Typeform Startups
11 case studies with real revenue and traction data from typeform startups.
SwagUp is a branded swag creation and distribution platform that Michael Martocci bootstrapped from his mom's house to over $500k/month revenue in under 4 years. With 2,500+ clients and a team of 150+, the company leveraged an inherent viral loop where recipients of swag inquire about the source, driving inbound leads. The business was built with a scrappy initial tech stack (Wix, Typeform, Trello) and scaled through obsessive focus on customer experience and viral growth rather than traditional marketing channels.
newCo was Ben Tossell's video tutorial platform for learning no-code development, which reached 90 paying customers and $8k in total sales but generated only ~$700 MRR due to lifetime payments rather than recurring subscriptions. The startup ultimately failed due to lack of focus, trying to build too many features simultaneously while juggling video content creation, consulting, and platform development. Ben shut it down after realizing he had lost sight of what the product actually was, but lessons learned directly informed his later success with Makerpad.
Michael Novotny built LocalTown, a no-code marketplace launched in 2016, but failed to sustain it due to poor distribution and lack of audience building. He later found success with GetStackd, a tool that became Product of the Day on Product Hunt by helping makers choose the right no-code tools. His key learning was that distribution and audience-building matter far more than the product itself.
Henry is a Latin American coding bootcamp that teaches software development for free and operates on an income-sharing agreement model, taking 15% of graduates' salaries up to a $4,000 cap. Founded by Martin Borchardt after his experience hiring for his FinTech startup Nubi, Henry validated its concept through a simple Wix site and Typeform, attracting 100 applicants on day one through organic social posts. After receiving $300K from Y Combinator in Summer 2020, the company aims to train over 100,000 developers by 2025, with 90% of job placements driven directly by Henry's efforts.
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.
Nomad List is a community-driven platform and database of cities for digital nomads and remote workers. Peter Levels launched it in 2014 after creating a viral spreadsheet of cities with fast internet and low costs. The product gained significant traction through organic discovery on Product Hunt and Hacker News, and now serves nearly 1 million monthly users with 900,000+ visits per month, generating $17.5k-$25k in monthly recurring revenue.
Delite was a B2B SaaS platform for wholesale order management that launched in October 2016, created by Pat Walls and his roommate to solve the pain of manually managing orders across hundreds of retailers. Despite acquiring 5-10 customers through cold outreach and trade show efforts, the startup ultimately failed because the product was a "nice-to-have" rather than a necessity, it required significant feature development and integrations, and the founders lacked sufficient time while working full-time jobs.
Rebase is an immigration-as-a-service platform that helps remote workers and digital nomads establish residency in Portugal. Founded by Peter Levels, it went viral on Twitter when he shared a casual photo of building the landing page, generating thousands of sign-ups. The platform now serves approximately 9% of all people moving to Portugal annually, processing around 400-500 sign-ups per month with $30-50k MRR.
Emma is a technical product designer and entrepreneur building Velvet, a no-code infrastructure layer for onboarding, authentication, and payment processing across digital products. After selling her previous company Moonlight (which did $55k/month in revenue), she pursued an MBA at Chicago Booth while exploring multiple product ideas, eventually raising a $1.2M pre-seed round from Chicago Ventures to build Velvet, which aims to become the Shopify of digital goods.
TimeLift is a dinner club marketplace that connects strangers for weekly curated dinners in 300+ cities. After 3 years and 2 failed app iterations (bucket list and dream-based dating), founder Maxime Barbier pivoted to an ops-heavy, tech-light model in 2024, launching with just Typeform, WhatsApp, and Stripe. In 10 months, the company reached $12.5M ARR, 70 employees, 18,000 dinners per week, and 1M Instagram followers through paid ads and viral organic traction fueled by the resonant mission of combating post-COVID loneliness.
Makerpad is a no-code education platform founded by Ben Tossell that teaches users how to build apps and websites without coding. The platform leverages popular no-code tools like Bubble, Webflow, Airtable, and Zapier to provide tutorials and hands-on learning for aspiring makers.