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Startup Traction: 5 Signups to $2M ARR With Content and Pricing

Episode 257 Published 5Β years, 7Β months ago
Description

Jacob Eiting posted his new SDK on Reddit and got destroyed. People called him a rip-off middleman. His beta launch attracted just 5 signups. He had no revenue and was living off his wife's income. Getting startup traction seemed impossible.

So he started writing. He spent 6-12 hours a week publishing content that answered the questions mobile developers were already searching for. Slowly, SEO traffic trickled in. RevenueCat went from $400 MRR to $7K MRR - then exploded to $2M ARR. The startup traction came from compounding effects: content for early traction, usage-based pricing that created 4-5% monthly expansion revenue, and developer word of mouth.

Jacob shares why "founder-product fit" matters more than confidence, how Y Combinator accelerated his startup traction through social proof, and why negative feedback does not mean your idea is wrong.

Key Lessons

  • πŸ› οΈ Write content to find startup traction when nothing else works: Jacob spent 6-12 hours per week writing blog posts answering developers' questions. This slow-burn SEO strategy produced the first paying customers after months of zero revenue.
  • πŸ“‰ Negative feedback does not mean no startup traction ahead: Reddit called RevenueCat a "rip-off middleman," but a few developers who understood the pain validated the idea. Jacob focused on them.
  • πŸ’° Align pricing with customer growth to compound startup traction: RevenueCat switched from per-user to revenue-based pricing, creating 4-5% monthly expansion that compounded automatically as customers' apps scaled.
  • 🧠 Founder-product fit matters more than confidence: Jacob battled self-doubt throughout the early days. Choosing a problem in his technical wheelhouse gave him enough conviction to keep going.
  • πŸš€ Stack compounding advantages for startup traction: Content creates evergreen traffic, usage-based pricing creates expansion revenue, and developer word of mouth grows with your customer base.

Chapters

  • Introduction
  • What RevenueCat does and the problem it solves
  • From $6.9K MRR to $161K MRR in under two years
  • How the idea came from building subscription apps at Elevate
  • Sitting on the idea for 2 years before acting
  • Posting the MVP on Reddit and getting torn apart
  • The beta launch that attracted only 5 signups
  • Struggling with zero revenue and self-doubt
  • Writing content 6-12 hours per week to drive SEO
  • First paying customers and reaching $400 MRR
  • Pricing evolution from per-user to revenue-based
  • Getting into Y Combinator
  • Overcoming founder self-doubt and imposter syndrome
  • Raising a $1.5M seed round led by Jason Lemkin
  • How compounding effects drove growth to $2M ARR
  • Mistakes and lessons from early hiring
  • Lightning round
  • Where to find RevenueCat and Jacob

Resources

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