Niche SaaS: One Pain Point to $5.5M ARR in 12 Years episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 24, 2024 · 54 MIN

Niche SaaS: One Pain Point to $5.5M ARR in 12 Years

from The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders · host Omer Khan

Erling Linde had no sales experience and a product so ugly a prospect called it terrible. Twelve years later, his niche SaaS generates $5.5M ARR and employs 42 people across five countries. In this episode, you'll learn how focusing on one vertical SaaS pain point and expanding geographically - instead of adding features - built a durable business. Erling reveals how he cut demo times from two hours to 10 minutes by learning to read buying signals, why hiring customer success people before salespeople in new markets built trust faster, and how an industry-specific SaaS approach created a compounding referral loop when consultants changed jobs and brought the product with them. CV Partner (now Flowcase) bootstrapped for 10 years to $4M ARR before raising a minority VC round that doubled the team from 20 to 42 people in one year - proof that niche SaaS patience pays off. 🔑 Key Lessons 🎯 Niche SaaS wins by going deep, not broad: CV Partner hit $5.5M ARR by solving one pain point for consulting firms - resume formatting for bids - and expanding geographically rather than building for adjacent markets. 🤝 Cut demos short when you see buying signals: Erling's meetings went from two hours to 10 minutes once he stopped presenting when prospects showed excitement and scheduled follow-ups instead. 🛠️ A UX co-founder can transform a niche SaaS product: A prospect's blunt criticism of the developer-built UI led Erling to recruit a UX expert whose redesign became CV Partner's top competitive advantage. 🚀 Hire customer success before sales in new markets: CV Partner entered new countries by placing a local support person first so prospects trusted they would receive niche market SaaS-level attention. 💰 Bootstrap until ready, then raise to compress time: Erling bootstrapped for 10 years to $4M ARR, then raised a minority round that doubled the team in about a year. Chapters What CV Partner does as a niche SaaS for consulting firms Revenue, team size, and 47% growth in 2023 Discovering the pain point at a dinner with friends Hiring a UX co-founder after blunt design criticism Two-hour demos and learning to read buying signals Conferences as a growth channel for vertical SaaS Building the SEO and inbound engine Growing from $1M to $4M ARR across Scandinavia Why Erling raised VC after 10 years bootstrapping Lightning round and book recommendations Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/417 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

Erling Linde had no sales experience and a product so ugly a prospect called it terrible. Twelve years later, his niche SaaS generates $5.5M ARR and employs 42 people across five countries. In this episode, you'll learn how focusing on one vertical SaaS pain point and expanding geographically - instead of adding features - built a durable business. Erling reveals how he cut demo times from two hours to 10 minutes by learning to read buying signals, why hiring customer success people before salespeople in new markets built trust faster, and how an industry-specific SaaS approach created a compounding referral loop when consultants changed jobs and brought the product with them. CV Partner (now Flowcase) bootstrapped for 10 years to $4M ARR before raising a minority VC round that doubled the team from 20 to 42 people in one year - proof that niche SaaS patience pays off. 🔑 Key Lessons 🎯 Niche SaaS wins by going deep, not broad: CV Partner hit $5.5M ARR by solving one pain point for consulting firms - resume formatting for bids - and expanding geographically rather than building for adjacent markets. 🤝 Cut demos short when you see buying signals: Erling's meetings went from two hours to 10 minutes once he stopped presenting when prospects showed excitement and scheduled follow-ups instead. 🛠️ A UX co-founder can transform a niche SaaS product: A prospect's blunt criticism of the developer-built UI led Erling to recruit a UX expert whose redesign became CV Partner's top competitive advantage. 🚀 Hire customer success before sales in new markets: CV Partner entered new countries by placing a local support person first so prospects trusted they would receive niche market SaaS-level attention. 💰 Bootstrap until ready, then raise to compress time: Erling bootstrapped for 10 years to $4M ARR, then raised a minority round that doubled the team in about a year. Chapters What CV Partner does as a niche SaaS for consulting firms Revenue, team size, and 47% growth in 2023 Discovering the pain point at a dinner with friends Hiring a UX co-founder after blunt design criticism Two-hour demos and learning to read buying signals Conferences as a growth channel for vertical SaaS Building the SEO and inbound engine Growing from $1M to $4M ARR across Scandinavia Why Erling raised VC after 10 years bootstrapping Lightning round and book recommendations Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/417 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

NOW PLAYING

Niche SaaS: One Pain Point to $5.5M ARR in 12 Years

0:00 54:50

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders?

This episode is 54 minutes long.

When was this The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders episode published?

This episode was published on October 24, 2024.

What is this episode about?

Erling Linde had no sales experience and a product so ugly a prospect called it terrible. Twelve years later, his niche SaaS generates $5.5M ARR and employs 42 people across five countries. In this episode, you'll learn how focusing on one vertical...

Can I download this The SaaS Podcast - AI, Growth & Product-Market Fit for SaaS Founders episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!