Early Traction: 60 Waitlist Signups to $2M ARR

Early Traction: 60 Waitlist Signups to $2M ARR

Author: Omer Khan August 8, 2024 Duration: 1:07:49
Lav Crnobrnja forgot about his landing page for nine months. Then one email from a frustrated waitlist subscriber changed everything. That single message became the early traction signal that turned a company hackathon side project into a $2M ARR bootstrapped SaaS with 2,500 customers. Lav reveals how building Slack-first instead of adding Slack as an integration created a genuine differentiator, why hiring Toggl's former CMO shaped their content strategy for startup traction, and the painful lesson of attracting thousands of visitors who never converted. Learn how early traction from just 60 waitlist signups compounded into getting traction across multiple channels. Vacation Tracker launched with a six-month free beta for 60 subscribers. About 10 became active users. Today the product serves 2,500 customers with a team of 20, running 100,000+ users on $1,000/month hosting costs through serverless infrastructure. The initial traction came from content marketing and the Slack App Store. Key Lessons 🎯 Early traction starts with listening, not launching: Lav handled every demo, live chat, and support request in year one, using feedback to prioritize features like Google Calendar sync and payroll exports. 🛠️ Build around the platform for early traction: Vacation Tracker was designed Slack-first while competitors added Slack as an integration. That architectural choice became the core differentiator. 📉 Vanity traffic kills startup traction momentum: Travel destination articles grew traffic 50% but generated zero signups. Problem-specific content around leave accruals finally converted. 💰 Borrow strategy, hire for execution: Lav hired Toggl's former CMO to write a two-year plan, then brought on a junior marketer. Proven strategy at a fraction of the cost. 🚀 A crossed-out price anchors value for early traction: Displaying pricing but crossing it out for beta users set expectations so the free-to-paid transition felt natural. Chapters Introduction What Vacation Tracker does and who it serves From services company to hackathon side project The waitlist email that created early traction after nine months Pricing the beta and first paying customer Slack-first as a product differentiator Getting from 10 to 1,000 customers Content mistakes: travel guides that drove zero signups Slack and Microsoft Teams App Store optimization Transitioning from services to full-time product Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/406 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

For anyone building a software company, the journey from an idea to a sustainable business is filled with specific, often daunting, questions. The SaaS Podcast-AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders exists to answer those with concrete stories, not abstract advice. Each week, host Omer Khan sits down with founders who have actually done it-they discuss the messy reality of securing those first few customers, the difficult adjustments needed to find true product-market fit, and the tactical decisions behind scaling to and beyond a million dollars in annual revenue. Conversations delve into the nitty-gritty of pricing models, sales processes, reducing churn, and the practical application of AI in a SaaS context. Omer’s perspective is shaped by having personally coached over a hundred and fifty founders past critical revenue milestones and conducting interviews with more than five hundred others. This depth of experience means every episode cuts straight to actionable insights, whether you’re painstakingly bootstrapping toward ten thousand in monthly recurring revenue or managing the complexities of rapid growth. The focus is relentlessly on proven strategies that have worked in the real world. Tuning into this podcast feels like gaining access to a private mastermind, a resource where thousands of other founders gather weekly to learn from the honest successes and setbacks of their peers.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders
Podcast Episodes
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Duration: 1:02:20
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Duration: 50:42
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Duration: 45:03
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Duration: 52:13
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Duration: 46:06
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Duration: 49:32
Most founders think enterprise sales takes 6-12 months. Bassem Hamdy closes deals in 9 days. After scaling Procore from $10M to $100M, Bassem built Briq - an AI workforce platform now doing 8 figures in revenue. His ente…
Consultative Selling: How He Closed Instacart Live [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 42:18
His co-founder live-coded a fix during the Instacart pitch - and closed the deal on the spot. Saket Saurabh used consultative selling SaaS techniques to close 15 enterprise customers including Instacart, LinkedIn, and Do…
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Duration: 57:21
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Duration: 57:26
First paying customer: $8 a month for a fantasy football league. Bilal Aijazi's freemium SaaS grew to millions of monthly active users and 7-figure ARR with just 20 people. The challenge was figuring out which of those m…
Bootstrapped SaaS to 8-Figure Exit With No VC Funding [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:16:40
4,000 pound WordPress plugin. No tech skills. No VC funding. 8-figure exit. James Ashford built GoProposal as a bootstrapped SaaS for accountants and sold it to Sage - proving you don't need massive funding to build a va…