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$322 β $2K MRR in 60 days by building in public
Hello everyone, this is Tony! π
Today is a special day.
I want to share with you all this post I originally posted on Indie Hackers, but I think you all will also be interested!
Itβs a long post about my journey growing Black Magic to $2K MRR in the last 2 months.
Here we go.
π $322 β $2K MRR in 60 days
Two months ago, I received an offer to buy my SaaS (name: Black Magic) for $40,000, all cash.
Black Magic was about $322 MRR at the time. That was > 10x ARR β a very good deal.
For various reasons,Β I declined the offer.
Now, 60 days later, Black Magic is atΒ $2,164 MRR.
Today, I want to share with you how I did it.
I canβt guarantee that you can do the same with your SaaS, but I hope this can give you some ideas, or simply inspire you to keep going.
π A quick background
Previously, Black Magicβs main feature was helping people βdecorateβ their profile pic and banner in a special way. For example, my profile pic shows a progress bar that update itself automatically:
There were customers, but mostly for fun. I was not solving any major pain points. It was more like a device to help me grow my Twitter account.
As you can see in the MRR chart above, the product was stuck at ~$330 MRR for a very long time.
π‘ The idea phase
I have always wanted to make Black Magic become a βreal/helpfulβ product, but I didnβt know how.
I have a lot of ideas on many stuff I want to improve on Twitter here and there, but I couldnβt find the right way to combine them all together deliver them (a SaaS?/website?/app?/bot?).
The most 2 important ideas I want to add to Black Magic:
View past interactions from a person with me: have they liked/replied to my tweets before? How long did they follow me? Etc.
View a tweet performance over time: how my tweet impression change in its entire lifetime? How did a like/retweet from someone with 100K followers affect my tweetβs reach? (Yes, Iβm a data nerd, and I want to see a lot of data).
And then, many smaller stuff like: add notes to a profile, set reminders to a tweet, tweet categories, some analytics, etc.
I have a very long wishlist of things I want to improve on Twitter. I just didnβt know in what form should I deliver them.
β‘ I pivoted the product
One day I saw Twemex.app for the first time, it gave me the idea of adding a sidebar to the Twitter Web (shoutout to the authorΒ @geoffreylitt).
I immediately know how to deliver all of my ideas: it will be a browser extension. It just makes sense!
I didnβt want to build a new Twitter web client, I just want to improve the existing one.
Everything must happen inside the sidebar, I didnβt want to touch any of the existing UI components from Twitter, so that my extension wonβt be affected when Twitter change their code.
Later, I can move the whole extension to a separate website or app, if I really have to.
Over the next week, I drafted an MVP for the extension, then use it for myself for a while.
I really like it!
π I built in public
The MVP only had 1 or 2 features, I released it as a beta version, then invited some of my Twitter friends to try it. They liked it a lot!
I shared some small demos on Twitter, people get excited. It helped gain some traction for Black Magic as a whole. Some people started asking to pay early.
I started an invite-only beta program, where people can try the extension free of charge, and invite their friends to try it.
Then, I ask people for their feedback, make improvements, and add more features.
For a few weeks straight, I added new features almost every day. My entire day was like:
Morning: add a feature
Afternoon: release the feature, tweet about it, then invite new beta users
Night: talk with beta users, collect feedback/suggestions, fix bugs
Repeat the next day.
Almost every tweet I made about Black Magic went popular. Every feature I publish became a marketing tweet.
If you are curious, here isΒ a long thread of all those tweets. Each one gets ~50-100 likes on average, some good ones get toΒ ~300 likesΒ or evenΒ 688 likes.
I asked people to drop a βπβ to my tweet to get an invite code, it helped me to keep track of who to send the invite codes, and also helped with the reach as well.
During that time, every day, I DM'ed ~20 people, gained ~100 new followers, and marketed the product at the same time.
π I offered the product for free (while in beta)
As mentioned, I let people use the product for free while itβs in beta. There are some pros and cons to it:
Pros:
Gained a lot of free users
Collected a lot of feedback/suggestions
Many of them converted to paid customers later
Many of them leave a review on the extension store
I got to watch the system reacts to a slowly increasing traffic and usages, which is very helpful to identify and fix problems early.
I have a perfect excuse if there is an embarrassing bug or the whole product just goes offline (didnβt happen, luckily).
Cons:
Sometimes, I had to spend too much time talking with customers. I want to talk to customers, but also want to focus and build.
To serve the huge amount of free users, I had to upgrade my server 3 times, migrated it to AWS, and burned my free credits like crazy.
As for the beta testers:
They can use the product for free
They can provide early feedback, be involved in the idea/planning phase, and help shape the product roadmap in a way that benefits them the most!
I think this is a win-win for everyone!
I ended up with about 920 beta testers. The whole testing phase lasts ~60 days.
To thank them, I offered an early-bird discount, ~33% OFF lifetime subscription discount.
For those who didnβt buy, I added an additional 24 days of using the product for free, with all premium features unlocked.
πͺ My unfair advantages
Itβs unfair not to talk about my unfair advantages.
When I started the beta, I had ~14K followers or so. It definitely helped the momentum and the reach of my tweets. Thatβs my first advantage.
My 2nd advantage: over the past 6 months, I gained a lot of free users for Black Magic, thanks to the fun-free stuff I made with Black Magic (profile progress bar, real-time banner, etc.).
To be exact, I had ~7,000 registered free accounts at the time. I think this is also a good strategy to get free users first, then offer paid products later.
I think many of them converted. I didnβt have time to set up the conversion tracking so I canβt know for sure.
For context, 8 months ago, I had ~200 Twitter followers, and 0 customers. If you want to learn how I managed to build these unfair advantages for myself, Iβll write about it later inΒ my personal newsletter.
Finally, my 3rd unfair advantage: I have been writing code for 13 years, 7 of those years, I freelanced, worked for startups, outsourcing companies, enterprises professionally.
Frontend, backend, DevOps, Android, iOS, desktop apps, games,β¦ I have done it all, either at work or in my past side projects.
To me, coding is the easy part. Thatβs why I was able to ship features so fast.
Not everyone has these advantages like me, thatβs why I call them βunfairβ. I think unfair advantages is a crucial part of getting success! You should also find (or build) your own unfair advantages today!
But Iβm not done yetβ¦
π Today, I launch on Product Hunt
Yes, itβs happening.Β Right now. The beta ends today Dec 16th, 2021.
If you have a minute, I really appreciate it if you can drop by and show your love! β€οΈ
We are currently the #1 Product of the Day, letβs try to keep that spot to the end of the day! Or even sneak into the Product of the Week category! π€©
β Magic Sidebar by BlackMagic.so
Magic Sidebar by BlackMagic.so on Product Hunt
In conclusion, here are some numbers from the beta:
πΒ 60 days of beta testing
π§ͺΒ 920 invite-only beta users
π₯Β 1,660 active users
π€Β 248 paid users
π΅Β $2,164 MRR
Iβm hoping this launch will push the MRR a bit higher, but I set no expectation (itβs a recipe for disappointment and stress π)
π₯ To be continued
I enjoy sharing my story here with you all!
If you like this post, once again, please join me on Product Hunt, I am very grateful to have your support! πππ
Here is the link.
https://www.producthunt.com/posts/magic-sidebar-by-blackmagic-so
Thank you for reading!
Until next time! π
Tony