top | item 19701783

Ask HN: One-person SaaS apps that are profitable?

752 points| phoenix24 | 6 years ago

Hi HN,

Do you know any one man SaaS app that are profitable?

I'm asking this because I'm considering starting a SaaS app as a side project, and I'm looking for some inspiration.

Thanks!

Note: this is was previously on HN here[1], but it's been few years, and I'm sure a lot of one person startups are thriving than before.

[1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11924009

358 comments

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Some comments were deferred for faster rendering.

lynnetye|6 years ago

Key Values (https://www.keyvalues.com) is a one-woman show (oh hi!). I started Key Values as a side project two years ago, but it quickly turned into my full-time passion and business. I'm doing ~$30k/month and it's almost all profit since I don't have an office or any employees. I recently talked to Courtland of Indie Hackers (already mentioned in the comments) about how I got here: https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/086-lynne-tye-of-key-va...

I would never have started Key Values w/o Indie Hackers, so I highly recommend you spend some time there. It's a bottomless treasure chest of inspiration.

mark-ruwt|6 years ago

God, that's a brilliant name/logo.

cypherpunks01|6 years ago

I was interested in knowing how you got the idea for this, and reading your about page confirmed my suspicion that this is an amazingly simple example of the whole "make a product that solves a problem in your own life" sentiment. Kudos!

mrfusion|6 years ago

Neat! Could you add a category for part time?

How do you enforce that the companies are being honest?

Also the filters seems to OR each other so the more I pick the more results I get. I think most people expect filters to be AND.

amelius|6 years ago

Nice idea, but I miss society related values here (which are increasingly important for many people). For example, what if I don't want to work for a company that trades user data? Also negative externalities of a company are not clearly shown.

PKop|6 years ago

Great interview on indie hackers podcast. Always motivating to hear from the perspectives of people not trying to grow at all cost, following SV conventional wisdom etc, aiming for more lifestyle type businesses.

nodesocket|6 years ago

> I'm doing ~$30k/month and it's almost all profit since I don't have an office or any employees.

Awesome job. I am really surprised with that kind of revenue you don't spring for an office or dedicated office space at WeWork. You might as well spend money on your business, either that or you paying taxes to uncle sam (assuming you based out of the US). I try and buy a new MacBook Pro each year, might as well get a high end asset I use daily and the deduction.

bggy00|6 years ago

A lot of these are manager-dependent, like 'fosters psychological safety'. My impression is that these are snapshots of how the companies would like to be seen, which is what they are paying for. They aren't paying for an 'audit' of what their true value are, or for insight from employees (like Glassdoor).

bigboris|6 years ago

Sweet mother...this is awesome. As a very technical engineer currently lost in a sea of bean counters and project managers, it has been a real challenge wading through idiotic recruiters and endless repeated garbage job postings. Thank you for Key Values...this is gold.

tinktank|6 years ago

So how are you monetizing it? Is it ads or paid job advertisements or something else?

DevX101|6 years ago

Your indie hackers episode was just recommended to me this week. Will have to check it out!

dahdum|6 years ago

Heads up I can’t seem to get half the tags (self-funded for example) to filter. I select and then hit select values and nothing happens. On an iPad / Safari.

aluminussoma|6 years ago

Thanks for responding. That's really inspirational.

Aeolun|6 years ago

It may just be that all companies select the same values, but even deselecting basically everything I still get +/- 80 results.

jdwyah|6 years ago

This is great. In a mildly amusing side-note, in order to fill out my companies profile, my (barely profitable) side project is a perfect fit: https://forcerank.it lets you have your team rank all the values so you can see what the team actually thinks your values are.

cyrilbenson47|6 years ago

I hope you can add more remote work soon.

noisy_boy|6 years ago

I have a feedback for you - would be great if you can add filters (separate from the value filters) e.g. I selected my priority values and then wanted to filter the results with only remote jobs but no such option was available. Similarly one might want to filter the results by location etc.

onesmalluser|6 years ago

How much do you charge each company?

alphagrep12345|6 years ago

Really good website. However, I'm wondering as to why this is a full-time business. Is most of your time taken by marketing and sales?

real-hacker|6 years ago

I thought this is a Key/Value store. :)

dandare|6 years ago

Could I ask how much time you send on sales and marketing compared to development/engineering?

rjzzleep|6 years ago

How did you end up managing 150 people a couple of months after dropping out of grad school?

tixocloud|6 years ago

Really great idea! How do you measure the softer criteria like “Eats lunch together”?

bitcoinmoney|6 years ago

Love the name! What’s the business model? Not very obvious from the website

bggy00|6 years ago

I call BS on some of these, like EQ > IQ at Github, lol.

akash7|6 years ago

Is there a way to AND the filters, instead of OR?

yoube|6 years ago

Just an FYI, the site is blocked under Sophos.

dorfsmay|6 years ago

Where do you get revenue from? Ads?

ttty|6 years ago

A suggestion would be to make that select values button to work or do something.

ohaideredevs|6 years ago

I thought this was going to be a storage service for private keys.

coderholic|6 years ago

I started https://ipinfo.io as a side project, and then ran it fulltime as a one-person SaaS app for over a year. We're now a team of 8, profitable, and growing quickly. We're still 100% bootstrapped, and I have zero plans to raise any outside funding.

We started with a simple IP geolocation API, which now handles over 20 billion API requests per month. We've added new data to that service, such as IP type classification (hosting, isp, or business, and soon education too), IP to company, and carrier detection. And we've also launched some other products, like hosted domain API (all domains hosted on an IP, sometimes called reverse IP), IP ranges belonging to an organization, and an ASN API. We've got a lot in the pipeline too, including some domain related offerings (see https://host.io for an early preview).

So it's definitely possible :) What sort of SaaS product are you thinking of launching? Would be happy to chat! Shoot me an email at ben@ipinfo.io

brianwillis|6 years ago

You got my GPS coordinates almost exactly correct. That's incredibly worrying.

I mean, it's impressive from a technical standpoint; but still, worrying.

Procrastes|6 years ago

Really appreciated your service at my last company, and I recognize some of how hard what you do really is. In my case you're over 400 miles off. That's not a complaint; I'm amazed at how much you manage to get right.

Topgamer7|6 years ago

Ip info is quite convenient with curl :)

55555|6 years ago

I love your service. I've been using it for years! I use the responses at /geo and /json. The 'org' data is appreciated.

romanovcode|6 years ago

Can you explain if you have any difference than MaxMind? Seems you just use their database and proxy the result?

aacook|6 years ago

Go for it!

I'm working on NanaGram (https://nanagram.co) solo and bootstrapped. Although I'm not making a full-time income yet, it's generating a profit. It's mostly automated.

NanaGram is the 3rd greatest generator of happiness and fulfillment in my life (after my wife and my dog). I get a constant stream of good vibes from customers, most recently voicemails from grandmothers! (https://nanagram.co/blog/feedback-by-vm)

Good luck :)

derrida|6 years ago

I really like this since everything is changing and who knows what will be profitable or survive next year, but if you look back at what you directed your efforts towards, even if everything fails (which it will, eventually) you have hard times in the future this would be a source of happiness :) I'm looking at this thread for a livelihood myself and I'm not motivated by being a middle-man or selling more consumerist shit that doesn't make people happy, this idea is inspiring, you can do good things ;)

I hope this spreads and more people use it :) Products / activity like this really motivate me to promote them or recommend them when you're doing things this wholesome :)

mi100hael|6 years ago

Happy customer here :)

I recently visited my grandma and found a drawer full of envelopes with every photo we've ever texted.

kohanz|6 years ago

Love your site! My story is very similar with my project VidHug (https://vidhug.com). Helping people spread joy & love is definitely a great motivator!

cimmanom|6 years ago

Just curious: are you using a third party API for printing and mailing?

akash7|6 years ago

This brought joy to me :)

julia01|6 years ago

this is a segment that does not get too much love. kudos!

bentossell|6 years ago

This may not qualify as SaaS but I built makerpad.co to show people how to build products/businesses without code. Currently $27k over the last month. One person, not my full time gig.

Wtf am I talking about?! I’m basically showing people the power of not needing to code to build something. I built an Airbnb “clone” by linking webflo, Airtable and zapier. Basically trying to show people they can build their first version without the classic “needing a technical cofounder” or “learning to code”. Tools out there right now are insane and can help you get to a place you couldn’t previously.

Okay Lynne is a recent friend and been huge in helping me the last couple weeks.

I did the normal shit of b2c (and still do) but the power of b2b is huge. I flipped my strategy and went from ~10k one month to now 30k (yes got 3.5k more since my initial comment).

lynnetye|6 years ago

I didn't realize you already did $27k this month! That is tremendous and you're only just getting started! GO BEN.

schappim|6 years ago

How did you market to businesses ?

kuzimoto|6 years ago

Hey just wanted to check out your site, it looks good but the menu is messed up a little for me on mobile. Using the Pixel in Chrome: http://imgur.com/fz2GiVP

faitswulff|6 years ago

I just looked around. Great content! But how do you monetize a site like this?

ed|6 years ago

B2B, meaning the deals section? Are those numbers recurring? Awesome business, if so

jwr|6 years ago

Yes, PartsBox is (Electronic parts inventory & production: https://partsbox.io/). Some key points I would have told my former self:

* Do not expect any kind of explosive growth, especially in B2B. Expect linear growth. Search for "slow SaaS ramp of death" for a pretty good description of what to expect.

* Marketing is a huge problem. If you look around, you will see lots of marketers talking about marketing. In. Short. Sentences. With. Deep. Meaning. But then you'll notice that they mostly talk about marketing marketing apps for marketers. Unless you are building apps that help marketers market, much of this advice will be useless. And the short sentences are annoying.

* Paid ads are a waste of money, though I heard that with 4-5 digit budgets you can make them work. I never could.

* It is extremely difficult to get a working SaaS business at price points below $20/month. If you look around, businesses with these price points are VC-sponsored and are burning through investor money. I would not start a sustainable SaaS with price points below $40/month.

* When thinking about pricing, remember about support. There is no such thing as "no support", every product needs it, and it costs time and money.

* It's hard. Everything is hard. And there is always too much to do.

* Anxiety eats at you. No matter how good you are at keeping it at bay (I was pretty good), it will eventually catch up with you. I still don't have a good solution to that.

* If you pick a good niche, you can live in a world with nice and smart customers. It's a good world!

* When planning, be careful to set goals based on realistic financial assumptions. If this is to be your full-time job, it needs to support your business (including all hardware and office costs), you (your salary, insurance, retirement savings) and your family. People tend to vastly underestimate how much revenue is needed, especially if their past experience is mostly living with parents or surviving on ramen as a college student.

* I would not trade this for a "normal" job, ever :-)

stevoski|6 years ago

> Anxiety eats at you. No matter how good you are at keeping it at bay (I was pretty good), it will eventually catch up with you. I still don't have a good solution to that.

Same feeling here.

Something that works pretty well for me is having a mentor a generation older than me, who has been running a business for decades. I tell them about my anxiety, ask them if they had it, and listen to how they dealt with it.

Strangely, every time I have that conversation the anxiety drops significantly for a while.

Anyone have other techniques for dealing with the startup anxiety they can share?

paulstovell|6 years ago

> But then you'll notice that they mostly talk about marketing marketing apps for marketers

I loved this point! It’s so true. They go on about how such and such strategy worked so well for HubSpot. Of course it did, HubSpot has an easy audience: marketers! Turns out those strategies work a lot less well for technical or more discerning audiences.

laydn|6 years ago

We're waiting for an on-premise version of PartsBox to be released :-) Is that wishful thinking???

cperciva|6 years ago

Depending on how you define SaaS: I started Tarsnap in 2006 (launched in 2008) and it was a profitable one-person company for many years. (Now it's a profitable two-person company.)

Mind you, it isn't a side project -- this has been my full time job for a dozen years. Starting a successful SaaS company as a side project is much harder.

AlchemistCamp|6 years ago

Did you ever take patio11's advice about charging more?

chubot|6 years ago

Congrats on running it sustainably and profitably for so long.

I imagine that TarSnap must have done very well since many tiny HN startups used it 10 years ago, and some of them are now huge. When those companies are growing like crazy I'm sure they just pay the bills and don't think about switching!

csomar|6 years ago

It's sad you have dropped Bitcoin support!

deforciant|6 years ago

I have been running https://webhookrelay.com/ as I side project for the last two years and since last March it's quite profitable. Environment is highly automated, running on GKE, builds and testing on drone.io while deployments are rolled out by keel.sh, some alerting goes through Node-RED so I don't have to interfere.

Still doing full-time consulting but hopefully in the next year or two I will transition full-time to it (if it's ever needed). I do plan to hire someone for marketing or sales, maybe on contracting terms and not full-time.

madsohm|6 years ago

I read the pricing as "1500 webhook requests per minute" instead of the (I assume) correct "1500 per month".

onlyrealcuzzo|6 years ago

Hey, this is really cool. Two things:

Your headline text is "Webhook Relay lets anyone to..." You should probably make that "Webhook Relay allows anyone to..."

Also, I read your name as Web-hooker Lay, which is less feedback, and more just something I thought was funny.

therealdrag0|6 years ago

Love the idea; love how small the feature set is and how the domain is interesting from a software-engineering perspective. And really like the UX of your site. Kudos all around.

throw03172019|6 years ago

I’ve always wanted this for localhost. Thanks!

kahoon|6 years ago

Great idea! How did you market it?

mrskitch|6 years ago

Hey! I just did/am doing an AMA on dev.to (located here: https://dev.to/joelgriffith/i-m-the-creator-of-browserless-i...).

I run a one-person (me!), bootstrapped business called browserless (https://browserless.io). I started it after trying to wrangle headless Chrome for a wishlist app, and desperately needing something like it. Obviously it wasn't around, so I pivoted and built it from the ground up.

I'd be super happy to answer questions. You can also email me at joel at browserless dot io. Anything and everything is game!

EDIT: Forgot to post how it's doing, which you can see on IH here: https://indiehackers.com/product/browserless

throw03172019|6 years ago

We use the open source version but still pay the subscription monthly. We love your product!

charliepark|6 years ago

I run one, a minimalist personal finance app. It's about 11 years old at this point.

I built it up as my full-time gig and ran it initially for about six years. At that point: A) I had hired someone part-time to do customer support; B) the feature set was stable enough that it didn't need constant attention; C) I was missing working with people. So I moved out to SF and started working with a startup as an engineer. Enjoyed that for two years, then moved on to another startup where I was for three years (first as an engineer, then had a chance to move into management [which I also enjoyed, but where I missed making things]).

This past October I left that startup to go back to working on my own thing. Revenue coming in to the app dropped significantly while I was doing other things, but since coming back to it I've rebuilt it (well … 90% of it) and am soon going to be shifting focus to improving business operations (in addition to building out some new features). My hope is that within a year or so it'll be back up to its earlier customer levels, but I haven't spent a lot of time forecasting that, and growth could be slow. It'll be a while before it'll support us living in SF, but that's somewhere on the horizon.

What worked for me might not work for you (it was a long time ago!), but in case it's helpful, I built a very basic MVP (literally a spreadsheet) to scratch my own itch and then shared it, for free, online. (At the time I wasn't thinking of it as a business, just as a way to help people.) It got a good amount of traction. I was able to build on the attention the free version got (and the feedback people shared) and to develop a web-based, subscription-based version that required less work and gave more value to customers than the free version.

I haven't ever taken funding, and am so, so glad I haven't.

whitehouse3|6 years ago

Do you have a link to your product? A cursory search turned up nothing.

marinosbern|6 years ago

I started Parachute [1] by accident when I won the TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2015 Hackathon with its first prototype. I dropped everything else I was doing and launched it right here on HN a few months after that [2]. Today it's a healthy business without having taken a single cent of VC funding. I'm the only one full time on it, and it's made possible by relying heavily on a network of amazing friends who are each responsible for specific subprojects within their areas of expertise. Everyone is geographically distributed and I spend 9 months a year in NYC and the remaining 3 months traveling

Cheers to all the amazing engineers here who run ethical, douche-free, sustainable businesses

[1] https://parachute.live/app (app), https://parachute.live/platform (B2B)

[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9885950

albydarned|6 years ago

I co-founded Pigeon SMS (https://pigeonsms.com) with my dad just a couple of years ago and we reached profitability just a few months after founding.

We provide business texting services to businesses of all sizes. Some of our customers include a city, vet clinic, glass shop, screen printing firm, boutique retailers, and on and on. Really any business can benefit from adding texting to their communications.

My advice: Pick something that will keep you interested and motivated to come back to when life gets busy.

therealdrag0|6 years ago

I have a friend who works for ZipWhip which seems like the same sort of space. And they just raised $51 mil, so I guess there's need for this sort of product!

bhudman|6 years ago

Congrats on the launch. Would you be able to recommend off-net sms providers that you have had good luck with?

wayoverthecloud|6 years ago

How do you market to local businesses? Aren't they the least technical people? Congratulations though!

mark-ruwt|6 years ago

I founded Are You Watching This?! (https://ruwt.tv) in 2006 and have been profitable since 2013. It's a Sports Excitement Analytics firm, licensing real-time data about the excitement of games by analyzing pitch-by-pitch and shot-by-shot data, to sports properties and cable companies.

I'm happy with where I'm at, but there's a lot I would've done differently. Holler if you'd like to chat about it at all: https://www.linkedin.com/in/markphillip/

marketgod|6 years ago

Way cool. I remember when this site had scores for games posted and it would show you what channel each game is on depending on your location/provider. Great work!

azhawkes|6 years ago

I'm the solo founder of Loadster (https://loadster.app) which has been profitable for a while and is now making me pretty close to a comfortable living.

I really enjoy the freedom and variety that comes with running a SaaS, and while the grass is always greener on the other side, I think I'm pretty much ruined for a regular job at this point. So beware!

One piece of unsolicited advice: if I were to start all over again as a solo bootstrapper, I would probably do something less technical. As others here have pointed out, there is a LOT more to running a SaaS than just building software, and it's often hard to find the time or brain space to give all the facets of your business the attention they deserve.

rlonn|6 years ago

Great work w Loadster. Didn't know it was a solo effort! I founded another load testing service - loadimpact.com, which is doing very well but certainly not a solo effort and has taken on investors along the way. I'm now trying to build something solo again, and would echo the advice to go for something less technical. Plus do B2B if financial success is important. I have three projects atm, trying to figure out which has the most potential - 2 of them are consumer apps (one unreleased, the other is a crossword game for kids - https://puzzlepirate.net) and one is a technical data storage SaaS for IoT sensor data storage (https://pushdata.io). The latter product is a lot more demanding, from most aspects. A simple and maintenance-free product is worth gold when you're running it solo.

plasma|6 years ago

Hey azhawkes; I've used loader.io and a few other services to do load tests.

For all of them, I wish I had a "pay for credits" model, where I could just pay for each load test I ran, instead of a subscription.

Load tests for me were infrequent and feature/ad-hoc/test-case specific, so I wish I had a billing model that fit my use case.

Wish you the best!

reubenswartz|6 years ago

I first built Mimiran (https://www.mimiran.com) because I just wanted to know if and when prospects were reading my proposals. Since then I’ve added features by customer request to the point that it’s a crm, but really designed for consultants and other service-focused people, rather than traditional sales teams. It’s fun (usually) to get to do everything from coding to customer support. The feedback loop is very tight, especially because I’m user #1.

If I could be so bold as to pass along advice, I would say:

- keep the app itself as simple as possible. “This is so simple, even Steve Jobs would say it’s too simple” simple. This makes creating, testing, describing, and supporting the app as easy as possible. And if people can use it and provide meaningful feedback on what else they need, you can always decide to add it later.

- don’t try to reinvent the wheel on marketing. See what has worked for similar products (indie hackers is awesome).

- make sure you talk to prospects, customers, friends, and family. Don’t just sit there writing code. Having lifestyle flexibility as a solo founder is awesome, but it’s important to make time to be social. As much as I don’t miss commutes, office politics, etc, we are social creatures, even us introverts, and if you’re just coding or emailing or whatever and not actually talking to people, it’s going to be hard.

- try to pick a market where you enjoy talking to your customers. I really like this part of my job. I know some other people who for whatever reason tend to have unpleasant interactions with their customers and it's not nearly as fun.

So I’m told. :)

idlewords|6 years ago

I run Pinboard by myself and make about $250K/year in revenue, with 97K expenses.

frenchie4111|6 years ago

Where does 97k expenses come from, if you don’t mind me asking

danielecook|6 years ago

I’m a Big fan of pin board and it’s simplicity.

Improvotter|6 years ago

Wow I'm impressed by the revenue for such a site. Congratulations!

pw|6 years ago

Do you still also run the bed bug registry site?

davej|6 years ago

I'm close with ToDesktop (https://www.todesktop.com/), I've launched quite recently so expect to be there in the next month or two.

throw03172019|6 years ago

Was really impressed with the flow but I hate being so tied to this. For example, what happens if you go out of business? Now we have 10,000 users on an app we can’t update, etc.

_bxg1|6 years ago

Nifty! Elegant pricing model too.

srecio|6 years ago

I built out Pipefile (https://pipefile.com) as a one man operation. Bundle your PGP key into file upload forms to receive end-to-end encrypted files. Embed the upload forms into any html page to receive files without setting up any backend infrastructure.

You can try sending me something at https://pipefile.com/steve

joshtronic|6 years ago

I'm the solo founder of Holiday API - https://holidayapi.com - a DaaS platform for holiday information.

The project was originally started in 2013 as an open source side project, while I running a network of niche social networks full-time (also quite profitable for a while), after serving as CTO of a daily deal company, that stemmed from my need for reliable holiday information without the overhead of actually maintaining said data on a regular basis.

A shift to a premium model was made in 2016 and the first month into being a premium service, it was profitable (sans my time ;) and has grown to ~$1500 MRR.

Ironically I started the project as a way to NOT have to maintain said data and now part of my day to day involves maintaining data accuracy... and sales outreach... and DevOps to improve... my own development efforts... and... and...

Recently received my YC rejection email for the upcoming batch (actually interviewed with another project with a partner a while back), but still hustlin'. Flying solo is great, but definitely can't get caught up in the echo chamber. Would highly recommend building a peer group of founders / other hackers & hustlers to meet / chat with regularly.

lprubin|6 years ago

My friend launched EnvKey (https://www.envkey.com/) completely solo and grew it slowly over time. He eventually went through YC and took on investment but the first few years were bootstrapped. But he's still solo with a few freelancers.

davidbanham|6 years ago

I run two SaaS products. Both are entirely my work and both are modestly profitable.

I split my time about 50/50 between the the SaaS side of my business and consulting. The consulting revenue stream is much larger than the SaaS one but it's growing.

https://takehome.io

And

https://clubman.app

_bxg1|6 years ago

Clubman is so specific. This seems to be a pattern of many small, honest, successful software businesses: instead of trying to make a platform that will eat the world, they find a tiny niche that they understand, and hand-craft a solution that's perfectly tailored to it and meets people's real needs. It's inspiring. When software is too generic it becomes boring (and impossible to compete with as an entrepreneur).

pplante|6 years ago

I love the takehome product idea. Wish that was around when I was conducting loads of technical interviews a few years ago.

wayoverthecloud|6 years ago

Which is bringing in more profit? Clubman looks super niche. Unless you know ski clubs really well, looks hard to market.

ackbar03|6 years ago

As one commenter said this is very specific, how do you go about finding and marketing to your clients?

nate|6 years ago

I continue to run the writing software Draft (https://draftin.com) all by myself. It can largely run on its own without a ton of interruption to me so I can work on other things.

wkoszek|6 years ago

Hi Nate. I've looked at Draft when I wanted to build something similar. Is it profitable to the point where you could do it full-time?

monokai_nl|6 years ago

I'm running https://mybrandnewlogo.com — an automatic, online logo generator.

I'm also running https://monokai.pro — a professional color scheme for coders.

I've done both on the side of co-running a design agency. Last year I've spent quite some time on the logo design tool. It helps that I enjoy programming, learning and making stuff, but something's always got to give. I've sacrificed a lot of weekends, but luckily the foundation is there now.

Both projects are profitable and have quite different mechanics. I've done almost no marketing for the color scheme, whereas the logo machine needs a lot of marketing.

anthonylee|6 years ago

https://letterfromyou.com/ Letter from You is a service that allows business owners to connect with their clients through beautifully handwritten letters. It's my first side project and currently talking to some larger recurring companies.

aerovistae|6 years ago

That is a really clever, original idea for a business, I mean it. Damn.

Axsuul|6 years ago

I'm building a SaaS app (getting close to ramen profitable): Trunk @ https://www.trunkinventory.com which helps online sellers sync their inventory in real-time across their different sales channels (i.e. Etsy, Faire, Shopify, Amazon, eBay, etc)

colinbartlett|6 years ago

StatusGator is the status page monitoring service I built. It’s been profitable since about 2016.

Though I very recently took on a partner to try and grow it because I believe it can be more than just “profitable” but perhaps actually a sole income source one day. It’s great to have a “one person” company but I feel it’s even better to have a partner to help inspire and motivate you, especially when it’s a side project and not a full time job.

jborak|6 years ago

Packetriot (https://packetriot.com) - around 4 months old and I haven't begun seriously marketing, but it generates $60/month and makes a tiny profit.

With it you can create a secure public endpoints (HTTP/TCP) from any network. The client can host static sites, reverse-proxy to other hosts, terminate TLS. It manages Lets-Encrypt for you. The higher-end tiers provides access logs, metrics, firewall rules, and service-health checks.

With a public endpoint you can pretty much do anything. I initially built it to reduce my hosting costs to something minuscule (which it did). I found alternatives as I developed it, but I was so interested in the problem I continued and created some features that aren't available in others. I still have more ideas in the pipeline.

I've been putting together video tutorials to showcase what you can do with it and how to use it. I'm focusing on people that self-host since most developers/hackers understand the concept. A lot of my registrations and customers have discovered Packetriot through my YouTube channel.

CloudNetworking|6 years ago

Interested in hearing more about your very low running costs (I understand below $60/month).

tom-jh|6 years ago

I built https://flowcrypt.com solo for the first two years. I would have preferred a partner, but nobody committed.

Today 3+ years later it's a three person team. Maybe in another year I can have reasonable work life balance again. Maybe.

endriju|6 years ago

Running a 1-man SaaS as a side-project has been one of the best things career wise. It helped me gain a different perspective on software (design, devops, sales, support etc.) in general. Being able to bring some of that experience into my day-time jobs was really rewarding.

The Saas i'm running is Gridoc (https://gridoc.com) - it pays for the car and a few bills. I'm pretty sure it could be doing better but it has been on auto-pilot for a couple years now (started a family).

discobean|6 years ago

Solo founder of https://docevent.io SFTP and FTP/S directly to your Azure Blobs, Google Cloud Storage and S3 buckets.

I bootstrapped it myself, but there are now others that help remotely (consultants, contractors) on some features, fixes testing and marketing.

vyrotek|6 years ago

This is great! I really wished this existed a few years ago at my previous company. We needed this exactly. A straightforward way to get ftp files into blob. Is it possible to cname/whitelabel the domain of the ftp address?

sergiomattei|6 years ago

I'm making https://getmakerlog.com, which is currently doing $200 MRR.

jkeuhlen|6 years ago

Just curious, did you go about setting up a formal corporation for the product? I'm thinking about setting up my own SaaS product and I'm not sure if I need to do anything on the legal/business side.

viv2020|6 years ago

Love the idea and a great product. But how are you monetizing this? I can't figure from the page.

Schweigi|6 years ago

I run two side projects on my own.

The first with is on auto pilot and does $800MRR. My second is called TeamCal (https://www.teamcalapp.com) and I’m actively working on it. Usually 2-3 hours/week. Its doing $1700MRR and growing.

TeamCal provides a scheduling view for Google Calendar and is used by cleaning/call center/staffing companies.

If your interested about some of the work involved, I documented part of the journey on Indie Hackers: https://www.indiehackers.com/product/teamcal

krm01|6 years ago

Solo started http://Fairpixels.co/pro - UX/UI for B2B SaaS companies. a “Service as a Service” powered by custom internal software to work more efficiently. Growing strong and working with small saas companies and Elon Musk cofounded ventures.

nghiatran_feels|6 years ago

I know the solo guy who are running Proxyman https://proxyman.app as a side project for a year.

He's ambitious to be a better alternative version of Charles Proxy. The best of Proxyman is that it's native app, lightweight and super easy to use for iOS dev newbie

enoj|6 years ago

I run a leave intent fortune wheel popup SaaS called Listagram (https://www.listagram.com) as a solo founder and doing about $6K MRR with about $1K costs (Heroku, AWS CloudFront).

Have about 100 paying customers.

Yeah everybody hates popups. But I saw a potential for a product and wanted to try doing the SaaS thing after a decade selling software and doing consultancy. It has been a lot of fun, it is thrilling and scary to have my JS loaded on some high traffic sites.

jivings|6 years ago

Two-person but close enough - We're building Leave Me Alone (https://leavemealone.xyz), an app that helps you unsubscribe from spammy mailing lists. Currently at ~$500/month (full stats are public here https://leavemealone.xyz/open)

ksahin|6 years ago

I used your service 2 months ago, thank you sooooo much!

spekulatius2410|6 years ago

awesome you are actually sharing numbers - love it!

clementmas|6 years ago

I launched https://travelmap.net as a side project 5 years ago but now I'm working full-time on it. I preferred that than freelancing ;)

vividcode|6 years ago

this is amazing idea. Happy to share how much monthly users you got, and what tech you used?

mfrye0|6 years ago

BigPicture (https://bigpicture.io) is a solo founder operation. I was the only person for the first couple years before I grew it enough to start hiring.

I don't recommend anyone follow this path now having been through it myself. Being a solo founder is absolutely brutal.

kcdev|6 years ago

Surprised Simple Analytics[1] hasn't been mentioned yet. I don't know how profitable it is but this seems like a great example re: the question.

[1] https://simpleanalytics.io/

AdriaanvRossum|6 years ago

As the founder of Simple Analytics I know a bit about the profitably of the company. It is making profit but it’s not enough yet to sustain my lifestyle completely.

I do some freelance work on the side. As one hour of freelance work is more or less equal to one customer for a year it’s still way more satisfying to work on Simple Analytics.

I try to keep it within 40 hour work weeks but the reality is around 2-10 hours freelance and 30-50 on Simple Analytis. But it’s sooo fun!

docsapp_io|6 years ago

I am working on SaaS DocsApp (https://www.docsapp.io/) solo and bootstrapped. DocsApp is a platform to manage your product documentation. DocsApp now is profitable and growing. Currently I am focusing on marketing to grow more. DocsApp was born as a result of frustration to building documentation for Product/SaaS.

I have been working on DocsApp for 3 years and only now start profitable. The hardest problem I faced was marketing and sales. Development is only 30% of the work.

jbenders|6 years ago

Preppr (https://preppr.com). I built this Instagram scheduling site and iOS app. Currently doing $10,000 MRR over the last month.

pawurb|6 years ago

I am running https://abot.app currently at $1500 MRR and growing. Still at full-time job apart from that.

pplante|6 years ago

I understand the context, but that logo doesn't give me a lot of warm feelings. I would likely skip the product just on that regardless of how awesome it might be.

ryanckulp|6 years ago

Lobiloo (https://www.lobiloo.com) is an invoicing tool exclusively for florists.

i acquired it from a florist about 1.5 years ago and have been going deep on the industry ever since.

my challenge is (obviously) not having domain expertise, but i compensate by listening to customers, getting feedback from the former owner (now a lifetime user), and doing what i do: hack.

fullstackjob|6 years ago

Full-Stack Job Board (https://fullstackjob.com) is a one-men show on the way to profit, as costs are very low, just one paid submission is enough for now. But of course far from goal to get something more out of it then a lot of fun, learning's and coffee. Real money is then to come in from the underlying boardengine.io

mdbm|6 years ago

I've seen a lot of friends publish apps to different ecosystems (e.g. marketplace.atlassian.com, https://apps.shopify.com, etc.) and make a steady profit. Seems like this is a good way to tap into an existing user base (although you share a portion of the revenue).

mickel|6 years ago

I'm a one-man team developing TAYL, a service that turns websites into podcasts using AI. I built everything in 3 months (while working full-time with other things) and it's been profitable since week 1 of public release https://www.tayl.app

sharedmocha|6 years ago

Website looks really neat and clean. Did you use any website builder for this ?

bbayer|6 years ago

It looks very promising. What text-to-speech engine are you using?

marketgod|6 years ago

I have an edge in the market and it can work with larger portfolios than mine so I setup a system where my entries/exits are automatically posted for others to follow. Also, my algo generates the plan at night and that gets posted before the market opens so people can get in when I get in and make the same profits. In trading, most services aren't as transparent/don't get into all their recommendations, so this helps me take advantage of a niche. It's not nearly as profitable as I expected, but it will be soon once I create more awareness for it. It's not really a side project because I do trade full-time, but it kind of is a side project as I don't spend too much time marketing/advertising/adding features. Finding a niche is important, in my opinion.

fiatjaf|6 years ago

There's my https://teams.cardsync.xyz/, which I did as toy and forgot about, then months later I realized there were many many users using it for free, then started charging a little and people indeed started to pay! Then many people told me to raise the prices, which I did reluctantly and now I have a nice product that is grossly overpriced, but people pay anyway (not many people, but sufficient to be profitable and perhaps make a very modest living).

I recommend first trying out plugins and extensions for established products instead of trying to launch the new Facebook.

Stuff like https://www.ragic.com/, for example, are niches no one seem to be exploring.

owenwil|6 years ago

I run a one-person ‘SaaS’ that delivers morning tech briefings each day for industry insight, without ads, that I wanted to see, called recharged: https://char.gd/recharged. I both write the newsletters + develop the platform behind the scenes that enables seamless community access involved, and our MRR is approximately $2,500/month for about 18 months.

I’ll admit it’s a struggle to properly grow at this point, but I’m trying to figure it out... but it’s been a fun ride so far. Now I’m moving to build the tools I already made for myself that make it easy to build paid content + communities without the developer skills I had to learn to get here... hopefully going into beta soon.

_justirma|6 years ago

I follow your work! If you need a hand on Recharged I'd love to help and keep it live and up.

StephenCanis|6 years ago

Your Audio Tour (https://www.youraudiotour.com) is making about $120 in recurring monthly revenue. I built it using Micheal Hartl's online ruby on rails tutorial which I would HIGHLY recommend.

rorygibson|6 years ago

https://trolley.link - my payments project.

It lets you put a payment button on any website and pop up a cart; single products, donations, deposits, subscription / recurring payments.

Customers are using it to power charity donations, self published book sales, physical product sales & shipping, membership fees for clubs and so on.

You can integrate it to Mailchimp and use it to put together a paid subscription email newsletter... or use it to make your own Patreon at much much lower cost to you.

It uses Stripe as the gateway in the back end. (To use Stripe Checkout you still need a back end to handle token exchange. Trolley handles that for you.)

markhalonen|6 years ago

I created Vora (https://getvora.com/) as a solo developer. I sold it a couple months ago, at time of sale it was making $300-500 in monthly profit

beesmum|6 years ago

I've run a music education site for 10 years (https://www.tonictutor.com). It's been only a very modest success, but it's provided a small amount of revenue that's been relatively steady. I haven't really marketed it much, but I'm planning on putting some time and resources into that once I've finish converting all of the old Flash versions of the games (which is nearly finished!).

seektable|6 years ago

I started https://www.seektable.com as a side project 2 years ago - originally this was demo of technology (totally free tool). Last 9 months I'm trying to convert it into profitable SaaS app; have first paid customers however MRR is still low.

Depending on your SaaS app niche and your marketing capabilities it might take some time to get stable and good-enough cash flow.

jordiee|6 years ago

My saas https.appdoctor.io is barely profitable but that is mainly because of how cheap the infrastructure cost is(something I think helps a lot in 1 man/woman projects). I would agree with what others have stated though that I don’t recommend solo founding(looking for a co founder now). They don’t tell you that making an functioning application that is useful is less then half the battle to having a successful saas.

osrec|6 years ago

https://usebx.com was my personal side project for a couple of years. We managed to sell contracts to a few corporates, and now have fairly strong MRR (so much so, that we've made the core product free for small teams). I've recently hired a few contractors in London to help expand the Bx toolset and also finally add some documentation!

throw03172019|6 years ago

I am the only full time cofounder of a healthcare SaaS. My cofounder is the domain expert who kept his job. No employees. ~20k MRR

pplante|6 years ago

What sector of healthcare? Mind being more specific? My email is in my profile if you're interested in a conversation.

I have a side project that's targeting physicians being able to better track their activities.

tpkj|6 years ago

Are you able to share any info regarding the type of customer (B2B or B2C), the number of customers, and the method of customer acquisition? Depending on the nature of the product offering, healthcare can be seriously difficult market to enter.

foxhop|6 years ago

Remarkbox (https://www.remarkbox.com) +$50/mo

stevoski|6 years ago

That’s just $50 per month? Or is there a K missing: $50K per month?

swiftcoder|6 years ago

What's the overhead on load times of this?

duiker101|6 years ago

Can't load :(

wayoverthecloud|6 years ago

Currently building receiveco.com. It helps local businesses to get customer feedback and based on it asks for reviews on Google, Yelp, etc. I am currently searching for a co-founder better if someone who's got experience in marketing. The app is 95% complete. Email me at the email on my profile if you're interested.

kevinslin|6 years ago

Made a no frills transcription services that uses AWS transcribe on the backend: (http://scribe.thence.io). I run a podcast and use it to generate multi-speaker transcripts. It's fully automated and generates a nice little revenue

logronoide|6 years ago

I started https://apility.io about 16 months ago and it’s profitable since month six. It’s not profitable enough to leave my job and fully dedicate my time to this, and who knows if it ever happens. I started the project just for fun, btw...

nocubicles|6 years ago

I'm running https://www.gosourcingwise.com - its not super profitable but growing. Companies using it find it very simple and useful so that motivating to keep building it better.

sjs382|6 years ago

Send To My Cloud (https://sendtomycloud.com) is a one-person SaaS that I made 4 years ago. Its definitely in maintenance/passive mode but still profitable.

cx42net|6 years ago

I've been working on PDFShift (https://pdfshift.io) for a almost a year now - alone. I'm nearing 100 customers and will soon be able to make salary :)

leozeba|6 years ago

We're a small team of 3 co-founders at @nazar_io currently doing $50k MRR.

voipspear|6 years ago

I run VoIP Spear (voipspear.com) by myself. We're doing about $5k/month.

VoIP Spear is a service for people who use VoIP. It monitors your Internet connection and alerts when you have a call quality issue.

kahoon|6 years ago

How does this work? How can you even tell VoIP data from non-VoIP data? I would have guessed that everything is encrypted.

ca98am79|6 years ago

I started park.io 5 years ago by myself and it has been profitable since then (and it has been just me the whole time)

user7878|6 years ago

My self developer of few of Saas applications. I worked on starting from ideation to go live. I am developer of those applications working as single person for client to make multiple Saas applications as side projects since few years.

P.S. Ideas are not mine I'm just doing development and can't disclose more details here.

gortok|6 years ago

I am not at liberty to say who it is but I know a one person SaaS (well, now a 4 person SaaS) that does several million a year in revenue. They found a niche and wrote software for that niche. It is the tiniest of niches but is underserved.

throwaway13000|6 years ago

Atleast giving an idea of the general market would be great. Otherwise, your answer has no meaning

mrfusion|6 years ago

I wish I could find a niche :-(

provlem|6 years ago

Education SAAS is anytime great product to make money - something like EduClan.com

pk4636|6 years ago

Prints salutations

umen|6 years ago

so what can we learn from this?

osakasaul|6 years ago

Pocket: one man team for at least the first two years.

osakasaul|6 years ago

Pocket. One-man team for at least the first two years.

ratling|6 years ago

No one is going to tell you this idiot. They'll build it themselves and reap the profits.

This whole ycombinator post is stupid as hell.

ratling|6 years ago

[deleted]

tyingq|6 years ago

Interesting question because answering it is somewhat risky, assuming no secret sauce or years of work to launch.