Vertical SaaS: $400K Hardware Pivot to 7-Figure ARR

Vertical SaaS: $400K Hardware Pivot to 7-Figure ARR

51:46 Jan 30, 2025
About this episode
Hiren Hasmukh invested $400,000 of his own savings into a hardware company that COVID killed. He pivoted the backend software into a vertical SaaS that now generates 7-figure ARR with 22 people. In this episode, you'll learn how Teqtivity competes against heavily funded IT asset management competitors on just $2,500/month in ad spend, and why separate code bases per customer became a niche SaaS competitive advantage. Hiren reveals how long-tail Google keywords cost a fraction of the $60-70/click industry-specific SaaS primary keyword, why investing in conference booths across multiple events produced zero follow-up demos, and how transparency after a data breach - including moving a customer on-prem and completing SOC 2 - actually strengthened trust. Teqtivity now has 22 employees and 7-figure ARR while remaining fully bootstrapped - proof that a focused vertical SaaS can beat funded competitors through customization, word-of-mouth, and disciplined spending. ? Key Lessons ? A vertical SaaS can emerge from a failed hardware pivot: Hiren's $400K smart locker investment became Teqtivity's foundation when he recognized the backend software had standalone value for IT departments - pivoting took six months with two developers. ? Win with long-tail keyword strategy on a small budget: Teqtivity avoids the $60-70/click "IT asset management" keyword and targets question-based searches competitors ignore, keeping total ad spend at $2,500/month. ?? Separate code bases create a vertical SaaS moat: Maintaining bespoke versions for each customer lets Teqtivity's 16-person dev team deliver custom features that one-size-fits-all niche SaaS competitors cannot match. ? Customer referrals outperform events for growth: Teqtivity's strongest channel is customers who move to new companies and bring the product - far more effective than conferences that produced zero follow-up demos. ? Transparency after a breach strengthens trust: Hiren moved the affected customer on-prem, completed SOC 2 certification, and shared pen tests. The affected customer stayed and deepened their integration. Chapters What Teqtivity does as a vertical SaaS for IT departments The TechCube hardware origin story and $400K investment Deciding to pivot from hardware to software Building the SaaS in six months and landing first customer Positioning against well-funded competitors Long-tail keyword strategy on $2,500/month Why event marketing failed with zero ROI Customizing with separate code bases per customer Surviving the data breach and rebuilding trust Lightning round Resources Full show notes: https://saa
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