and experienced a hockey-stick growth moment around February 2021 by doubling down on SEO and content marketing, achieving consistent 10-15% monthly growth and landing enterprise customers like Apple, Netflix, and the U.S. Air Force.

SaaSseosubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us
Hammerstone.dev / Hello Queryby Colleen Schnittler

Hammerstone.dev (rebranding to Hello Query) is a developer tools company co-founded by Colleen Schnittler, a self-taught Rails developer, and Aaron Francis, a Laravel expert. The company built a visual query builder product with separate versions for Laravel and Ruby on Rails, initially gaining traction through an enterprise client that needed custom reporting functionality. As of early 2023, the company is repositioning from a developer-focused visual query builder to a product manager-focused custom reports platform after customer feedback revealed stronger demand in that direction.

SaaSenterprise-direct-salessubscriptionvia Startups For the Rest of Us
Sifterby Garrett Diamond

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.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Indie Hackers Podcast
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
Content Snareby James Rose

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.

SaaScommunitysubscriptionvia Failory
$5k/mo
Honey Badgerby Josh Wood

Honey Badger is a web application monitoring and exception tracking platform founded by three experienced Ruby developers (Josh Wood, Ben Curtis, and Starr) who were frustrated with Airbrake's decline in reliability and customer support. Starting as a nights-and-weekends project in 2012 while freelancing, they gradually transitioned to full-time over 2 years, leveraging their developer network and word-of-mouth marketing. Today, they're a profitable, bootstrapped SaaS company doing over $1M ARR with sub-1% monthly churn, operating with just 5 people on a 30-hour work week.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Indie Hackers Podcast
GoRailsby Chris Oliver

Chris Oliver built GoRails starting in 2014 as a successor to the dormant Railscasts, offering weekly screencasts teaching advanced Ruby on Rails topics. He bootstrapped from zero to over $1 million in total revenue by combining free educational content (blog posts, videos, community forums) with paid products including a subscription screencast service ($20/month), courses, app templates, and Hatchbox (a Rails deployment automation tool). His traction came primarily through SEO and organic discovery, combined with strategic email list building (23,000 subscribers) and community engagement.

SaaSseosubscriptionvia Indie Hackers Podcast
Tony (Multiple Products: Black Magic, Snapper, Dev Utils)by Tony

Tony is a Vietnamese indie hacker who quit his corporate job in August 2021 with only 300 MRR in revenue from Black Magic to pursue building multiple products. Within one year, he grew to nearly $20,000 MRR across three main products: Black Magic ($10k/month, a Twitter growth tool), Snapper ($4.2k/month, a screenshot tool), and Dev Utils (~$4k/month, a developer toolbox). His success came from building an audience on Twitter, creating products that solved his own problems, and leveraging viral loops that kept compounding.

SaaSword-of-mouthsubscriptionvia Indie Hackers Podcast
$20k/mo
Chowdyby Steve

Chowdy was a Toronto-based subscription meal delivery startup that grew to $1.3M in annual revenue in 2 years by solving the last-mile delivery problem through a unique hub system using partner cafes. The business reached approximately $100,000-$125,000 per month in revenue but ultimately shut down due to regulatory pressure from the Toronto health department, which deemed their distribution model too risky, combined with unsustainable unit economics and high customer churn.

Otherpaid-adssubscriptionvia Failory
Edgarby Laura Roeder

Edgar is a social media scheduling SaaS founded by Laura Roeder in mid-2014 that automatically cycles through a library of content instead of requiring manual one-off posting. Launched with bootstrapped $100k investment and an 80,000-person email list, Edgar grew to nearly 4,000 customers by January 2016 with $2.2M ARR ($180k MRR) at $49/month average, using Facebook ads ($30k/month) and content marketing as primary growth channels while maintaining a healthy 95% monthly retention rate.

SaaSpaid-adssubscriptionvia Nathan Latka Podcast
$180k/mo
Hammerstone / Hello Queryby Colleen Schnettler

Colleen Schnettler, a self-taught Rails developer and military spouse, co-founded Hammerstone to solve the pain of custom reporting in Laravel and Rails applications. The product eventually evolved into Hello Query, an AI-powered chatbot for custom data reporting. She was accepted into TinySeed's Fall 2022 accelerator batch.

SaaSothervia Startups For the Rest of Us
GoRails / Jumpstart / HatchBox (Chris Oliver's Suite)by Chris Oliver

Chris Oliver is a solo founder who built a portfolio of three complementary products for the Ruby on Rails community: GoRails (screencasting education), Jumpstart (pre-built Rails features), and HatchBox (Rails app deployment/management SaaS). His suite has reached $1M in annual revenue while allowing him to maintain a highly autonomous, low-workload lifestyle.

SaaSproduct-led-growthsubscriptionvia Indie Hackers Podcast
Page 1 of 2Next

Other Technologys