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How I automated my first sales without hiring anyone

A year ago, I launched a tiny SaaS. I had zero audience, zero sales experience, and just enough money in the bank to cover groceries and servers. I couldn’t afford to hire help—so I didn’t.

Instead, I built a scrappy, automated sales process that landed my first 25 customers. No cold outreach, no SDRs, no sales calls. Just forms, follow-ups, and a lot of trial and error.

Here’s how I got there.


1. My solo founder challenge

Like most indie hackers, I wear all the hats: builder, support, marketer, ops. Sales felt like the final boss. I didn’t want to be pushy, but I also didn’t want to wait around hoping people would find me.

I needed a way to:

  • Qualify leads automatically
  • Respond quickly (even while asleep)
  • Route people to the right plan or demo
  • Nurture cold leads without manual follow-up

The goal wasn’t to build the perfect sales funnel—it was to make something that worked while I stayed focused on shipping.


2. Why I didn’t hire

Hiring would’ve slowed me down and stretched my budget thin. I didn’t want to spend weeks onboarding someone into a system I hadn’t built yet.

Instead, I gave myself two constraints:

  • Time: Automate anything repeatable in under 3 hours
  • Money: Use free/cheap tools with minimal bloat

This led me to a very lean workflow where every piece had to prove its value.


3. Tools I used (including NoForm AI)

Here’s the exact setup I used to run a basic but effective sales funnel solo.

🔍 Step 1: Capture interest

  • Embedded a form on my landing page using NoForm AI
  • It qualified leads in real time based on their input (use case, company size, urgency)
  • Instead of just capturing emails, it asked smarter questions up front and adapted based on context

📬 Step 2: Auto-reply + route

  • If a lead was warm (based on criteria I set), they got an instant, personalized email from me via Postmark
  • Cold leads were added to a ConvertKit sequence with spaced-out, value-based emails over 10 days
  • Hot leads got a Calendly link to book a call or a “fast start” onboarding email

⚙️ Step 3: Notifications and follow-up

  • Used Zapier to push lead info into Airtable
  • Sent myself a daily digest of new signups with tags like “High Fit” or “Not Ready”
  • If someone replied or clicked a key link, I got a Slack ping (even though I’m the only one in the Slack)

I know this looks like overkill for early days—but it meant I didn’t miss legit leads and didn’t waste time chasing cold ones.


4. Results and numbers

This setup ran for 3 months before I tweaked anything major. During that time:

  • ~280 people filled out the form
  • 61 were tagged as “warm” leads
  • 25 converted to paid within 30 days
  • $1,500 MRR added, all self-serve or async

Most importantly: I didn’t spend more than 30 minutes a week managing any of it.


5. Lessons for other indie hackers

1. Forms are underrated sales tools

Most people slap a generic form on the site and hope for the best. But a good form is your first sales conversation. It should ask smart questions and adapt like a human would.

2. Automation ≠ impersonal

The warmest feedback I got was from people who received fast, relevant follow-ups. One person even said, “I felt like you were waiting for my email.” (I wasn’t—it was just a well-timed automation.)

3. Don’t automate too early—or too late

I waited until I had a handful of manual leads before automating. That gave me real conversations to base the logic on. If you automate before understanding your funnel, you’ll automate the wrong things.

4. Simplicity scales better than features

I kept trimming the setup until it was just what I needed. No CRM, no dashboards. Airtable and email did the job.


If you’re bootstrapping and solo, it’s easy to feel like “real” sales needs a team. But with the right stack and some testing, it’s possible to build a repeatable system without hiring—or burning out.

Let me know if you want a screenshot of the exact Zapier flow or the lead tagging logic. Happy to share.

on May 29, 2025
  1. 2

    Great question on refining those Zapier flows and tagging logic for optimal conversion. It's so easy for those systems to become 'set it and forget it,' especially when you're in the survival phase.

    Seeing your numbers (like that 80% weak lead rate and the MRR spread), it often flags up that the initial tagging isn't just about organizing, but about real-time qualification right from the start. If the funnel's been static for a few months, those initial qualification tags might be missing crucial signals that could filter out most of the noise upfront.

    Have you explored how much tighter lead qualification directly at the point of entry (like on an opt-in or survey form) could impact what flows into Zapier, rather than trying to filter it all downstream? Sometimes tightening that initial 'gate' makes all the difference for deal size later on."

  2. 2

    Thanks for sharing. I have built a product as solo dev. I made first sale via codester but no sale yet from organic traffic.

  3. 2

    This was helpful. Thanks! I'm building something in the AI health space – might share soon too.

  4. 1

    How did you drive traffic to your website?

    1. 1

      Mostly through low-effort channels. Posted a few build-in-public tweets, answered questions in niche forums, shared useful tools in relevant subreddits (without being salesy). Nothing went viral, but it was enough to get steady trickles.

  5. 1

    That’s awesome. We’re working on a game launch now, and the biggest pain is outreach. Did you build your automation stack yourself or use tools like Zapier/Phantombuster?

    1. 1

      Thanks! Yeah, I built the it myself - just stitched it together with tools like Zapier and a few no-code forms. Kept it super lean. No Phantombuster, but I’ve heard good things if you’re doing cold outreach.

  6. 1

    This is a great primer on how a solo founder can support their sales efforts with automation. I don't know that it works for every use case, but I don't think that's your intent. And I DO think you've done a great job of spelling your process such that it's adaptable to others' needs.

    The one area I'd like to know more about in your case is how you generated traffic to your landing page, to kick off this process.

  7. 1

    In the intro you says "no sales calls", then in the text you says "Hot leads got a Calendly link to book a call".

    How come?

    1. 1

      Good catch! Yeah, some hot leads did book calls, but only if they wanted to. I didn’t do sales calls in the traditional sense (chasing people down, pitching, etc.). The whole point was that the system worked without me needing to push.

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