SaaS Positioning: Niche Down to $55K MRR Bootstrapped episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 7, 2016 · 57 MIN

SaaS Positioning: Niche Down to $55K MRR Bootstrapped

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

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. 🔑 Key Lessons 🎯 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. 💰 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. 🚀 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. 📉 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. 🧠 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

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. 🔑 Key Lessons 🎯 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. 💰 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. 🚀 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. 📉 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. 🧠 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

NOW PLAYING

SaaS Positioning: Niche Down to $55K MRR Bootstrapped

0:00 57:34

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 57 minutes long.

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

This episode was published on April 7, 2016.

What is this episode about?

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...

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!