Vertical SaaS: $400K Hardware Pivot to 7-Figure ARR episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 30, 2025 · 51 MIN

Vertical SaaS: $400K Hardware Pivot to 7-Figure ARR

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

Hiren Hasmukh invested $400,000 of his own savings into a hardware company that COVID killed. He pivoted the backend software into a vertical SaaS that now generates 7-figure ARR with 22 people. In this episode, you'll learn how Teqtivity competes against heavily funded IT asset management competitors on just $2,500/month in ad spend, and why separate code bases per customer became a niche SaaS competitive advantage. Hiren reveals how long-tail Google keywords cost a fraction of the $60-70/click industry-specific SaaS primary keyword, why investing in conference booths across multiple events produced zero follow-up demos, and how transparency after a data breach - including moving a customer on-prem and completing SOC 2 - actually strengthened trust. Teqtivity now has 22 employees and 7-figure ARR while remaining fully bootstrapped - proof that a focused vertical SaaS can beat funded competitors through customization, word-of-mouth, and disciplined spending. 🔑 Key Lessons 🔄 A vertical SaaS can emerge from a failed hardware pivot: Hiren's $400K smart locker investment became Teqtivity's foundation when he recognized the backend software had standalone value for IT departments - pivoting took six months with two developers. 💰 Win with long-tail keyword strategy on a small budget: Teqtivity avoids the $60-70/click "IT asset management" keyword and targets question-based searches competitors ignore, keeping total ad spend at $2,500/month. 🛠️ Separate code bases create a vertical SaaS moat: Maintaining bespoke versions for each customer lets Teqtivity's 16-person dev team deliver custom features that one-size-fits-all niche SaaS competitors cannot match. 🤝 Customer referrals outperform events for growth: Teqtivity's strongest channel is customers who move to new companies and bring the product - far more effective than conferences that produced zero follow-up demos. 🎯 Transparency after a breach strengthens trust: Hiren moved the affected customer on-prem, completed SOC 2 certification, and shared pen tests. The affected customer stayed and deepened their integration. Chapters What Teqtivity does as a vertical SaaS for IT departments The TechCube hardware origin story and $400K investment Deciding to pivot from hardware to software Building the SaaS in six months and landing first customer Positioning against well-funded competitors Long-tail keyword strategy on $2,500/month Why event marketing failed with zero ROI Customizing with separate code bases per customer Surviving the data breach and rebuilding trust Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/428 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

Hiren Hasmukh invested $400,000 of his own savings into a hardware company that COVID killed. He pivoted the backend software into a vertical SaaS that now generates 7-figure ARR with 22 people. In this episode, you'll learn how Teqtivity competes against heavily funded IT asset management competitors on just $2,500/month in ad spend, and why separate code bases per customer became a niche SaaS competitive advantage. Hiren reveals how long-tail Google keywords cost a fraction of the $60-70/click industry-specific SaaS primary keyword, why investing in conference booths across multiple events produced zero follow-up demos, and how transparency after a data breach - including moving a customer on-prem and completing SOC 2 - actually strengthened trust. Teqtivity now has 22 employees and 7-figure ARR while remaining fully bootstrapped - proof that a focused vertical SaaS can beat funded competitors through customization, word-of-mouth, and disciplined spending. 🔑 Key Lessons 🔄 A vertical SaaS can emerge from a failed hardware pivot: Hiren's $400K smart locker investment became Teqtivity's foundation when he recognized the backend software had standalone value for IT departments - pivoting took six months with two developers. 💰 Win with long-tail keyword strategy on a small budget: Teqtivity avoids the $60-70/click "IT asset management" keyword and targets question-based searches competitors ignore, keeping total ad spend at $2,500/month. 🛠️ Separate code bases create a vertical SaaS moat: Maintaining bespoke versions for each customer lets Teqtivity's 16-person dev team deliver custom features that one-size-fits-all niche SaaS competitors cannot match. 🤝 Customer referrals outperform events for growth: Teqtivity's strongest channel is customers who move to new companies and bring the product - far more effective than conferences that produced zero follow-up demos. 🎯 Transparency after a breach strengthens trust: Hiren moved the affected customer on-prem, completed SOC 2 certification, and shared pen tests. The affected customer stayed and deepened their integration. Chapters What Teqtivity does as a vertical SaaS for IT departments The TechCube hardware origin story and $400K investment Deciding to pivot from hardware to software Building the SaaS in six months and landing first customer Positioning against well-funded competitors Long-tail keyword strategy on $2,500/month Why event marketing failed with zero ROI Customizing with separate code bases per customer Surviving the data breach and rebuilding trust Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saasclub.io/428 Join 5,000+ SaaS founders: https://saasclub.io/email

NOW PLAYING

Vertical SaaS: $400K Hardware Pivot to 7-Figure ARR

0:00 51:46

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 51 minutes long.

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

This episode was published on January 30, 2025.

What is this episode about?

Hiren Hasmukh invested $400,000 of his own savings into a hardware company that COVID killed. He pivoted the backend software into a vertical SaaS that now generates 7-figure ARR with 22 people. In this episode, you'll learn how Teqtivity competes...

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!