
Customer support software is one of the most crowded SaaS categories out there. Intercom, Crisp, and dozens of others have been around for years. Building something new in that space and actually finding customers takes more than a good idea. It takes clarity.That's exactly what Preet Mishra brought to Helploom. A flat-rate pricing model, a simple interface, and a Reddit strategy that drove most of his growth. When the time was right, he listed on Acquire.com and closed in four days.You'll hear:How Helploom competed on pricing and simplicity in a saturated marketWhy Reddit drove more growth than SEO, paid ads, and social media combinedWhat made him decide to sell a profitable, growing productHow Acquire.com connected him with 15-20 buyers and 4-5 LOIs in two daysWhy he chose vision and alignment over the highest offer3 Lessons from HelploomSimplicity Is a Competitive Advantage: In a crowded market, being easier and more predictable than the incumbents is enough to build a loyal customer base.Know Which Race You're Running: Scaling Helploom would have required becoming a different kind of founder. Recognizing that early was the smartest move Preet made.Preparation Closes Deals Fast: Clean documentation and a realistic asking price turned a four-day listing into a completed acquisition.For solo founders and bootstrapped builders, this episode offers a clear and honest look at what it takes to grow, decide, and exit on your own terms.Follow the guest:LinkedInX (Twitter)Helploom
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A Test Listing That Turned Into a Startup Sale

The Clear Use Case Behind an Early-Stage Startup Sale

From a Real Problem to a SaaS Product Buyers Wanted

A Profitable E-commerce Brand Built for Acquisition
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