
The Idea
David Park started his first company at 16. A clothing brand, run out of his high school. It failed, and he lost all his money. But seeing strangers wearing something he'd made gave him a taste he never shook off.
So he dropped out of UC San Diego, where he was studying literature, to go full time on a tech startup, funded by a man he'd met on a plane. That one failed too. Then a dating app. Then a tool for adding people across social platforms. Four startups. Eight years. Nothing.
By 27 he was back in his parents' house with no money and a literature degree he never finished.
What he did have was a co-founder, Henry Mao, who could actually build, and a shared obsession with natural language processing. In 2019 they pointed GPT-2 at the one problem David understood better than anyone: writing is slow. The first version did exactly one thing. It made writers roughly 10 to 20 percent faster.
That was it. That was the whole product. This was the beginning of Jenni AI.
The Execution
- 2019: Park co-founded Jenni AI with Henry Mao. The MVP was built on top of GPT-2 and helped writers write 10 to 20 percent faster. That was all it did. They built a content agency around it and used their own product as an internal tool.
- 2020: GPT-3 arrived and broke their business model in the best way. They cut the human writers out entirely and switched from agency to SaaS, then made it better by removing features. Cutting things made the product and the vision clearer.
- 2021 to 2022: The dark years. Revenue sat flat at $2,000 a month for almost eighteen months while Park cold called for customers. The founders moved to Malaysia purely to make the runway last longer.
- 2022: Near-death. Nearly out of funds, Park almost lost a $250,000 deal with a Korean VC over a simple oversight, and only saved the company by raising from another US investor to extend the runway. The $100,000 that kept the lights on came from a Jason Calacanis scout who happened to hear him on a small podcast, at a point when David's bank balance was in single figures.
- 2023: The break. A viral X thread by Zain Kahn sent users to the site at a rate of 10 every second. After that, Jenni grew 15 to 20 percent month over month.
- 2023: Then he got cancer. Diagnosed with thyroid cancer just as the company finally took off, Park's fear wasn't dying, it was his voice: "The most worrying part was that my voice might be damaged. I thought about bolting out of surgery." He had the operation. He didn't sell the company. He hired.
- 2024: Jenni hit $6.4M ARR with $150,000 in monthly EBITDA, built on a distribution engine most founders ignore entirely: short-form video that racked up nearly 250 million views.
- 2025: Starter Story published how a 27-year-old grew Jenni AI to $5M ARR in two years. The video passed a million views on YouTube. Meanwhile MRR climbed from $560K in early 2025 to $730K by September and $800K by December, with a 23-person team and roughly 83% gross margins.
- Today: Jenni AI is a $10M/year profitable business with over 5 million users, bootstrapped beyond a single $100,000 angel cheque, built by a man who failed four times before he was 27.
The lesson?
Jenni AI looks like an overnight AI success. It was eighteen months flat at $2,000 a month, four dead startups before that, and a cancer diagnosis in the middle. Park's edge was never the model. Everyone got GPT-3 on the same day. His edge was that a decade of failing had already taught him that distribution is the entire game and product is only table stakes, so he pours 80% of his energy into the part most founders treat as an afterthought. Everyone saw the same technology. Park was just the one who'd already learned how to make people look.