Founder stories
353 stories found
Zeno Rocha spent $25K on a domain, launched an open-source email library, built a 6,338-person waitlist in 7 weeks, then turned it into $5M ARR β the "Stripe of email."
Jan Oberhauser, a VFX pipeline engineer, started coding n8n in his Berlin apartment after work. His first hire was a developer evangelist. Now it's worth $2.5B with 150K GitHub stars.
A team from Prague spent 4 years building before they launched publicly. Zero VC funding. $10M revenue. Acquired by Celonis for $107M.
Thomas Paul Mann and Petr Nikolaev left Facebook to build a Mac launcher. They gave it away free for 3 years, grew through pure word of mouth, and built an extension ecosystem with 20K+ developer contributors.
After founding Groupon ($16B IPO) and watching it unravel, Andrew Mason built Descript β an AI video editor that lets you edit media by editing text. He acquired a voice-cloning AI startup and rebuilt the product from scratch.
Victor Riparbelli assembled a founding team of two AI professors and one operations co-founder to turn academic video AI research into a $4B enterprise platform with 65,000+ business customers.
Demi Guo and Chenlin Meng dropped out of Stanford's AI PhD program after being frustrated with existing AI video tools. They launched Pika on Discord, hit 500K members in 4 months, and raised $135M β all with a team of 13.
Noam Shazeer co-authored "Attention Is All You Need" β the paper that created modern AI. When Google refused to release their chatbot technology, he left to build Character.ai, reaching $1B valuation in 16 months.
Melanie Perkins started teaching design tools in college and realized they were too hard to use. After being rejected by 100+ investors, she built Canva into a $40B platform with 220M+ monthly active users.
Sam Liang built the "blue dot" at Google Maps, then founded Otter.ai to solve his own meeting problem. A Zoom partnership, free tier that undercut $1/minute competitors, and journalist evangelists drove 35M users.
Nadav and Gideon Keyson, two Dutch-Israeli brothers, failed with a live debating platform nobody watched. They pivoted to remote podcast recording, launched on Product Hunt with 2 paying customers, and landed Hillary Clinton within 6 months.
Young Zhao's AI livestreaming tool had only 200 users after 3 months. But one tiny clipping feature users kept asking about became Opus Clip β hitting $1M ARR in 14 days and 10M users within 2 years.
Victor Perez and Diego Rodriguez dropped King of Spain scholarships at Cornell to build Krea AI. A localhost demo posted on Twitter generated $10K in subscriptions in 24 hours. They grew to 20M users with just 8 people.
Alex Hormozi sold his six gyms, poured the money into a licensing model, and hit $17M profit in the first year. He scaled to 4,500+ locations across 13 countries, sold for $46.2M, then built Acquisition.com into a $250M+ portfolio.
Brett Williams had been designing since 2009. In 2017 he launched DesignJoy β a subscription design service. A viral tweet in 2020 doubled his MRR overnight. By 2022, he broke $1.5M ARR as a true agency of one.
Dan Anisse and Adam Mura ran a Webflow agency and kept building the same components. They productized the work into Relume β a component library that grew to 41K+ users, $150K MRR, and an AI site builder, all bootstrapped.
Chris Do ran an Emmy-winning design agency for 22+ years. In 2014, he started making YouTube videos teaching creatives how to run businesses. That side project became The Futur β 2.5M subscribers and $4.9M+/year.
After two acquisitions (5by by StumbleUpon, Islands by WeWork) and advisory roles at TikTok and Reddit, Greg Isenberg launched Late Checkout. In three years, it hit 8 figures with zero outside capital.
Codie Sanchez went from Goldman Sachs to building Contrarian Thinking β a newsletter that hit 10K subscribers in 30 days. She parlayed that audience into courses, community, and a holding company that now does 9 figures in revenue.
Nick Huber started Storage Squad at Cornell, expanded to 25 college towns, then caught the self-storage bug. He used Twitter to raise $20M+ and scale to 63+ properties worth $150M+, while building Sweaty Startup into a media brand.
Jack Butcher assembled cars at a Honda factory, talked his way into design school, spent 8 years at agencies, then burned out running his own. In January 2019, he started posting simple visuals on Twitter. Within 18 months: $180K/month.
Dan Koe tried fitness YouTube, dropshipping, a Facebook ads agency, and two e-commerce brands β all failed. Then he started writing on Twitter. Within 4 years: $3.3M/year and 3.4M followers.
Wes Bos started teaching at a coding bootcamp, then launched "React for Beginners" β 2,300 students in 3 weeks. His free JavaScript30 challenge attracted 680K+ sign-ups. Total: $10M+ in course revenue from Hamilton, Ontario.
Manish Chandra bet that fashion resale could be social. Poshmark's Posh Parties turned shopping into community events. Result: IPO at $7.4B, 80M+ users.
Explore founder stories in your niche
Share your journey and inspire other founders. We'd love to feature your story.
A note on these stories: The founders featured here represent those who publicly shared their success. Not every startup succeeds, and timelines vary widely. These stories are meant to inspire and educate, not to set expectations.
We add 5+ new stories every week. Get them delivered to your inbox along with insights on what's working for founders right now.
Showing 73 to 96 of 353 stories