About FixMyLanding
FixMyLanding scans a landing page and tells founders exactly what to fix to convert more visitors. Its founder, Jim, built it solo while still in high school - he was 16 when the product was acquired.
Jim started on Sequenzy's free tier in February 2026. By June, FixMyLanding had reached $100 MRR, hit #1 on Uneed, and been acquired.
Day one: a sequence triggered by the product itself
Jim's first Sequenzy sequence was live the same day he signed up. The trigger was FixMyLanding's core moment of value: a user finishing a scan.
I literally love Sequenzy, it's so simple, I love the dashboard. I also saw the integrations and was shocked.
Jim, Founder of FixMyLanding
From his Python backend, Jim fired an audit.completed event to Sequenzy's API whenever a scan finished, passing the user's name as a variable. That one event enrolled every fresh, high-intent user into a follow-up sequence at the exact moment they had just seen what was wrong with their landing page.
That is the whole integration: one API call from the product, and email follow-up ran itself from then on.
The revenue: scans became sales
The scan-completion sequence did what a solo founder cannot do manually - follow up with every single user at the right moment. Three days after setting it up, Jim sent a message that summed up the result:
3 sales today, all thanks to Sequenzy. Honestly, thanks.
The sales kept compounding. Within weeks Jim was tracking roughly $100 in gross volume for the month and adding around $50 in new MRR, on his way to the $100 MRR mark - all while running on Sequenzy's free tier.
#1 on Uneed
With the email engine converting users in the background, Jim launched FixMyLanding on Uneed, the launch platform for indie products, and took the #1 spot.
Looking back at the run, Jim credits email across all of it:
It helped me grow to $100 MRR, get #1 on Uneed, make more sales, get acquired.
The exit: an email stack worth acquiring
In June 2026, a little over three months after that first sequence went live, FixMyLanding was acquired.
The email system was part of what changed hands. When Jim requested the handover, Sequenzy migrated the entire workspace - subscriber lists, sequences, sent history, and API keys - to the acquirer's account the same afternoon. The buyer inherited a working revenue channel, not a to-do list.
Your product is perfect. Keep building!
Jim is reinvesting the proceeds into his next products. The playbook he proved at 16 stands on its own: wire your product's key event into a sequence on day one, let email convert users while you build, and when it is time to sell, the email stack transfers as cleanly as the code.

