Founder stories
The largest software testing community in the world, offering conferences, courses, forums, and professional memberships for testers.
How Rosie acquired customers
Tools used to build Ministry of Testing
Started as a free forum in 2007. 12 years later: $1.2M ARR from conferences, memberships, and courses.
Rosie Sherry started Ministry of Testing in 2007 as a simple side project - a forum for software testers who needed a place to connect. She didn't have a business plan. She just knew testers deserved better than what existed.
Despite being an introvert, Rosie launched the community using Ning, a free hosted platform. She reached out to "a few well-known testers" she knew and invited them to join.
"If I can help people, then why not?" was her philosophy from day one.
For the first four years, Ministry of Testing was just a forum - free to use, with no real monetization. Rosie ran it as a side project while raising five children.
But she deliberately avoided advertising: "It takes away lots of energy and conflicts with community interests."
The breakthrough came when Rosie launched TestBash, the community's first conference, in Cambridge with just 65 attendees. It was terrifying for an introvert, but it worked.
By 2019, Ministry of Testing was running 9 conferences annually across multiple countries.
After 12 years of patient building, Ministry of Testing reached $1.2 million in annual revenue. Rosie eventually brought her husband Graham onboard and hired a CEO to handle day-to-day operations.
"Plant the seed, but don't expect something straight away."
Rosie's kindness-first approach spread throughout the community. She focused on authenticity and "real issues" rather than corporate messaging.
Community-first, revenue second. Rosie ran a free forum for 4 years before finding sustainable monetization. Build genuine value before extracting value.
Events can transform a community business. The pivot from forums to conferences changed everything - creating both revenue and deeper community bonds.
Long-term thinking beats quick wins. "Plant the seed, but don't expect something straight away." 12 years to $1.2M ARR requires patience.
Avoid advertising in communities. Ads conflict with member interests. Find revenue models aligned with member success (events, education, memberships).
Inspired by Rosie's journey? Generate a business idea in the Education space using AI and real founder data.
Rosie achieved 4 milestones on the path to $100K ARR
$1,000
$10,000
$1,200,000
The journey, decisions, and context behind this milestone
See the complete breakdown: launch strategy, validation methods, startup costs, expert analysis, replication playbook, and more actionable insights.
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