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Making SaaS in solo mode: from $0 to $10k MRR 🦄

Hey! I'm Alexander Isora, the founder of Unicorn Platform.

Unicorn Platform is a landing page and blog builder for SaaS which I made solo.

alexander_isora_wide_2-9i6bo

Let me tell you how I came up with the idea, why only this project among 20+ ones I created really got off the ground, and what sources of traffic and growth tactics I used to reach $10,000 MRR.

Unicorn Platform revenue since 2018.

“It is just not for me”.

When I was a kid, I was living in a small town in Siberia. Back then Siberian kids had 2 ways to spend their time after school: snow games and heroin. Heroin did not sound fun to me, so I was spending my life playing snowballs, skiing, and sliding on ice.

One day my dad brought Pentium at home. This day changed my life.

It was a naked Windows XP with no games and no software. So I was doing all day long is drawing in Paint.

Much fun.

The magic machine changed my way of thinking. There was a whole new world on my desk. It felt big. I knew there is a huge potential in this white box, but I did not know how to unlock it.

Playing with colors in Paint was more than enough for me back then though.

A few years later, I became an expert in the PC thing. I installed all the software I could find in the town and all the games. I got access to the Internet too, but it was slow and expensive. Not even enough to download porn 😓

Getting known to the Web and software was the second moment of enlightenment. Some cool folks were able to create amazing web pages and programs. I want to become one of them!

So I downloaded a nerdy book about Java. The nerdiest one I could find. I thought it would be enough to become Neo and create cyber things.

Oh boy, I was wrong! It was the most boring stuff I ever read. I did not understand a fucking word.

I dropped my dream of becoming a developer. “It is just not for me”.

First steps in Web

Even though I quit my attempts in becoming a programmer, the magic world of zeros and ones was always thrilling me. It felt so tempting. So I gave it another try.

Another nerdy book, another quit. Yes, I’m not a fighter 😅

But things changed when I really had to create a website.

During my studies at University, I needed cash to pay for the dorm. Working at a cafe or as a courier did not sound fun. I made a small e-commerce shop in WordPress.

Task by task, I got into this. I learned HTML, CSS, JS, some PHP and made a lot of changes in my shop.

Even though the project was profitable, I switched my focus from selling to programming and quickly became a freelancing web developer.

The time started to flow really fast. Soon I got a lot of clients, increased my hourly rate to $60/h, and quit the Uni. My dream became true. I’m a developer now. Yeah boy!

But there was an itch. Something was not alright. “You must become an entrepreneur and create your own company” — my heart kept telling me.

Entrepreneurship

One of my clients was especially happy to work with me. So happy he offered me to quit freelancing and make a company together. That was an opportunity!

The new journey had begun. We stopped working with our clients, settled together in a small apartment to reduce costs, and started making our own company.

Our company was producing HTML and WordPress themes for sale. At some point, we reached $30,000 yearly revenue.

I learned how to research markets, how to sell, how to communicate with clients, how to promote stuff on the Web. It was a huge step forward on my path as an entrepreneur.

But most importantly, I learned how people create websites. This understanding tempered my vision of a website builder that this world needs.

My partner also had a vision of a website builder. Unfortunately, his idea was different from what I was thinking about. So I quit and started my own venture.

The beginning of Unicorn Platform

At the moment I quit the company was in a crisis. We were arguing more than creating. The sales also went down.

It is much easier to have a partner. But there are always risks in relying on another person.

Even though I had the money for only a few months of living, this time I decided to go completely on my own.

I had an idea and a clear vision of a landing page builder. I wanted to create a tool which is:

  • Stylish.
  • Easy and fun to use.
  • Simple.
  • Powerful just enough.
  • Tailored for one audience — startups (SaaS, mobile apps, software, NFT etc)

So let’s start building!

Making MVP

It took me 2 months to create the initial version.

I coded an HTML generator. The tool was able to compose pages to export as HTML. There was no online editing, no hosting.

I was absolutely sure about my vision. I knew people need this. This is why I was not worrying much when I was posting Unicorn Platform on Product Hunt.

Unicorn Platform on Product Hunt.

The crowd was amazed!

I got so much positive feedback. And the most important, some cash as absolute proof of demand.

But the MRR was about $500\. Which was not enough to pay my bills. I launched a private Lifetime Deal round and instantly raised $10,000 through the help of Nitesh’s Facebook group.

Cash boost after the LTD round.

The 50 people who bought the LTD access were promised they will get a complete website builder with an online editor and hosting in 1 year.

I’m an honest man. I knew I could not break the promises of people who believe in me.

There was huge work ahead.

Building website builder

By the time I had cash and the deadline I was a solid HTML coder. But to build a website builder you need more programming skills.

So back to the nerdy books 🙂

Same as previously, I needed something to push me to learn. Something to motivate me to keep grinding boring books till deep night.

I’m a human. I need fuel to go.

My fuel was the promises given to the LTD owners and my passion.

The motivation was epic.

I was waking up each morning and rushing to the co-working space. I did not need stimulators, I did not need any Pomodoro technics and other productivity hacks.

I was a machine that was only learning and coding 14 hours per day.

There is nothing much to tell about that year of building. Unicorn Platform was literally born like this:

How to

Launch

After a year of hard-working, Unicorn Platform was ready for a launch.

I re-posted it on Product Hunt. And again, the tool was warmly welcomed. The MRR jumped from $800 to $2,000.

Product Hunt is a perfect place to launch a startup. This community is full of talented designers, coders, entrepreneurs, and marketers who are eager to discover new tools. If you wish to learn about launching on Product Hunt, watch my YouTube playlist.

But the Product Hunt launch is just a first step. You need to constantly drive traffic to grow.

Customer acquisition channels

Existing customers

Humans are social animals. We naturally want to share good stuff with each other.

People who use Unicorn Platform and pay for it are happy with our service. We do more than just provide access to the builder. Our team consciously works on making each user even happier.

First, we care about them by talking personally in a live chat.

Each request is an opportunity. If someone asks for help, it is a strong signal that they are interested in continuing using your tool. They already spent time signing up and playing with it. Now they have an issue that blocks their experience. But they are not getting away, because they really want to go on.

We try our best to provide excellent support. This rarely means pointing to a guide.

We often:

  • Provide custom code. Yes, our managers will provide you with custom JavaScript code if you have a specific request. E.g. add an integration that Unicorn Platform currently does not have.
  • Google for them.
  • We help our users to grow their user base by sharing our own knowledge and resources. I regularly hunt the projects of my clients on Product Hunt and promote them on my personal Twitter.
  • Cheering them up. Yes, a little psychotherapy 😅

Often people ask for a feature we do not have or report a bug. It is a common practice for us to fix reported bugs or implement a small update on the same day the request came. An instant feedback from the developers makes users feel confident.

If they requested a complex feature, we add it to our roadmap.
Once the feature gets enough requests, we implement it and personally notify each person who wants it. Yes, personally, not through a mass email.

A personal reach out makes an amazing effect on users. They feel cared for and their will to spread Unicorn Platform in their network grows.

Word of mouth is our main source of new users. But there are many more.

"Made by" links

Every free website has a branding badge with a direct link to Unicorn Platform.

Branding badge.

The badge helps to build brand awareness and constantly brings new users. Every 3 of 100 users signs up Unicorn Platform by clicking the badge.

We have a special 2x times cheaper plan which includes the main features but still does not allow a user to remove the branding. It is a good tradeoff: pay less, but help us grow.

Open startup reports

We publish our main metrics such as MRR, churn, new users, and website visitors. People are curious about numbers. This type of content has good engagement and successfully attracts new users and potential partners.

Trends

I try to chase trends and benefit from them. For instance, we created a template for an NFT project.

NFT is hyping right now. Hundreds of project pop up daily. We offered users a simple and quick way to get a neat page for their collection in minutes.

To make sure we rank well on Google for the “create NFT website” keyword, we created a page and a blog post:

Currently, every 7th new user comes from these pages.

Big competitors do not have this level of flexibility as a small project does. We benefit from it.

Memes

We made a fun commercial.

We made it to send a signal to the world that we are not a boring company but a team of cool and fun folks. Everybody wants to hang out with cool folks.

Tweet analytics.

I hoped the ad will go viral, but it did not 😭

AppSumo

We had an AppSumo campaign which I plan to tell about in detail in the next blog post.

Besides cash boost, we also surprisingly got a lot of attention. The AppSumo community is giant. There are plenty of Facebook groups that share deals with each other.

The listing brought us 2,949 new quality sessions (bounce rate: 10.6%, time on site: 4:38).

Side-projects

We create free side-projects with our ad placed there.

UI generator screenshot.

A side-projects is a separate tool that follows 2 rules:

  1. Is free. A free thing is much easier to promote.
  2. Is useful to our audience. We make sure it brings value to your potential users, not to random strangers.

We made:

Making side projects has some side benefits. It forces to learn new technologies and test new tools. It also helps to avoid burning out.

Product Hunt

We re-launch Unicorn Platform on Product Hunt every 6 months.

According to the official Product Hunt F.A.Q., you can re-launch your project again after it got significant updates and after a period of 6 months has passed. This is why I consider Product Hunt as a customers acquisition channel, not a on time launch platform.

Here is our re-launch example.

SEO

We continue creating new blog posts and keyword-specific pages (example).

I’m not an SEO expert. I did not do any backing building or long-tail key-wording. But somehow search engines give us 31.1% of the total traffic.

SEO impact.

Capterra, G2, TrustPilot and other listing platforms

These platforms bring 0.14% of the total traffic. Not too much, but still something.

I believe listing platforms are needed to provide social proof, not to bring new users directly.

Paid ads

I do not re-invest in paid ads. I believe you need to constantly spend huge amounts on ads to create brand awareness. I do not have this many resources.

Spending $1,000 on Google ads to get 10 users with $200 LTV and earn $2,000 on them did not work for me. I experimented and got zero sign-ups. Pass.

Costs

The company monthly costs are:

  • $2,000 — salaries.

  • $400 — Uploadcare (images hosting).

  • $400 — AWS.

  • $200 — Other services (deployment, onboarding, marketing).

  • $500 — Taxes, commissions.

Total monthly costs: $3,500.

The project MRR by this moment is $12,802.

Thus, I earn $9,000 from the project as a personal income.

I still live a humble life and spend $1,500-2,000 per month for life. I store the money for experiments, force majeures, and future hires.

Goals and future plans

I do not want to outcompete SquareSpace, Wix, WordPress and dominate the market. I do not have any KPI or growth goals. I’m not chasing the “hockey-stick” growth.

I just love my product and want to continue improving it. Linear growth is totally fine to me.

There is one thing that makes me angry 😖

The popular media are full of successful startup stories such as “X raised $100M”, “Y expanded the staff to 500 heads”, “Z has grown 1000% in the last year“. TechCrunch, Verge, and others want to show off big numbers because these titles will have a better retweet rate.

This creates an image of a successful entrepreneur who lives in Silicon Valley, has 10 meetings with investors a day, and raises $100k of an angel’s cash during lunch.

But this is a manipulation.

A startup is a complex and unpredictable thing. It can evolve in many different ways.

VC is not mandatory. Raising funds is not mandatory. The team is not mandatory. An office is not mandatory. Hockey-stick is not mandatory.

Let your success story be written by you, not by the media.

Thanks for reading my story 🙂

I hope you found it useful and fun.

Here are some links.

Project:

Personal:

✌️!

P.S. This post was originally posted on our blog https://unicornplatform.com/blog/from-0-to-10k-mrr-the-story-of-a-bootstrapped-saas/

posted to Icon for group Growth
Growth
on January 31, 2022
  1. 8

    Great and helpful post! Good luck on your way to $100k MMR :)

    1. 3

      Thanks for the support and your awesome tool (https://user-onboarding.app/), Aleks! Looking forward to hear your "0>10K" story soon 🙂

      1. 1

        I hope it happens this year 🤔

  2. 6

    Great story man.

    I remember when 4 years ago you were deciding and seeking for knowledge and advice on how to build the backend part of UP and late nights of us discussing it.

    You have made it! It is awesome and you are inspiration for me thru out these years.

    Thanks for sharing!

    1. 2

      Thanks, Kostya.

      This would not be possible without you. Seriously.

      Your advice back then, your app today (https://appliku.com/). Your contribution is priceless.

      1. 1

        how is the backend build ?
        can you share ?

        1. 1

          It is Django + DRF + Postgres. Nothing special 🙂

          1. 1

            and how the preformence ? which python web server do you use ?
            do you using aws RDS ? or installed plain Postgres on ec2?
            im thinking starting new project using python

            1. 1

              Plain Postgres does the job really well for us. We do not have to handle too many requests to the database because we cache websites.
              We use gunicorn as a python server.

  3. 3

    Amazing post, thanks for sharing!

    The popular media are full of successful startup stories such as “X raised $100M”

    I agree, I personally see raising VC money as a way to admit you failed and that your company is likely to fail too: you failed to be profitable fast enough, you failed to create organic growth, your company doesn't have enough expertise and needs external help, you want to grow faster than the natural rate. This is why I think VC money is a bad sign: it forces a company to grow faster than it's normal. By growing so fast, there are so many things to get wrong at the core that can eventually kill the company.

    I find a $10k MRR profitable bootstrapped company to be infinitely more successful than a loss-generating company that recently raised $10m. I might be biased though, we are on IndieHackers after all.

    1. 2

      I think if investment rounds do not hurt the vision and the product, it is fine for the end-user. Good examples: Miro, Notion, 1Password, Figma. The companies raised a shit ton of money but their products are still great and they continue developing them.

      What I do not like is thinking that investment is the only metric of success. If you want to play the VC game, it is fine. But you do not have to if you do not want it. No one will call you a loser because you have not raised a million.

      1. 2

        I think if investment rounds do not hurt the vision and the product, it is fine for the end-user

        I am still not convinced about this, I think VC-money always comes with strings attached: you have to grow AND you have to generate more revenue/profit. No one will invest in a product just to make it better, they want to profit out of it.
        I personally don't use any of the tools you mentioned, but so far my experience has been that once a company raises VC money it starts falling apart (leadership changes, people leaving, more bureaucracy).

        I am not saying that VC money is never good, I just don't like this way of funding an (existing) business. If someone needs the money to just get started, yes, it's beneficial (especially for hardware companies that must buy expensive equipment before they can start production).
        If an existing company is going well, being profitable and can grow by itself, I don't think VC money to accelerate this growth is good.
        If an existing company is not going well, losing money or not having a good product-market fit, then I don't think VC money would be anything other than wasting resources.

        What I do not like is thinking that investment is the only metric of success

        I agree. Many entrepreneurs have nowadays the goal to raise $Xm VC money instead of building a successful business.

        1. 2

          once a company raises VC money it starts falling apart

          I believe it depends. If a CEO puts too many responsibilities on their shoulders, getting into the VC race can ruin a company.
          But if CEO has the right people around him to cover all the stuff (product, marketing, finance, etc) and has enough time to play the VC game, it can go smoothly for the company.

          If an existing company is going well, being profitable and can grow by itself, I don't think VC money to accelerate this growth is good.

          People want to make money.
          I think this desire drives the economy and the tech progress which is a good thing 🤔

          1. 1

            I think this desire drives the economy and the tech progress which is a good thing

            I agree, I might have gone a bit overboard, I think I am more in favor of small family shops remaining as they are rather than turning into a franchise with the goal of making more money. I am not a big fan of capitalism, where infinite growth is a necessity.

            1. 2

              We can support SMB and local brands by making purchases from them 🙂
              I have bought most of my clothes in small shops. It is a little pricier, but the quality and the service are usually better.

  4. 3

    Great post!
    You are one of the success stories I follow :)

    What would you say, going for existing market with strong need (every product need a website) is the reason for the success.
    I feel that the majority of indie hackers that saw success are the ones that went for existing product line, and made their own version. Because it is so hard to find a new product market fit idea.

    1. 2

      Yes, moving to an established market is a safer and more predictable choice.
      But you will meet a higher competition too.
      So it is up to you 😀
      Do you have any particular ideas to discuss?

      1. 1

        Yeah :) but I am still trying to wrap my head around it. Would love to brainstorm it with you when I will have more compressive product strategy and vision.

        1. 1

          Sure thing. Feel free to reach me out anywhere and pitch your ideas 🙂

  5. 3

    Hey, uigenerator.org is great! Would be nice to have more customizable screens though.

    1. 3

      Hi Ruslan.
      Can you please give more details about the customization level you want to see? Do you want to move particular items inside a UI template?

      1. 2

        I would appreciate some of these

        • Finance & etc - € instead of $
        • Desktop - Dashboard - combine into 1 and customize inside
        • Desktop - Login screen
        • SVG export

        I was also thinking that one way to monetize this is to make a Figma mockup kit available for download for $$ (I was trying to search for one but was unable to find one which fits my product - SaaS desktop)

        1. 1

          Great ideas. Thanks.
          I think we can at least publish the Figma file. I will keep the other ideas for the future ✌️

  6. 3

    Wow great post, congrats on everything, the YT channel is helpful and will grow, and the commercial is EPIC!

    1. 1

      Ha-ha, thanks Jeff 😄

      I can not say the commercial was a marketing success story but it was fun.

      The YT channel is something I truly enjoy working on. I have always been dreaming to become an actor 🙂 YouTube allows me to express myself. Even though I have only 72 subscribers, I do not care much. Knowing that I'm watched by even 10 people gives me joy.

  7. 2

    Very inspiring, but don't be deterred from advertising because you hear people like this saying that they don't get any signups.

    It's a long process of testing many keywords, ads, and landing pages. These platforms have done a great job of convincing people that it's easy, yet don't provide any meaningful results—sometimes any results at all—because they made it look too easy.

    If you can afford to, stick with it and test many different variations of everything. Above all else, do your research as there's far more to it than people think.

    1. 1

      Hey Dan. I plan to continue experimenting with paid ads. I will publish my results.

  8. 2

    Amazing story man!
    Really happy to see more fellow people from Russia making it success on international market and not focus on internal market.

    Thank you for sharing a breakdown on the acquisition channels. It's really helpful.

    Good luck on your journey to even more success!

    1. 2

      Thanks, кomrade! 😝 I'm glad the read was useful. Let me know if you need more details.

  9. 2

    Congrats, Alexander!

    Great story, I can definitely relate – working on a somewhat similar thing (niche e-commerce platform), appreciate the details you shared on customer acquisition!

    How mature was your app when you first launched on product hunt? You said that you relaunch there every 6 months – have you noticed a meaningful difference between launches as your product became better over time?

    Thanks!

    Greg

    1. 1

      Hola Greg!

      How mature was your app when you first launched on product hunt?

      The MVP is still live: https://unicornic.com/app/
      You can play with it 🙂

      have you noticed a meaningful difference between launches as your product became better over time?

      Each launch brings fewer customers because the tool is not new and excites fewer people. But it is still a good source of traffic.

  10. 2

    Hey @alexanderisora thanks for sharing your experience. You mentioned "only this project among 20+ ones I created really got off the ground" - do you know why?

    Did you just try 20 projects and this happened to be the one that stuck? Or, was there something different you did for this project that made it work?

    1. 1

      Hi Jake. Thanks for the great question. It made me think a lot.

      I will spend some time reflexing on this and make a thread on Twitter https://twitter.com/alexanderisora

      I can notify you by email or here when the thread is ready if you want me to.

      1. 1

        @alexanderisora Hey thanks. I don't use Twitter so an email or notification on here would be great 👍

  11. 2

    Alex, massive props to you my man, you have built something amazing. [It was also one of my ideas years back around the time of Optimizepress...Then came kajabi, clickfunnels etc..ahhh warrior forum days - but my ideas never materialized - big up anyone on IH from those days]

    I've made the decision to instantly switch to your platform for our front end offering, and support your amazing endeavour. There are few minor tweaks needed, but honestly, UP blows alot of 7 figure website builders out of the water.

    I'll be pushing you to everyone possible, keep up the good work amigo!

    1. 1

      Wow, that is so amazing. Thanks, for the support, Ryan!

      P.S.: Your idea is still possible to make 🙂 The market is big. You will find your customer.

  12. 2

    Thanks for sharing! I'm going to watch your ProductHunt videos here soon.

    1. 1

      Cool! I hope it will be useful for you Justin 😀

  13. 2

    I can't ever praise this wonderful person named @alexanderisora enough for creating such a robust world-class website builder and all that with a clear vision, full commitment and unbroken promises.

    I can't ever praise him enough for always mentioning me as the early-supporter whenever he writes the story of Unicorn Platform while my contribution was almost nothing, that to give so much value. :)

    But I will take a moment to say you -

    A BIG THANK YOU! 🌟

    for keeping the promise for all the early adopters, giving them one of the best SaaS deals for life and being a such an amazing human.

    1. 1

      You are my angel savior ha-ha! 😇

  14. 2

    Bro! I freaking love your site! It is extremely easy to use even for a beginner like me at creating websites! Like dude, this is exactly what I have been looking for => an easy way to create layouts, input new sections (components), and have it look like a cohesive website done by a professional!! Love it man, just love it!

    1. 1

      Wow this is so warm and expressive. Thank you very much! 🥰

  15. 2

    I really loved this post!! Especially your evidence of all the not-mandatory things in tech. Tech has this image of needing to take on a lot of funding and hustle 80-90 hours to build a product. I've seen the opposite with my coaching clients.

    I love that you're also proving your own version of success.

    1. 1

      Hey Sabrina.
      I'm enjoying promoting my idea of not following popular stereotypes. I believe it will make many people happier.

  16. 2

    Absolutely loved the read buddy. Keep it up!!

    1. 1

      Thanks, Ian!✌️😇

  17. 2

    Great post! I really love that last part because it's exactly how I feel.

  18. 2

    Thanks for sharing this here. So many great tips and lessons.
    Subscribed to your YT.
    All the best with the biz !

    1. 1

      Thanks Peter! 🥰
      Do you have anything you want me to tell in the next videos?

      1. 2

        Going along with the theme of some of your other vids,
        my vote/ask is for one that discusses thinking/planning for what's the right mix of time and effort on various startup activities.

        e.g. for some of your marketing initiatives how much time did you dedicate to it, did you get any contractor/employee help, what are some of the considerations.

        Cheers

        1. 1

          Nice ones. Really. Noted 👍 Thanks Peter!

  19. 2

    Amazing post my friend. I’ve taken Designjoy to $80k MRR in solo mode, and I’m still widely criticized for it. Good for you for proving once again that there is more than one way to build and grow a business, despite what the norm says. Individually we are far more capable than we tend to believe. ✌️

    1. 1

      Why the hell do you get any criticism for making such an amazing project? 🙄

  20. 2

    Amazing work mate!

    By far the most entertaining founder doing it 👏

    1. 1

      Thanks Lachlan 🙂 I love to bring the fun.

  21. 2

    I just have to say: I absolutely love Unicorn Platform. It's essentially squarespace but for nice "modern tech" looking sites and it's amazing. I use it for my personal site and 2 products. It's one of the few SaaS subscriptions I have right now that I'm only looking to upgrade tiers in the future and wouldn't even consider cancelling.

    I think the key is that it hits the perfect epicenter between "flexibility" and "easy". Coding a landing page yourself is flexible, but hard. Something like WebFlow is a little better, but still difficult. Unicorn Platform is perfect.

    1. 1

      Many thanks Spencer.
      I'm happy you found our builder balanced enough to be helpful for your needs.

      P.S. I posted your precious feedback on Twitter: https://twitter.com/unicornplatform/status/1488381448549986306

  22. 2

    Hi Alexander congratulations on your success this is hugely inspiring! As I was reading I felt as if I had a similar journey in that I had a Java book and could never make progress in building anything. I wondered what language/tools eventually allowed you to build your product and how you went about learning? I feel for myself I can never learn things without using the tools to build something useful. Take care!

    1. 1

      Hello!
      I learned ReactJS and Django.
      I recommend starting from HTML/CSS/JS. It is easier to learn and, most important, you will see the results of your work (pages). This resource can help https://roadmap.sh/frontend

  23. 2

    That was really inspiring. Thanks for sharing.

  24. 2

    Oh dude, congrats!! Super useful content, specially your growth tips. Considering some of them for my project. Thank your for sharing :-)

    1. 1

      I'm glad it was useful. I hope these tips will help you grow 🙂

  25. 2

    I just love my product and want to continue improving it. Linear growth is totally fine to me.

    Love this! Thanks for sharing and good luck with your future growth 🙂

  26. 2

    Well, that was an interesting&inspiring story. I always appreciate longer reads and others’ business journeys. Congrats!

    1. 2

      Thanks, mate. I'm glad you liked it. I tried to keep it exciting and not too long, yet whole. It took 1 day to write it and 3 days to edit.

      1. 1

        You’ve succeeded and it was definitely worth it. As we can see, best work takes time ;) Waiting for more of such reads

  27. 2

    This is an incredible story, and thank you for sharing this, adds a lot of value as well. And your Roadmap looks really interesting as well. Keep pushing mate.

    1. 1

      Thanks, Karthik! I try to keep Roadmap updated but the product plans change often. Mostly because we got new requests from users and also because I'm terrible at estimating.

      1. 1

        I'm sure you get a ton of new feature requests at this scale. Hey, you should try Hellonext.co (https://hellonext.co/) to centralize the feedback system and save some time.

        1. 1

          We are pretty good at using Trello and live chat to collect feature requests 🙂
          I do not plan to switch from these tools. At least until we have a really huge volume of requests.

  28. 2

    Hi Alexander,
    Thanks so much for sharing. That's an inspiring story, and we all love those :-)
    Andy

    1. 1

      Hey Andy. Thanks for reading this 🙂 I'm super glad my story made you inspired.

  29. 2

    Amazing post! 🔥 Thanks for sharing your journey.
    Wish you all the best!

    1. 1

      Thank you Ivan! I'm happy you liked the story 🥰

  30. 2

    CONGRATS!

    I used Unicorn Platform for the first time in 2020 and shared it with all of my indie-hackers friends.

    The very first $$$ I made from a SaaS pre-sale was with Unicorn Platform 😎.
    This SaaS project has to be shut down but I've been able to create, publish and get my first payments on the website within 3 days. Crazy for me!

    Thank again dude, you're really inspiring all of us and especially me.

    1. 2

      Hey Robin. I'm sure you are the only reason your SaaS got sales so quickly 😄
      But I'm glad Unicorn Platform was helpful on your path.

  31. 2

    Awesome post! Really cool story, wish you the best for the future!

    1. 1

      Hey Jules. Thanks for the kind words mate! 😇

  32. 2

    What a journey Alexander, thanks for sharing it 💙 Also, uigenerator looks super cool.

    1. 1

      Thanks, brother 🙂 We plan to launch UI Generator in a week. Still making some improvements.

  33. 2

    I disagree. You are one of a kind. Not everyone can sustain your drive. I congratulate you!

    1. 1

      I agree with your disagree 😄
      Everyone's path is unique. I do not encourage to follow my steps. Instead, I'm glad to see people making their own way.
      I just shared some less-known growth tactics that can help.

  34. 2

    Nice story, thanks for sharing and inspiration ;)

    1. 1

      ˚✧₊⁎( ˘ω˘ )⁎⁺˳✧༚

  35. 2

    Wow great Sharing man!
    Congrats for everything... Hopefully you can reach a higher MRR!

    1. 1

      Thanks, Tangguh! We are slowly growing day by day 😄

  36. 1

    The product is very useful, thank you for your contribution 🙂

  37. 1

    Super impressive --I'd love to have you on my Podcast. Takes 15-20 min, features thought leaders like yourself..... Interested?

  38. 1

    Super impressive --I'd love to have you on my Podcast. Takes 15-20 min, features thought leaders like yourself..... Interested?

    1. 1

      Hey thanks. That would be great!

      1. 1

        email me at support@gigasco.com

        Subject : Podcast guest

  39. 1

    Great story, great work! I totally agree with the thing that makes you angry.

    Keep on buildung! I wish you all the best.

  40. 1

    This was very inspiring and I appreciate your sense of humor :)

  41. 1

    "A startup is a complex and unpredictable thing. It can evolve in many different ways...Let your success story be written by you, not by the media." Love this! Thanks for giving us the REAL deal! [Loved the owl illustration as well.] ;)

  42. 1

    I genuinely enjoyed reading your story, you have an amazing way of story-telling. Your post made me rethink the 'facts' that I thought I had to get right, like getting a partner, getting VCs, and having a team. I also love the passion you have, it comes through clearly in your story. You also made me reimagine how I would want my startup to go, from wanting it to skyrocket up in growth, to being okay with linear growth and just enjoying the process, as you do. Thank you so much for taking the time to post this, Alexander! It really benefited me :)

    1. 2

      Way to go my friend! ✌️

  43. 1

    You got me on Siberia! haha. Do you still live there or have you immigrated? My mom was from Siberia, I from St. Petersburg but have long migrated to tropical climates.
    Thank you so much for sharing your success story. It is very encouraging that one can be happily building a product that solves the same problem a mature global platform does yet make a good income and bring satisfaction. Unicorns unite!

  44. 1

    This is super insightful to read, thanks so much! Totally agree with your sentiment on VC money. There is a different way to build healthy, sustainable businesses.

  45. 1

    Posts like these are always a delight to read. Good work and all the best for the future! :-)

    1. 1

      Thanks Shubham! I'm glad you enjoyed the read 🙂

  46. 1

    You are my idol Alexander. Keep the good work up!

    1. 1

      ╭(๑☆‿ ☆#)ᕗ

  47. 1

    Such a great read. Thanks for sharing. 👍👍
    All the best for a faster "linear" growth.

    1. 1

      Thank you for reading this 🙂

  48. 1

    These are the posts I like to read, honest, concise and true. I'm happy for you. By reading this, it keeps me motivated in next venture.

    1. 2

      Good luck Daveyon! 👍

  49. 1

    great story , can you please share where do you host your web app , and what services you are using ?

    1. 1

      We use AWS for hosting and Uploadcare for images.
      The services we use are https://appliku.com/, http://crisp.chat/, https://user-onboarding.app/.
      Communication: Trello, Discord, Slack, Telegram

  50. 1

    You are great storyteller. I read whole post in one time. Just want to say, congratulations and all the very best.

  51. 1

    That video you made was hilarious!! 😂 Thanks for sharing your story!

    1. 1

      Haha thanks, Brandon! 🙃

  52. -2

    This comment has been voted down. Click to show.

    1. 2

      There are plenty of logo generation tools out there. The competition will be hard.
      Maybe you can get inspired by @dagorenouf (https://twitter.com/dagorenouf), the founder of https://www.logology.co/ 🙂 He is really good at promoting his tool.

      1. 0

        Although the competition is stiff enough on logo makers, being in the top 20 players can already meet my early semi-retirement plan.

        Started to follow his Twitter, he is real good in promoting his web!

  53. 1

    This comment was deleted 3 years ago.

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