An AI contract tool got 300 users but $0 MRR. Hereâs what that signalsâand how bootstrapped founders turn workflow pain into paid growth.

AI Contract Tools: 300 Users, $0 MRRâWhatâs Missing?
âŹ50,000 is an expensive way to learn that âtrustâ isnât a payment system.
A founder on Indie Hackers shared a story thatâs painfully familiar for service businesses: a young design studio doing âŹ250K/year collapsed after âŹ50K+ in unpaid invoices and âŹ40K in debt. The response wasnât a lawsuit or a long LinkedIn rant. It was product.
He built an AI contract toolânow sitting at 300 users and $0 MRR. If youâre building a US startup without VC, that sentence should grab you by the collar. Getting users without revenue is common. Staying there is optional.
This post is part of our âAI Marketing Tools for Small Businessâ series, but weâre using this story for a specific reason: contracts arenât just legal paperworkâtheyâre a growth and retention system. If your tool helps small businesses get paid, reduce scope creep, and reduce admin, youâre not âselling docs.â Youâre selling cash flow.
300 users and $0 MRR usually means the offer is unclear
If you have users but no revenue, the problem is rarely âmarketing.â Itâs usually one of these:
- The product is useful, but not urgent (people try it, donât pay).
- The pricing is misaligned with value (too high for the first win, too low for the real win).
- The outcome isnât provable (buyers canât connect âcontractâ to âgetting paidâ).
In Accordioâs case, the pain is real: freelancers and agencies lose money to late payers, vague scope, and handshake deals. The founder lived it.
But buyers donât pay for your origin story. They pay for a specific, measurable result.
Hereâs the stance Iâll take: âAI contract generatorâ is not a business. âGet paid faster with fewer disputesâ is.
Make the value legible in one sentence
If a freelancer lands on your homepage, they should instantly understand:
- Who itâs for (freelancers, studios, agencies)
- What it does (creates contracts, sets milestones, collects deposits)
- What it prevents (non-payment, scope creep, disputes)
A clear positioning line looks like:
âCreate client-ready contracts with milestones and deposits in 5 minutesâso you donât start work unpaid.â
That message converts better than âall-in-one paperwork.â Itâs sharper. Itâs testable.
AI contract tools win when theyâre paired with payment behavior
A contract doesnât fix non-payment by itself. Enforcement is hard, especially across borders. One commenter in the thread nailed the operational truth: international recovery often costs more than the invoice.
So the real product isnât âa contract.â Itâs a workflow that changes client behavior.
The simplest workflow that prevents âŹ50K problems
This is the playbook most bootstrapped service businesses end up with (after learning the hard way):
- Deposit upfront: 20â50% before kickoff
- Milestone billing: invoice before each phase
- Stop-work clause: work pauses automatically if payment is late
- Change requests: scope creep triggers a written addendum
AI can help generate the language. But the product should push the user toward the behavior.
If youâre building in the US small business market, this is where âAI marketing toolsâ connect: marketing creates demand; contracts and payments keep the cash. Cash is what funds bootstrapped growth.
Product idea: Sell âgetting paidâ not âgenerating contractsâ
Instead of a feature list like:
- AI drafting
- Templates
- E-sign
Try bundling around outcomes:
- Deposit collection + contract generation
- Milestone schedule + auto-reminders
- Scope change detection + one-click addendum
Thatâs a package founders will pay for, because it maps to revenue protection.
The hidden trust gap: AI-generated contracts can backfire
The thread included an important warning: AI contracts can look strong and still be unenforceable.
Thatâs not anti-AI. Thatâs pro-reality.
If youâre selling an AI contract tool to small businesses, you need credibility signals that answer:
- âWill this hold up in my state?â
- âWhat happens if the client refuses?â
- âDoes this cover the platform Iâm using (Stripe, ACH, international)?â
What âcredible AIâ looks like in legal-adjacent tools
To get paid customers (not just curious users), build trust into the product:
- Jurisdiction-aware templates (at least by country/state tiers)
- Plain-English explanations for each clause (what it does, when it matters)
- Attorney review option (paid add-on, partner marketplace, or vetted network)
- Your own siteâs legal pages are flawless (no placeholders, clear jurisdiction, dispute process)
That last point matters more than founders want to admit. If you sell contracts, your own Terms and Privacy Policy become part of your sales deck.
Turning organic users into revenue (without VC)
A bootstrapped startup can absolutely grow with community and organic channelsâbut you still need a tight monetization path.
Here are monetization moves that work especially well at the â300 users, $0 MRRâ stage.
1) Charge for the moment of highest urgency
Most freelancers donât wake up wanting new software. They pay when:
- a deal is about to close,
- a client is stalling,
- a scope fight starts,
- a deposit needs collecting.
So donât paywall âAI writing.â Paywall the transaction.
Practical pricing structure:
- Free: create 1 draft contract
- Paid: collect deposit + enable e-sign + milestone schedule
- Higher tier: team workflows, client portal, dispute templates, integrations
2) Use âROI mathâ that founders can repeat
Contracts are abstract until you quantify them.
A simple ROI line a founder can believe:
âIf this prevents one $2,000 non-payment per year, itâs paid for itself.â
Even better if you track it:
- invoices sent
- deposits collected
- days-to-payment reduced
- number of scope changes formalized
Those metrics turn your product into a financial dashboardâwhich is also marketing.
3) Create a wedge product, then expand into a system
The founder teased a bigger vision: an âAI agentâ that runs freelance admin through chat (WhatsApp/Slack), flags scope creep, tracks time, and alerts risk.
That direction is smart, but only if the wedge gets monetized first.
A strong wedge is:
- narrow
- urgent
- paid quickly
- hard to replace with a doc template
âDeposit + milestone contract in 5 minutesâ is a wedge. âFreelance OSâ is expansion.
4) Turn community growth into conversion loops
Organic growth doesnât mean âpost and pray.â It means building loops:
- Free contract health check inside the product (creates a reason to sign up)
- Scope creep detector as a shareable report (users forward it to peers)
- Client-ready PDF + portal branded with your logo (clients see the tool)
The best bootstrapped products bake marketing into the artifact that leaves the app.
Practical checklist: what small businesses should do this week
If youâre a freelancer, studio owner, or small agency and youâre reading this thinking âI should fix my client process,â do these five things now:
- Add a deposit policy: set 30% upfront as your default.
- Switch to milestones: tie payments to deliverables, not time.
- Write a stop-work clause: late payment pauses work automatically.
- Create a change request template: make scope creep billable by default.
- Centralize contract + payment steps: fewer tools means fewer leaks.
AI can help you draft faster. The win comes from making the process non-negotiable.
Where AI marketing tools actually fit in this story
AI tools for small business are often pitched as âgrowth toolsâ (content, ads, social scheduling). But bootstrapped growth is constrained by one thing: cash flow.
A founder who loses âŹ50K doesnât need more followers. They need systems that prevent revenue leakage.
Thatâs why legal-admin toolsâcontracts, invoicing, milestone billing, scope trackingâare quietly becoming part of the AI marketing stack. They protect the revenue your marketing brings in.
If youâre building without VC, hereâs the principle to steal:
Your product should turn risk into a repeatable workflowâand that workflow should be what people pay for.
If you want to see what this looks like in the wild, Accordio is one example in this category: https://accordio.ai/
The forward-looking question that matters for every founder reading: when your next 300 users arrive, will you have a clear path from âinterestingâ to âpaidââor will you collect signups and call it traction?