Episode Details
Back to EpisodesSaaS Positioning: Niche Down to $55K MRR Bootstrapped
Description
Mogens Moller built a hard-coded opt-in form for a travel agency and got 800% more email subscribers. 50 e-commerce managers emailed him wanting the same thing. Instead of nailing his SaaS positioning for that audience, he spent a year chasing every website type - and it nearly cost him the business.
Sleeknote's product positioning breakthrough came from narrowing back down to e-commerce - the niche SaaS audience that validated the product in the first place. That competitive positioning unlocked growth to $55K MRR and 700 customers, bootstrapped from day one.
Mogens shares hard-won SaaS positioning lessons: charging beta testers $20/month from day one, filling a 50-spot beta in two hours through Twitter, pricing at $69/month while competitors charged $5, and why partners only join after you already have customers in a market.
π Key Lessons
- π― Niching down unlocks growth faster than broad SaaS positioning: Sleeknote lost a year targeting every website type. When they refocused on e-commerce - the audience they knew best - growth accelerated to $55K MRR.
- π° Charge from day one to validate your SaaS positioning: Mogens charged 10 beta sites $20/month for hard-coded HTML boxes before writing application code. Getting money, not just signals, proved the product was worth building.
- π Create urgency to fill your beta fast: Sleeknote announced a 50-spot limited beta on Twitter and filled it in two hours. Artificial scarcity generated a 60-person waitlist of people willing to pay.
- π Partners follow customers, not the other way around: Sleeknote's agency referral strategy worked in Denmark where they had customers, but failed completely in the UK where they had none.
- π§ Price signals quality in SaaS positioning: Sleeknote set its minimum at $69/month while competitors charged $5. E-commerce managers viewed higher pricing as a quality indicator and could justify the expense to their organizations.
Chapters
- Introduction
- How to pronounce Mogens Moller
- What Sleeknote does for e-commerce sites
- How slide-in boxes work without hurting conversions
- Mogens's favorite quote about user interfaces
- From freelance project to startup idea
- The 800% email subscriber increase
- Hard-coded boxes as validation before building
- Building the MVP and first beta testers
- Getting 50 beta testers in two hours
- No proprietary technology - just execution
- The mistake of going too broad for a year
- Would staying niche have meant faster growth
- Charging beta users from day one
- Challenges scaling beyond Scandinavia
- Why the UK agency strategy failed
- Merging with a competitor - six co-founders
- Losing a co-founder who could not commit
- Lightning round
Resources
- Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/109
- Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email