Chris Poka couldn't break $3k/mo with his agency. Then he started fresh and built a productized service called Designpulse. Now he's nearly at the coveted $10k MRR milestone.
Here's Chris on how he did it. đ
I come from a very small village in Hungary, but we moved a lot, from bad places to worse. My family didnât have much money, and they couldnât help me in any way â financially or emotionally.
After finishing my studies, I took the first job I could find. I worked at a factory where I tested and assembled automatic transmissions. It was a 1.5-hour bus ride to and from work, and I earned the minimum wage.
It was really bad for my health. After about a year, I realized I didnât want to live my life that way. I was 19 at the time and I decided to give indie hacking everything I had.
I started watching YouTube videos about successful entrepreneurs and their lifestyles, and thatâs when I realized it was all possible.
Then, I started learning e-commerce and dropshipping. I had one idea that ended up making a few million dollars in sales on Amazon, so I felt pretty good about that. But otherwise, I didn't have much success. I didn't have enough capital.
After that, I tried to find something else, and thatâs when I discovered Bubble. I couldnât code, and this made building easy. Within six months, I gained enough knowledge to start freelancing.
I earned a bit on Upwork and Fiver, but I wanted to create something bigger. So I started a Bubble agency. I got leads through Bubble , so all I had to do was close.
Along the way, I noticed that most Bubble agencies didnât pay much attention to UI/UX design, so I started learning UI design and how to use Figma. I really enjoyed it. Combining Bubble and design was the perfect combo for me. I did this for about three years, and at my peak, I was making $3k per month.
Eventually, the leads dried up, and I had to come up with something new. Thatâs when I found a new business model on Twitter. I think Brett from DesignJoy was the first to try it â it involved offering design services on a subscription basis, marketed as âunlimitedâ design.
I liked it because it put me in a better position for cash flow and recurring revenue, so I started fresh.
I started Designpulse in April 2023. We help businesses build custom software to make their work easier and improve user experiences using low-code tools.
I had about $1.5k in my bank account and I needed to pay my bills and rent, so I had to work hard. I worked around 16 hours a day, learning how to grow this business model, doing cold emailing, posting on Twitter, and building something on the side to get more attention for Designpulse.
My first two clients came from Twitter and they're still with me. The rest came through LinkedIn. Today, I'm making $9,840 a month. My highest monthly revenue was $12k.
It took me a few days to build the MVP of the DesignPulse Internal Software, which I used for managing clients, tasks, and communication. Clients could create tasks, leave comments, and get email updates about task status changes â it was simple, but it worked.
As I gained more clients, I started updating the software, and now it does much more. I added an onboarding system so new users can subscribe to a plan and create their projects and tasks right away.
Marketing has always been hard for me â I didn't even know what a funnel was when I got started. So I made a lot of mistakes and poor decisions along the way.
I tried cold emails, forum posts, landing pages, social media, newsletters, and PR. For me, DMs on Twitter and LinkedIn have worked best. That, and posting about my work.
Posting what you're up to and how you're doing it builds trust, and in business, trust is the most important thing. If you have trust, you have everything you need.
Post every day. If you donât have clients, build your own projects to create a portfolio. Designers could even redesign live websites and post the redesigns.
Don't give up. You need to keep working and posting to get eyeballs. Every day, for months and years.
And if you can, record videos. Post them on Linkedin, Twitter, and Tiktok.
Build good habits. Going to the gym, eating healthy food, and using blue light-blocking glasses have all made a big difference for me. They really help!
Work every day. I was lazy when I started. You need to work every day, grow every day, and learn every day if you want to be successful.
And read. One name I have to mention is Alex Hormozi. His books, like $100M Leads and $100M Offers, were a huge help.
Lastly, after you hit a certain point â somewhere around $8k/mo â the free information on the internet won't teach you what you need to know. This is where you'll plateau. You have to get a mentor or a bigger course. You have to find out what people aren't sharing.
Iâm planning to start a podcast and a YouTube channel to grow my personal brand. That should make it easier to grow any future businesses I start.
My revenue goal for 2025 is $20k/month. And my personal goal is to travel to at least six countries next year.
If you're interested in learning more, check me out on Twitter and LinkedIn. And take a look at designpulse.co.
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I'm impressed by your achievement. Brett from Deisgnjoy too was the one that introduced me too to the world of productized services.
I just want to share with you a few advice that could be of help in running your business.
Here are some tips I made for you to scale your business to the next level.
For your pricing either be very expensive or be very cheap.
I can pretty much guarantee what youâre charging right now is nowhere near the ceiling of what you could charge.
The customer doesnât care about the number of hours you work.(Monthly service)
What they care about is the outcomes you deliver (and how you provide your serviceâget more tips on this here). They only care about the number of hours you work because thatâs the way you told them you work.
But if you were to charge by outcome (so by project) instead, you can easily make more money
For instance,
Instead of charging $50 per hour to build a website, you could charge $15,000 to build just the landing page.
What does the customer get? They get an entire asset they can plug-and-play into their business.
And, as you get more proficiently, you can do it in half the time and still charge as much because youâve decoupled yourself from charging for your time.
But to charge by project, you have to understand this fundamental reframe:
Youâre charging for your pattern recognition and experience, not the hours you work.
What the client is paying you for are all the years it took you to acquire knowledge in order to deliver the outcome.
So, letâs say a client asks you to put together a simple one page website, As a nocide developer, you might think thatâll take you 4-5 hours and youâd charge $5,000 for it.
But they arenât buying your time. They are paying for your pattern recognition.
If you think that the best way to be compensated on this is how long it takes for you to create just the website or the template, you're leaving 10 years of value on the table because that's how long it took you to be able to cr
eate this in the first place.
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I understand the importance of posting daily, but the thing is I write content on Medium, and even though I generate leads for my services using those articles, most of them are really not my ICP. They barely have money to partner up with our agency.
Does anyone face the same issues with organic/inbound leads?
Yes, many face similar challenges with organic/inbound leads, as they often attract a broad audience, including those outside your ideal client profile (ICP). To refine your reach, focus on creating content tailored to your ICP's pain points and goals. Use targeted keywords and promote your articles on platforms where your ICP is active. Additionally, consider pairing organic efforts with paid campaigns to attract higher-quality leads.
Increasing the monthly recurring revenue (MRR) of a productized service to $10K requires strategic planning, scaling efficiently, and optimizing the product. Create a streamlined, repeatable service that delivers consistent value to customers. To achieve this milestone, you must build a strong client base, automate key processes, and refine your marketing strategies.
To reach $10K MRR focus on creating a repeatable service that consistently delivers value. Build a strong client base through targeted marketing and customer referrals. Automate key processes to streamline operations and scale efficiently.
I needed to read this. It helps to know which platforms & methods of reaching out to people are most reliable when youâre starting off. Less instagram DMâs & more twitter DMâs. Got it!
find me on Insta & X @designbybibbs !
write a short reply to in human teaWow, your journey is incredibly inspiring! Itâs amazing to see how you turned a tough start into a thriving business. Your story about diving into Bubble and mastering UI/UX is proof of how persistence and adaptability pay off. I especially loved your focus on building trust and consistency in marketingâposting every day and sharing your process publicly is such solid advice.
Wishing you all the best with your personal brand, podcast, and the $20k/month goal. Youâre already crushing it! đch to this forum thread
As the Gen Z kids say, LinkedIn gives me the "ick," but only because these days I tend to frame it as a social media marketing platform. At its core, it's about sales and recruiting. Thanks for the reminder.
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