About this episode
Intel found his open-source code on SourceForge and asked to buy an enterprise version - before one even existed. Onur Alp Soner built Countly as a weekend side project with no validation and no customers. Yet through competitive differentiation rooted in open-source SaaS principles, he grew it to 7-figure ARR serving BMW, Coca-Cola, and AWS without a single outbound sales call.
Onur reveals why his first SaaS product failed because it lacked competitive differentiation against Mixpanel, how relaunching with dedicated servers per customer turned privacy into a technical moat, and the content strategy that drove 12 years of inbound-only growth. His SaaS differentiation playbook shows how open-source code becomes an enterprise sales funnel.
Countly is a privacy-first analytics platform that has been profitable and bootstrapped for 12 years. Onur survived a co-founder breakup that nearly destroyed the company after four years of silent tension.
? Key Lessons
? Open-source code is the ultimate competitive differentiation: Countly released free code that Intel and BMW evaluated, then requested paid enterprise versions - generating inbound deals for 12 years without outbound sales.
? Kill a product that lacks competitive differentiation: Countly Cloud looked identical to Mixpanel and hit a revenue ceiling. Onur killed it and refocused on the open-source SaaS enterprise model that was generating revenue.
?? Turn differentiation into technical architecture: Countly Flex gives each customer a dedicated server in their chosen region, turning privacy from a marketing claim into a competitive advantage competitors can't replicate.
? Charge for expertise, not just software: After 10 enterprise deals, Onur learned buyers pay for strategic consulting. He stopped publishing pricing and switched to value-based scoping.
? Address co-founder tension before it compounds: Onur's co-founder dispute built silently for four years before an eight-month crisis. Have hard conversations at the first sign of misalignment.
Chapters
Introduction and Rumi quote on wisdom
What Countly does and the privacy-first mission
Revenue, team size, and bootstrapped status
Origin story at Huawei in 2013
The Hacker News blog post that changed everything
How Intel found them through open-source code
Why enterprises chose Countly for competitive differentiation
Inbound-only growth and content marketing
Why the first SaaS product failed
Relaunching with dedicated servers for privacy
The co-founder breakup that nearly killed Countly
Lightning round
Resources
Full show notes: https://saascl