Congrats on growing a company in Indian market, let alone a bootstrapped one.<p>I worked for a MNC for past 5 years, i quit this April and started dabbling with new technologies and platforms, with the intent to create a SaaS. As a person who is interested in startup, this article gives me a lot of hope.
Awesome! Really great work and it's great to see more success stories from the Indian startup scene. It's particularly heartening that a bootstrapped company can get there. I was working on trying to lay the groundwork for startup in Bangalore last year and was told by many people that I'd fail for the simple reason that government regulation would kill me. There are in fact two spaces that I've been wanting to enter into India: space and education.<p>On the back of your experiences, I think I feel that maybe I shouldn't feel as discouraged.<p>Would love to hear more about your journey and the problems you conquered.<p>Good luck going international!
Kudos! Always good to read product people getting success in Indian market. As you said, the market is not wrong or small, if the value provided by product is good. It's just the way customers in India define value is slightly different than other countries, which is the case everywhere.<p>Great work and courage, to follow the path to profitability without external funding. Cheers!!! and best of all lucks going forward.
Congrats! And thanks for posting this. Definitely an inspiration for people looking to start a company in India. One of the things you mentioned is that Hyderabad is a growing place for startups. What are other pieces of advice you would give to people starting a company in India? Do you have blogs/forums that I can follow to catch up on the startup news happening in India? Thanks in advance.<p>And also wish you best of luck for the next year!
How did you attract SMEs - keeping in mind it looks like your service is aimed at developers? I'm keen to hear what your most common use cases are too.