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One Person SaaS Business: Side Project to $40K MRR and Sold

Episode 207 Published 6Β years, 10Β months ago
Description

Tyler Tringas was $50,000 in credit card debt after his venture-backed startup failed. All he had left was a one person SaaS business making $1,000 a month from store locators priced at $5 each. In this episode, Tyler reveals how he grew StoreMapper to over $40,000 MRR, sold it for "level up" money, and used the experience to launch Earnest Capital - a fund for bootstrappers.

Tyler built his one person SaaS business MVP on a single 30-hour flight and had five paying customers within 24 hours of landing. His niche SaaS strategy: latch onto a fast-growing platform like Shopify, prioritize retention over acquisition, and use just-in-time feature delivery to avoid wasting limited time as a micro SaaS solo founder.

He never ran paid advertising across the entire five-year history of StoreMapper. Growth came from Shopify App Store listings, forum engagement, and intercepting freelance gigs on Upwork by pitching his one person SaaS business as a cheaper alternative to custom development.

πŸ”‘ Key Lessons

  • 🎯 Validate a one person SaaS business by spotting repeated client requests: Three freelance clients asked Tyler for store locator functionality within two weeks - pattern recognition was stronger validation than any survey.
  • πŸš€ Latch onto a fast-growing platform for niche SaaS distribution: Tyler listed StoreMapper as the only store locator in the Shopify App Store, giving him a free and steady stream of customers without paid advertising.
  • πŸ“‰ Prioritize retention over acquisition during the side-project phase: High retention meant small trickles of new signups still compounded into meaningful MRR growth for his one person SaaS business.
  • πŸ› οΈ Use just-in-time feature delivery to protect limited founder time: Tyler manually emailed receipts from Gmail for two months rather than building automation - only building features when absolutely necessary.
  • πŸ’° Start cheap to get traction, then raise prices later: StoreMapper launched at $5/month. With 100+ happy customers, Tyler had leverage and data to raise prices substantially for his micro SaaS product.

Chapters

  • Introduction
  • Tyler's motivational quote - Hemingway
  • What is Earnest Capital
  • The StoreMapper story begins
  • How Tyler came up with the one person SaaS business idea
  • Building the MVP on a 30-hour flight
  • Five paying customers within 24 hours
  • What is micro SaaS
  • How much StoreMapper sold for
  • $40K MRR and five years to the exit
  • Running StoreMapper as a side project with minimal time
  • Getting the first 100 customers through Shopify
  • No paid advertising - ever
  • Focusing on retention during the side-project phase
  • Just-in-time feature delivery
  • Raising prices and growth strategies
  • Deciding when to hire vs do it yourself
  • Lessons from selling StoreMapper
  • How Earnest Capital works
  • Lightning round
  • Wrap up and where to find Tyler

Resources

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