How This $250K/Month SaaS Got Its First 100 Users (Steal This Playbook)

SStarter Story
창업/스타트업마케팅/광고컴퓨터/소프트웨어AI/미래기술

Transcript

00:00:00"I've now scaled two separate products to over 3 million
00:00:02in annual recurring revenue."
00:00:04This is Joseph, and his SaaS makes over $250,000 a month.
00:00:09But this episode is not how to go viral on TikTok
00:00:12or get millions of downloads.
00:00:13Nope, this video is about a foolproof way
00:00:16to get your first 100 paying SaaS customers.
00:00:19Because if you can get 100, you can get thousands.
00:00:22"When it comes to the first 100 customers,
00:00:24capture the low-hanging fruits."
00:00:25I brought Joseph onto the channel
00:00:27to break down his exact steps to go from zero
00:00:30to 100 customers fast.
00:00:31And in this episode, we'll dive into what you can do
00:00:34in the next hour to rank on search engines,
00:00:36why trolling subreddits can actually turn
00:00:39into a million dollar business,
00:00:40and the exact playbook that you can follow
00:00:42if you're starting over with a new SaaS in 2026.
00:00:45If you're building anything in SaaS right now,
00:00:48well, this is an episode you cannot miss.
00:00:50All right, let's get into it.
00:00:51I'm Pat Walls, and this is "Starter Story."
00:00:53All right, Joseph, welcome to the channel.
00:00:56Tell me about who you are,
00:00:57what you built, and what's your story.
00:00:58- Thanks for having me, Pat.
00:00:59I'm Joe, Joseph.
00:01:01I've now scaled two separate products
00:01:03to over 3 million in annual recurring revenue.
00:01:05And I'm currently building a company called SupaDemo,
00:01:07an AI-powered demo automation tool
00:01:09that helps companies create better,
00:01:11more exceptional product demos in minutes instead of hours.
00:01:14We launched SupaDemo around two and a half years ago now.
00:01:17And in that time, we've gone from zero to 150,000-plus users,
00:01:22over 3 million in annual recurring revenue.
00:01:24And we were named G2's number five fastest growing product
00:01:27in 2025.
00:01:28- All right, before we get into how you built the SaaS
00:01:31and how you got all these customers,
00:01:32I want to understand what this product is.
00:01:34Is it a SaaS?
00:01:35What does it do?
00:01:36Can you explain that?
00:01:37- It helps companies create interactive demos,
00:01:39which are kind of guided, clickable,
00:01:41realistic versions of your product
00:01:44that can be embedded anywhere on the web,
00:01:46whether it's on your website or in your documentation.
00:01:48This is an example of a SupaDemo in action.
00:01:51And as you can see,
00:01:51it looks and feels just like your actual product,
00:01:54because it's a clone of your product,
00:01:55but it allows people to experience your aha moment
00:01:58and what your product does
00:01:59without having to sign up for a plan
00:02:01or talk to a salesperson.
00:02:03We are a product-led growth SaaS company.
00:02:05So most of our traffic actually does come from our starter
00:02:09or freemium tier.
00:02:10And we look at that as our number one engine for growth.
00:02:13But as you can see here,
00:02:15if I go back into the metrics tab, here's our ARR.
00:02:17It's slightly over 3 million.
00:02:20You can see the number of demos.
00:02:21Currently we're doing just over 250K in MRR
00:02:25and we are growing every month.
00:02:26So it's a pretty exciting time to be around.
00:02:28- Thanks for showing that.
00:02:29I'm really excited to talk about building a SaaS,
00:02:31getting your first users as a SaaS, especially in B2B.
00:02:34I'm excited.
00:02:35But before we do,
00:02:36I want to understand a little bit more about your background.
00:02:38How do you even get to the point where you have this SaaS
00:02:40that's making multimillion dollars per year?
00:02:42- I've always growing up been a builder by heart.
00:02:45I started my first projects and businesses
00:02:47at the age of 14 and 15,
00:02:49not because I wanted to be a founder,
00:02:51but I was so enamored with the process of building.
00:02:54That started with me buying and selling electronics
00:02:57on Craigslist.
00:02:58I started an organic soy candle business.
00:03:01I also started a clothing company, a digital agency,
00:03:04all the way to running my first venture funded company
00:03:07in college where we built a B2B seafood marketplace.
00:03:11I think throughout all of those endeavors,
00:03:13one constant problem that I ran into over and over again was
00:03:17it's really difficult to demonstrate the value
00:03:21of your product, the benefits.
00:03:23And after doing a lot of video recordings, a lot of looms,
00:03:26having it constantly be out of date
00:03:28and not just watched by the buyers themselves,
00:03:30I figured there had to be a better way.
00:03:31And it was one of those ideas that I kept in my back pocket.
00:03:34And when I left that company,
00:03:35kind of came back to the drawing board.
00:03:36This was the one I settled on.
00:03:38- Going off the topic a little bit,
00:03:40obviously this is a huge business now.
00:03:41It's doing multimillions in revenue.
00:03:43What did that first early validation look like?
00:03:45Was it just good to go, right?
00:03:47When you first built it
00:03:48or what did that early days look like?
00:03:49- The number one thing is I knew that this was a problem
00:03:52that I had as a business builder,
00:03:54having built businesses for a long time.
00:03:56And the next step was do other people face the same concerns
00:04:00and what are they doing as a workaround
00:04:02to try to solve that problem?
00:04:03So I ended up talking to probably a hundred plus founders
00:04:07that were working in the B2B SaaS industry.
00:04:09And I think the unifying concern was, yes,
00:04:13this was a really painful problem.
00:04:15People hated creating product demos.
00:04:17People hated the sound of their own voice.
00:04:19And that's when I realized,
00:04:20hey, there's something to run with here.
00:04:22Let's build the one of an experiment where we could say,
00:04:25hey, can we sell this thing?
00:04:26Are people willing to pay?
00:04:27- Okay, cool.
00:04:28So you have this idea.
00:04:30You know it might be a good problem to solve.
00:04:32And one of the reasons why I wanted to bring you
00:04:33on the channel is you had an interesting strategy
00:04:36on how to get your first hundred customers.
00:04:39In a SaaS, that's so important.
00:04:40If you can find a hundred people that want to use
00:04:42and pay for your product, you're pretty much set.
00:04:43Everything should hopefully keep growing after that.
00:04:46So I want to dive into the actual playbook.
00:04:48If you were to start over today,
00:04:49how would you go about it right now
00:04:51to get those first 100 customers?
00:04:53- So I would say when it comes to the first 100 customers,
00:04:56I'd go back to my first step of the playbook,
00:04:58which is the low hanging fruit,
00:05:00capturing the obvious demand first.
00:05:02So what we did early on is we focused on people
00:05:06that were already searching for a solution.
00:05:08What that meant was crafting valuable content
00:05:11and using that as a main engine across the full funnel.
00:05:13So we ended up creating SEO pieces at the top, middle,
00:05:18as well as the bottom of the funnel.
00:05:20And in practice, what that meant in the bottom of funnel
00:05:22is detailed comparison pages,
00:05:24pitting Superdemo against our competitors.
00:05:27And when I mean competitors,
00:05:28I mean every competitor that you can find in your space,
00:05:31because that's the easiest way
00:05:33to piggyback off of their traffic.
00:05:34And we use that to quickly establish an imperfect,
00:05:38but live version 1.0 of pages that would get us ranked
00:05:42and mentioned in LLMs early on in the market,
00:05:45figuring out which competitor pages are actually being cited
00:05:48and picking up traction.
00:05:50And those are the ones that we would go in and optimize.
00:05:53Then it was all about going to the mid funnel,
00:05:55people that are a little bit higher intent.
00:05:57What we ended up doing is we created dozens and dozens
00:06:00of free tools and adjacent spaces like screenshots, SOPs.
00:06:04Our twist here was instead of back then,
00:06:07when we built these tools, we didn't have cloud code.
00:06:09We made our entire product experience ungated.
00:06:12So people didn't have to sign up for an account
00:06:14or set up a free trial.
00:06:16They could access certain areas or sections of our product
00:06:19that would let people take screenshots or create tutorials.
00:06:22The end result here, customers would land on the page
00:06:26and quickly find value.
00:06:27Today, I think these free tools bring in roughly 20%
00:06:30of all of our traffic and converts like 15 to 20%
00:06:33of all visitors into signup.
00:06:35What I love about Joseph's strategy is that it's not sexy.
00:06:38It's the stuff that actually works
00:06:40if you want to build a successful business.
00:06:41So if you have an idea, but you're still a little stuck
00:06:44on how to turn it into something real,
00:06:45stop building in the dark.
00:06:47Something that Joseph talked about was launching parts
00:06:49of his app for free.
00:06:50I call this free tool marketing.
00:06:52It's one of the eight strategies I wrote about
00:06:55in my million dollar MVP guide.
00:06:56You can download this guide for free right now
00:06:59and inside you will get actionable approaches ranked
00:07:01by how fast you can ship them, over 10 case studies
00:07:05of founders who use these exact methods
00:07:07to hit over a million dollars,
00:07:08and the validation framework you can use
00:07:11so you don't waste months building a product nobody wants.
00:07:14Look, this stuff isn't made up.
00:07:15This is all the stuff that I see from founders
00:07:17who come on this channel who built successful businesses
00:07:20and I put it all in one place for you to check out.
00:07:22This is the exact roadmap I would use to validate my idea
00:07:25and start building in 2026.
00:07:27So click the link in the description
00:07:28to grab the $1 million MVP guide for free.
00:07:31Now back to the episode.
00:07:32- Finally, on the top of funnel, what we ended up doing
00:07:34is we created step-by-step interactive demos using Superdemo
00:07:39of thousands of different workflows and keywords.
00:07:42And we would create SEO-focused, again, programmatic pages
00:07:46with Superdemo's embedded how to export Figma to PDF
00:07:49or how to merge cells on Excel.
00:07:51And our bet was by solving their question
00:07:54in an interactive and engaging way
00:07:56and putting our product front and center,
00:07:58enough of them would be within our ICP to say,
00:08:01"Hey, this is really cool."
00:08:03For step two of our playbook,
00:08:04it was all about as cliche as it sounds,
00:08:06doing things that don't scale to remove friction for buyers.
00:08:10So I personally offered to create free Superdemo
00:08:13for founders on Reddit, as well as indie hackers.
00:08:16And what I asked them to do is post their product URL.
00:08:19I would take that and I would actually go ahead
00:08:20and create the Superdemo of their product for them.
00:08:23Then I would comment in line on their post
00:08:26with the interactive demo so that they can just sign up,
00:08:29duplicate the demo and start using it right away.
00:08:31And the added benefit of doing that publicly
00:08:34was that other people who hadn't even commented
00:08:36would see all of the other products
00:08:38and the links being posted.
00:08:39It would click it, interact with it and say,
00:08:41"Whoa, this is really cool.
00:08:43I'm gonna ask him to create me a demo
00:08:45or I'm just gonna sign up and do it myself
00:08:46'cause it looks easy."
00:08:47We did permutations of that
00:08:49across many, many different channels.
00:08:51- There's something very common that I see
00:08:52with a lot of founders who come on Starter Story.
00:08:54I like to call it hand-to-hand combat,
00:08:56just going in and doing things one by one.
00:08:59Yeah, you don't have to do that forever,
00:09:00but if you can do that a hundred times,
00:09:02a percentage of those likely will turn into customers
00:09:05just by this do things that don't scale.
00:09:06So I really liked that.
00:09:07What's this third step?
00:09:08- Third is just be everywhere where your users are.
00:09:11I think the challenging thing about distribution nowadays
00:09:13in 2026 is there's no magic channel anymore.
00:09:17There's no gotchas.
00:09:18So for us, it was all about
00:09:19how do we get distribution density?
00:09:22So that was SEO and AI, LLMs, as I mentioned,
00:09:25through content, living and breathing in communities,
00:09:28and even doing things like direct outreach
00:09:30through like the product updates,
00:09:31building in public in LinkedIn and on IndieHacker,
00:09:35and just sharing our story and being a megaphone
00:09:37as much as you can in places where founders pay attention,
00:09:41just like here on Starter Story.
00:09:42Roughly 30, 40% of our visitors come from SEO and LLMs.
00:09:47A 30% comes from word of mouth, watermarks, referrals,
00:09:50folks creating super demos and sharing it with other people
00:09:53and that creating a viral loop.
00:09:55And third, 20% building in public on LinkedIn.
00:09:58- Okay, well, thanks for sharing that playbook.
00:09:59That's amazing.
00:10:00I think a lot of people watching this are,
00:10:01hey, I got a SaaS idea.
00:10:03I have an actual SaaS MVP.
00:10:05I have some customers.
00:10:06I'm sure you get a lot of people that reach out to you
00:10:08and go, hey, how did you do it?
00:10:09How'd you do with 3 million ARR?
00:10:11Even if you've given these people some advice,
00:10:13what do you typically see early SaaS founders getting wrong
00:10:17when they start out?
00:10:18- I think the biggest thing that comes to mind for me,
00:10:20I would say it's not launching yesterday
00:10:22and chasing perfection.
00:10:24Earlier you can launch the faster results compound
00:10:28and the faster you find out, do I need to kill this thing?
00:10:31Can we scale this thing with data?
00:10:32Or do we need to pivot and reorient?
00:10:35The cliche advice that a lot of people give is
00:10:38if you're not embarrassed by the first version
00:10:39of your product, you've launched too late.
00:10:41I don't think that holds true in the sense
00:10:43that every product should have great craftsmanship
00:10:45in the AI first era.
00:10:46But as a founder, the only advantage you have
00:10:49over an incumbent is urgency and speed.
00:10:51- Yeah, I like that advice.
00:10:52My first question that comes to mind is like,
00:10:53okay, why would I pay for this if I could just use Loom?
00:10:56And there are a lot of other cool product demo tools
00:10:59out there, but yours is actually crushing it.
00:11:01So I'd love if you could give me just a quick demo
00:11:03how it works.
00:11:04- So I'm gonna go right into this banking app.
00:11:06So you can create a demo in a variety of different ways.
00:11:09The easiest place to start is our Chrome extension.
00:11:11When you click this button,
00:11:12you're gonna get a few different options here
00:11:14that signify different demo types.
00:11:17I'm gonna click the guided HTML here
00:11:19and I'm gonna start the recording.
00:11:20You just need to click through the workflow
00:11:22or the features or the pages
00:11:24that you wanna demonstrate out.
00:11:26Maybe I'm creating for this use case an onboarding demo
00:11:29of how you can go about tagging transactions
00:11:32directly here on Berkeley.
00:11:33I wanna show the customer
00:11:35how to categorize transactions here.
00:11:37So I'm just gonna emulate and walk through that step.
00:11:39And let's, for example, put this under venue rental.
00:11:42Now that it's been categorized,
00:11:44you'll notice that Supa demo is recording
00:11:46all of your clicks and actions.
00:11:48From here, you can choose to stop the recording.
00:11:50It's actually going to clone all of the steps.
00:11:52You'll get things in a modular kind of editable editor
00:11:56that looks and feels like a PowerPoint slide.
00:11:57And you can easily go in and make changes
00:12:00as you go over time.
00:12:01I'll just show you what it looks like to the end viewer.
00:12:03So you'll notice we created this in like two minutes.
00:12:06It cloned the entire front end.
00:12:07So through a link, people can essentially access your app
00:12:10or access your product experience.
00:12:12That's like the super high level TL;DR,
00:12:14but you can obviously go in
00:12:15and do things like adding chapters.
00:12:17You can go in and edit the HTML
00:12:19and use one demo template for hundreds of different leads.
00:12:23You could put in like voiceovers.
00:12:25You can clone your own voice.
00:12:27If you do want like a loom-like experience,
00:12:29you could also record your face and camera here.
00:12:31- Wow, thanks for showing that.
00:12:32Super cool.
00:12:33It's like, instead of a video,
00:12:34it's like actually just saving all the HTML.
00:12:36And that's pretty impressive.
00:12:37How is this built?
00:12:38What's the tech stack here?
00:12:39- We're growing really quickly.
00:12:40So I'd say we're like rotating through
00:12:42like 50 plus different tools every single month.
00:12:45But at a high level, we obviously use Supa demo
00:12:47for demoing our product, for onboarding, for training.
00:12:50We use Cloud Code, Cursor, Codex very, very extensively.
00:12:54So we kind of switch between the three depending
00:12:57on what's the best model or most performant.
00:13:00We use Linear for task management.
00:13:01Linear is also super powerful for like connecting to Slack
00:13:05and also connecting to Cloud.
00:13:06We use AWS for hosting.
00:13:08I use Postmark for transactional emails.
00:13:10We use Intercom for more like triggered workflows
00:13:12and onboarding and for marketing emails and support.
00:13:15A bunch of other tools like Ahrefs, Clay, Zapier
00:13:20for a bunch of GTM and CS efforts.
00:13:22- Well, thanks for sharing that.
00:13:23Last question that we ask everyone who comes
00:13:24on Starter Story or for anyone who's watching this
00:13:27that wants to start a SaaS,
00:13:28what would be your one piece of advice?
00:13:29- I'd say stop obsessing over the competition
00:13:32and the idea and just start building.
00:13:34If you identify the right problem,
00:13:37the world is a very, very big place.
00:13:39There's more than enough market in most places for everyone.
00:13:42Most companies, I would say die.
00:13:45If they do die, buy (beep)
00:13:47and internal combustion then buy or buy competition.
00:13:50So just get going and start building.
00:13:52- Well, thanks Joseph for coming on and sharing all this.
00:13:55It is crazy to see that very niche product
00:13:57can do $3 million a year and I'm sure it's still growing.
00:13:59This is the future, this is building an AI.
00:14:01This is SaaS, it's not going anywhere.
00:14:03So thanks for coming on and sharing everything
00:14:05so transparently and inspiring others.
00:14:07- Cool, thanks for having me, Pat.
00:14:08- If you're watching this far and you want to build a SaaS,
00:14:11I think that his playbook to 100 customers is really good.
00:14:15And it's the right way of thinking
00:14:16when you're starting a SaaS.
00:14:17I don't want to be thinking about
00:14:19how do I get 10,000 customers?
00:14:20How do I get 1,000 customers?
00:14:22How do I get 10 customers?
00:14:23Because if you can get 10 paying customers
00:14:25that don't churn right away for your SaaS,
00:14:27you know you can go get more.
00:14:29Last thing I want to shout out,
00:14:30if you're looking for your SaaS idea and you want to build it
00:14:32and get it in the hands of customers in just a few days,
00:14:34you can do that with AI now.
00:14:36You should check out Starter Story Build,
00:14:37click that link in the description.
00:14:38You can get started,
00:14:39you can build and launch something very quickly.
00:14:41Thank you guys for watching.
00:14:42I'll see you in the next one, peace.

Key Takeaway

Achieving the first 100 SaaS customers requires a combination of high-intent SEO strategies, ungated free tools, and unscalable manual outreach to build initial momentum.

Highlights

Joseph scaled SupaDemo to $3M ARR and 150,000 users in just two and a half years.

The 3-step playbook focuses on capturing low-hanging fruit through SEO and programmatic pages.

Mid-funnel growth is driven by ungated free tools that convert 15-20% of visitors into signups.

Engaging in "hand-to-hand combat" on Reddit and Indie Hackers helps acquire early adopters manually.

Building in public on LinkedIn and establishing a viral loop through watermarks accounts for 50% of traffic.

Founders should prioritize speed over perfection, launching early to validate ideas with real data.

The AI-first era requires craftsmanship, but urgency remains the only advantage over incumbents.

Timeline

Introduction to SupaDemo and $3M ARR Success

Host Pat Walls introduces Joseph, a founder who has successfully scaled two separate products to over $3 million in annual recurring revenue. Joseph's current venture, SupaDemo, is an AI-powered demo automation tool that has reached 150,000 users and $250,000 in monthly recurring revenue. The tool allows companies to create clickable, realistic versions of their software that can be embedded anywhere on the web. Joseph explains that their growth is primarily driven by a product-led strategy and a freemium tier. This section establishes the credibility of the speaker and defines the core value proposition of the product being discussed.

Founder Background and Solving the Demo Problem

Joseph shares his history as a lifelong builder who started his first projects at age 14, ranging from Craigslist electronics flipping to a B2B seafood marketplace. Through these various endeavors, he consistently identified a painful recurring problem: the difficulty of effectively demonstrating product value to buyers. He validated this specific pain point by interviewing over 100 founders in the B2B SaaS space before building a solution. The interviews confirmed that people generally dislike the process of recording video demos and hearing their own voices. This validation stage was crucial in ensuring there was a market willing to pay for an automated alternative.

Playbook Step 1: Capturing Low-Hanging Fruit and SEO

The first step of the playbook focuses on capturing obvious demand by targeting users already searching for solutions. Joseph explains how they created SEO content across the full funnel, including detailed comparison pages pitting SupaDemo against every possible competitor. In the mid-funnel, they built dozens of ungated free tools for tasks like screenshots and SOPs, which now account for 20% of their traffic. For the top of the funnel, they utilized programmatic SEO to create thousands of "how-to" interactive demos for popular software workflows. This strategy puts the product front and center while solving specific user queries, effectively filtering for their ideal customer profile.

Playbook Step 2: Unscalable Hand-to-Hand Combat

The second step involves performing manual tasks that do not scale to remove friction for potential buyers. Joseph personally reached out to founders on platforms like Reddit and Indie Hackers, offering to build their product demos for them. By posting these interactive demos publicly in comment threads, he allowed the founders to simply duplicate the work and start using it immediately. Pat Walls refers to this as "hand-to-hand combat," a common trait among successful early-stage founders. This method not only acquired direct customers but also served as public social proof for other observers in the community.

Playbook Step 3: Distribution Density and Channel Mix

The final step of the playbook is to achieve distribution density by being present wherever the target users spend their time. Joseph notes that in 2026, there is no single "magic channel," so a multi-pronged approach is necessary. Currently, their traffic mix is 30-40% from SEO and LLMs, 30% from word-of-mouth and viral watermarks, and 20% from building in public on LinkedIn. He advises founders to avoid chasing perfection and to launch as quickly as possible to gather data. The core message is that speed and urgency are the primary advantages a startup has over established competitors.

Product Demo and Technical Stack Deep Dive

Joseph provides a live demonstration of SupaDemo using a banking application to show how the Chrome extension captures HTML clicks rather than video. The tool automatically clones the front-end and creates a modular, editable editor that functions similarly to PowerPoint slides. Regarding their technology, Joseph mentions they use a wide array of tools including Cursor and Cloud Code for development, and AWS for hosting. He highlights the use of Linear for task management and Intercom for customer onboarding and support workflows. This section illustrates the practical application of the product and the robust infrastructure supporting its rapid growth.

Final Advice for SaaS Founders in 2026

In closing, Joseph advises aspiring founders to stop obsessing over competition and simply start building. He believes that if the identified problem is significant enough, there is plenty of market space for multiple players to succeed. Pat Walls reinforces the importance of the "first 100 customers" mindset, noting that proving a product with 10 paying users is the foundation for scaling to thousands. The video concludes with a mention of AI tools that now allow founders to build and launch MVPs in just a few days. The overall sentiment is one of transparency and encouragement for the next generation of SaaS entrepreneurs.

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