
The Idea: Giacomo "Peldi" Guilizzoni spent years as a Senior Software Engineering Lead at Adobe, helping build products like Adobe Breeze. But every day he watched the same problem play out - product managers and designers would jump straight into pixel-perfect mockups before anyone agreed on what they were actually building. Hours wasted on polish, none spent on thinking. Peldi wanted a tool that felt like sketching on a napkin - fast, low-fidelity, and focused on ideas over aesthetics. So in early 2008, he quit Adobe, moved back to Italy (because San Francisco was too expensive to bootstrap from), and started building Balsamiq out of his home. Twenty pages into his first business book, he closed it and thought "I'm never going to start a business." He started one anyway. This was the beginning of Balsamiq.
The Execution:
- March 2008: Peldi officially founded Balsamiq Studios as a solo operation from Italy, self-funding the entire thing with personal savings - zero outside investment.
- June 19, 2008: Launched Balsamiq Mockups on the web. His first sale came four days before the official launch - someone found it through Google before he'd even announced it.
- July 2008: Hit $4,432 in revenue just three weeks after launch. Three weeks after that, he crossed $10,000. The demand for the desktop version (which he hadn't even planned to build) accounted for 77% of revenue.
- November 2008: Crossed $100,000 in total revenue - less than five months after launch - with 3,000 customers and still just one employee: himself.
- Late 2009: Hit $2 million in cumulative sales within 18 months of launch. When he considered raising funding to hire, investor Dharmesh Shah talked him out of it. Revenue spiked that same month - enough cash in the bank to cover salaries for 5+ years.
- 2011: Surpassed $9 million in total sales in just three years, growing entirely through word of mouth and relentless customer service.
- 2019: Shipped Balsamiq Wireframes for Desktop, completing a full ground-up rewrite of the product for Web, Mac, and Windows - a multi-year engineering bet that modernized the entire platform.
- 2024: Balsamiq hit $10.6M in annual revenue with a 38-person fully remote team, over 1.4 million licenses sold across 204 countries, and still zero dollars of outside funding raised. Ever.
The lesson? Peldi didn't chase venture capital or hypergrowth. He moved to a cheaper country, built something people actually needed, and competed on two things: usability and customer service. Seventeen years later, Balsamiq is proof that you don't need a fundraise to build a lasting software company - you need a real problem, a fast first version, and the patience to let customers do your marketing for you.