Getting your first 10 paying customers is the hardest part of building a micro-SaaS. It's also the most important. Those first 10 customers validate your idea, shape your product, and give you the confidence to keep going.
For corporate managers, the path to 10 customers looks different than the standard startup playbook. You have assets most founders don't: a professional network, domain expertise, and credibility. Here's how to use them.
Why the First 10 Matter More Than You Think
Your first 10 customers aren't just revenue. They're:
- Validation: Proof that real people will pay for your solution
- Feedback: The insights that shape your product roadmap
- Testimonials: Social proof for your landing page
- Referral sources: Each happy customer knows others with the same problem
- Confidence: The psychological fuel to keep building
Skip this phase or rush through it, and you'll build features nobody wants for an audience that doesn't exist.
The Corporate Manager's Unfair Advantages
1. Domain Expertise
You've spent years in your industry. You know the pain points because you've lived them. This means:
- You can describe the problem in your customers' language
- You understand the buying process and decision-makers
- You know which problems are annoying vs. which ones cost money
- You can build solutions that actually fit real workflows
Most indie hackers spend months doing customer research that you already have in your head.
2. Professional Network
Your LinkedIn has hundreds of connections. Your phone has contacts from conferences, past projects, and industry events. These aren't cold leads — they're warm relationships.
A message from a former colleague carries 10x more weight than a cold email from a stranger.
3. Credibility
Your title, your experience, your track record — these all signal competence. When you say "I built a tool that solves X," people believe you because you've been in the trenches.
The 4-Week Outreach Plan
Week 1: Map Your Network
Before you send a single message, build your prospect list.
Step 1: Open a spreadsheet. Create columns for: Name, Company, Role, Relationship, Pain Point Relevance (1-5), Last Contact.
Step 2: Go through these sources:
- LinkedIn connections in your target industry
- Email contacts from the last 3 years
- Conference attendees you've met
- Former colleagues who moved to target companies
- Industry Slack or Discord communities you belong to
Step 3: Score each person on Pain Point Relevance. Focus on people who:
- Work in roles that experience the problem your tool solves
- Have complained about the problem in conversations
- Work at companies the right size for your solution (usually 10-200 employees)
Target: 50 names with a relevance score of 3+.
Week 2: The Warm Outreach Campaign
Now reach out — but not to sell. To learn.
The Message Framework:
Subject: Quick question about [specific workflow]
Hey [Name],
Hope things are going well at [Company]. I've been thinking a lot about [specific problem] lately — I know it was something we dealt with at [shared context].
I'm exploring building a tool to help with this. Would you have 15 minutes this week to share how your team currently handles [specific task]? Not selling anything — genuinely trying to understand the problem better.
[Your name]
Why this works:
- It's personal, not templated
- It references shared experience
- It asks for help, not a purchase
- 15 minutes is a low commitment
Send 10-15 messages per day. Expect a 30-40% response rate from warm contacts.
Week 3: The Discovery Conversations
On these calls, your goal is to understand, not to pitch. Ask:
- "Walk me through how you currently handle [workflow]."
- "What's the most frustrating part of that process?"
- "How much time does your team spend on this each week?"
- "Have you tried any tools to solve this? What worked and what didn't?"
- "If a tool could solve this perfectly, what would it need to do?"
Listen for:
- Emotional language ("I hate this," "it drives me crazy," "we waste so much time")
- Quantifiable pain ("we spend 10 hours a week on this")
- Failed alternatives ("we tried X but it didn't work because...")
At the end of each call, say: "I'm building something to solve exactly this. Would you be interested in trying an early version?"
Most will say yes. Some will ask to pay immediately. Let them.
Week 4: Close Your First 10
You've had 15-20 conversations. You have 10-15 people who expressed interest. Now close them.
The Closing Message:
Hey [Name],
Thanks again for chatting last week. Based on our conversation and feedback from others in [industry], I've built an early version of [Product Name] that [one sentence description of core value].
I'm offering founding member access at [price — 50% off your planned price] for the first 10 users. You'll get:
- Lifetime access at this rate
- Direct input on the roadmap
- Priority support (my personal email)
Would you like to try it? I can set you up today.
Why "founding member" works:
- It creates exclusivity (only 10 spots)
- The discount rewards early adopters
- "Lifetime access at this rate" eliminates price objection
- Direct input on roadmap makes them feel invested
Channels Beyond Your Network
If your network doesn't yield 10 customers, supplement with these channels:
Reddit and Online Communities
Find 3-5 subreddits or forums where your target users hang out. Don't spam. Instead:
- Answer questions related to your problem space for 2 weeks
- Share genuinely useful insights (not links to your product)
- When someone posts about the exact problem you solve, DM them
- After building credibility, post a "Show HN" or "I built this" post
Cold Email (Warm Style)
If you must cold email, make it feel warm:
- Reference something specific about their company or role
- Lead with the problem, not your product
- Keep it under 100 words
- Include a specific, relevant insight they'd find valuable
- Ask for a conversation, not a sale
LinkedIn Content
Post about the problem you're solving (not your product). Share insights from your customer conversations (anonymized). This attracts inbound interest from people in your network who recognize the pain.
Pricing Your First 10
Don't overthink pricing at this stage. Guidelines:
- Charge something: Free users don't give real feedback
- Discount for early adopters: 50% off your target price signals value while reducing risk
- Monthly, not annual: Lower commitment makes saying yes easier
- Sweet spot: $15-$49/month for your founding tier
You can always raise prices later. Your first 10 customers are buying validation, not just software.
What to Do After You Hit 10
Congratulations — you have product-market fit signal. Now:
- Ask for testimonials: "Would you mind sharing a sentence about how [Product] has helped your team?"
- Ask for referrals: "Do you know anyone else who deals with [problem]?"
- Identify your best channel: Which outreach method converted best? Double down on it.
- Start content marketing: Write about the problem and solution. SEO compounds over time.
- Raise your price: New customers pay full price. Your founding members keep their rate.
The Mindset Shift
Most corporate managers feel uncomfortable with outreach because it feels like "selling." Reframe it:
You're not selling. You're solving a problem you understand deeply, for people you genuinely want to help.
Your corporate career gave you the expertise to see the problem. Your micro-SaaS gives them the solution. The outreach is just connecting the two.
Your first 10 customers are out there. Most of them are already in your phone.