1. uptime monitoring service [1]. launched in 2019. decided to enter a crowded niche so as not to reinvent the wheel and try to figure out distribution, but gave up. sold in early 2021. total sales before selling: $1,686
2. notion backups service [2]. launched in late 2021, total sales $100k, while still growing ~60% YoY. in hindsight, I should have picked an adjacent niche, since this business is technically difficult and not as easy to sell as a Notion site builder, for example.
3. churn analytics for stripe [3]. got accepted to the stripe marketplace, but still haven't gotten a single customer because I haven’t marketed it much. I use it daily and it is very helpful. for that reason alone, i don't want to kill it.
So I have many, but sold a few too. Right now I am in that uptime monitoring service but I went a different route and just made it 100% free. I started https://boxwatch.app awhile ago, was going to go pay but then I sold another business and said screw it.. 100% free. I am currently working on a companion ios/android app to go with the service but still totally free.
oh good luck, it's a tough space to be. some indie makers have managed to make it work (like healthchecks.io for example) but it requires patience and dedication, esp dealing with some entitled people on the free plan.
For people who are looking for a mostly succesful steady product, find a niche that others would not even consider because of how boring it is. Usually you end up doing research about the most boring logic that ends up being kind of fun. The people who QA will happily tell you why your product is broken, because it'll beats anything manual they're doing right now.
1. The idea and implementation was decent, but very hard to effectively get companies to pay for it and would have been destroyed by the bot apocalypse on the web. Also, turns out I don’t really want to run a SaaS. Still happy I challenged myself, shipped and convinced a few people to pay for it.
i just started a startup which i will not tell the name of for personal reasons , im still having many difficulties .. The problem isnt how good the startup is but how good you can advertise.
1. uptime monitoring service [1]. launched in 2019. decided to enter a crowded niche so as not to reinvent the wheel and try to figure out distribution, but gave up. sold in early 2021. total sales before selling: $1,686
2. notion backups service [2]. launched in late 2021, total sales $100k, while still growing ~60% YoY. in hindsight, I should have picked an adjacent niche, since this business is technically difficult and not as easy to sell as a Notion site builder, for example.
3. churn analytics for stripe [3]. got accepted to the stripe marketplace, but still haven't gotten a single customer because I haven’t marketed it much. I use it daily and it is very helpful. for that reason alone, i don't want to kill it.
[1] https://web.archive.org/web/20210515005206/https://tryhexade...
[2] https://notionbackups.com
[3] https://dunningbear.com
So I have many, but sold a few too. Right now I am in that uptime monitoring service but I went a different route and just made it 100% free. I started https://boxwatch.app awhile ago, was going to go pay but then I sold another business and said screw it.. 100% free. I am currently working on a companion ios/android app to go with the service but still totally free.
oh good luck, it's a tough space to be. some indie makers have managed to make it work (like healthchecks.io for example) but it requires patience and dedication, esp dealing with some entitled people on the free plan.
btw, your docs pages look malformed; seems like markdown metadata slipping into the page content: https://boxwatch.app/docs/api/authentication
ahhh thank you. Just went through the huge process of converting to 100% free. [fixed] :)
For people who are looking for a mostly succesful steady product, find a niche that others would not even consider because of how boring it is. Usually you end up doing research about the most boring logic that ends up being kind of fun. The people who QA will happily tell you why your product is broken, because it'll beats anything manual they're doing right now.
For future reference, you need to put newlines between lines to preserve formatting.
1. The idea and implementation was decent, but very hard to effectively get companies to pay for it and would have been destroyed by the bot apocalypse on the web. Also, turns out I don’t really want to run a SaaS. Still happy I challenged myself, shipped and convinced a few people to pay for it.
Sadly - too many.
Still pushing what has now turned into a pet project, serves many free members, but none that feel its worth paying for.
i just started a startup which i will not tell the name of for personal reasons , im still having many difficulties .. The problem isnt how good the startup is but how good you can advertise.
None that have failed