Dan Uyemura spent five years grinding toward PushPress's first million in ARR. He nearly quit to go back to running his gym. But the B2B product-market fit he built - software made by a gym owner, for gym owners - turned into an 8-figure vertical SaaS serving 3,500 clients.
Dan reveals how domain expertise gave him 70% accuracy on gut-based product decisions, why five-minute customer support created unstoppable word of mouth in a niche SaaS market, and how B2B product-market fit through a help-first approach outperformed paid acquisition. You'll learn why product-market alignment from insider knowledge is the ultimate competitive moat.
PushPress is a vertical SaaS platform for boutique gym owners including CrossFit, yoga, and martial arts studios. The company raised $11 million at a $62 million post-money valuation after eight years of pitching investors. Dan's team grew from a side project to about 100 employees by leading with genuine customer understanding.
Key Lessons
- šÆ Build where you live for B2B product-market fit: Dan's experience as a gym owner gave PushPress a decisive edge. His team made product decisions with 70% gut accuracy.
- š¤ Help first, sell second to grow vertical SaaS organically: PushPress grew through word of mouth by answering questions in gym owner Facebook groups without leading with sales pitches.
- ā” Speed of support drives B2B product-market fit: PushPress answered every support request within five minutes when competitors took three days, creating shock and delight.
- š Turn competitors into niche SaaS acquisition opportunities: By helping a competitor openly, Dan built trust that enabled PushPress to acquire their workout tracking product.
- š° Pitch investors persistently across years: Dan pitched the same investor five times over eight years before closing an $11M round at a $62M valuation.
Chapters
- Introduction
- What PushPress does and current business scale
- Discovering CrossFit and realizing gym software was outdated
- Building the product and B2B product-market fit journey
- The five-year grind to first million in ARR
- Word of mouth through five-minute customer support
- Why being a gym owner created the competitive wedge
- Partnerships and acquiring a vertical SaaS competitor
- Raising seed funding after years of rejection
- Lightning round
Resources