What You'll Learn
- The "LTD First, Subscription Later" cold-start playbook
- Why Product Hunt isn't always the answer
- How to price when you're an unknown solo founder
The Story
Shri Vatz is a 30-year-old software engineer in Chennai, India. Day job: writing code. Nights and weekends: building his own products. Three years, three products, two exits.
Guidejar, his third product, helps SaaS companies create interactive product demos and guides. Here's the path that worked:
Attempts 1 & 2: The Failures
His first two products generated revenue but never took off. He burned money on paid ads and cold emails — classic mistakes for first-time founders.
The lesson: paid acquisition doesn't work when you don't know who your customer is yet. Cold traffic needs warm onboarding.
Attempt 3: The AppSumo Play
Instead of launching on Product Hunt (which he'd tried before with mediocre results), Shri ran an AppSumo Lifetime Deal (LTD):
- Priced aggressively low ($29-49 one-time)
- Sold 950+ deals in the campaign period
- Converted ~18% of LTD buyers to annual subscribers
- Kept 95% profit margins throughout
The LTD wasn't just about revenue — it was 950 people stress-testing the product, reporting bugs, and requesting features, for free.
Why This Works for Solo Founders
The Transition to Subscription
After the LTD campaign, Shri introduced a monthly subscription tier with premium features. The transition was smooth because:
- LTD buyers kept their lifetime access (goodwill)
- New users only saw subscription pricing
- The product had 6+ months of improvements by then
Key Takeaways
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Original case from "全栈工程胖儿" WeChat startup case series.