Episode Details
Back to EpisodesFirst SaaS Customers: From Side Project to $1M ARR
Description
Scott Klein and his brother started building StatusPage.io as a side project - two weeks of contract work, two weeks on the product. Four months later, they had their first paying customer at $50 a month. Eighteen months after that, they crossed $1M in annual recurring revenue with 1,500 customers including Visa and Kickstarter.
In this episode, Scott reveals how StatusPage.io found its first SaaS customers without growth hacks, why having a sales co-founder was the single biggest factor in their early traction, and the hard lesson he learned from a failed music startup about why founders must be their own first customer.
The early days were anything but certain. People emailed them saying the product was something anyone could build in a weekend and they would never pay for it. But Scott's team had something most developer duos do not - a third co-founder named Danny who spent most of his days on the phone with prospects. Danny's focus on talking to first SaaS customers and following up by email is what Scott credits with the vast majority of their startup traction.
π Key Lessons
- π€ A sales co-founder accelerates startup traction: Scott Klein credits co-founder Danny with most of StatusPage.io's early success because Danny spent full days talking to customers while the developers built the product.
- π― Your first SaaS customers should be people you know: StatusPage.io's first paying customers came from Scott's personal network in the developer community - warm relationships, not cold outreach, drove initial revenue.
- π Building for an unfamiliar market creates a fatal empathy gap: Scott's failed music startup taught him that you cannot sell effectively when you have never experienced the problem yourself - you are just a primate pretending to understand.
- π οΈ Be your own first customer to validate early traction: Scott argues the best customer development is with yourself because it lights up neural pathways around the problem that make it easy to get up every morning and keep building.
- π° Charge from day one even when the product is incomplete: Early StatusPage.io customers paid $50/month for a basic product because having something was better than having nothing - and they gave feedback that shaped development.
- π Early customers come from conviction, not growth hacks: StatusPage.io did nothing special for marketing - they built the product, asked people for money, and stayed the course when critics said anyone could build it in a weekend.
Chapters
- Introduction
- What is StatusPage.io
- Team structure and choosing Denver over San Francisco
- Favorite quote - wisdom is listening to your own advice
- The danger of too many voices as a founder
- Where the idea for StatusPage came from
- Why communication matters more than uptime
- Taking the leap without knowing if people would pay
- Staying the course when early feedback is mixed
- Why a sales co-founder is critical for first SaaS customers
- Danny's blog post on getting to $5K MRR
- Validating the problem without special tactics
- Why early customers tolerate incomplete products
- The music startup failure and the empathy gap
- Timeline from first line of code to first customer
- Tactics for finding customer two and three
- Preview of Part 2
Resources
- Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/86
- Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email