I’m the founder of Flow Samurai, a Webflow/Framer design toolset. Six months ago, we launched Samurai Plus, a curated collection of 100+ premium templates, built from feedback over years of agency work.
We’ve signed up 160+ paying users so far (50% from agencies, the rest freelancers/indies), and I wanted to share the unexpected lessons and tactics that got us here.
The problem we were solving Agencies were tired of stitching together templates they never fully owned
Freelancers needed production-ready designs but lacked the time to build from scratch
Reuse and version-control across Webflow/Framer/Figma was often painful
So Samurai Plus became a one-stop library: ready-to-use templates across categories, fully editable in Figma, with easy plug-and-play in Webflow and Framer.
Early traction (0→50 users) Leverage your audience — we announced Samurai Plus first to our free-tier users and email list. These early adopters gave us real feedback and became product advocates.
Beta pricing — a limited-time 50% off “founders price” (about $12/month) created urgency and exclusivity. We filled 70% of our beta spots within two weeks.
Community-driven feedback loop — we set up a Slack group, asked open-ended questions about what templates to build next, and only shipped what was repeatedly requested.
These early wins gave us user stories (“I shipped a client site in a day”), which became critical proof.
Scaling to 160+ (50→160 users) As soon as we hit 50 users, we shifted focus:
Content and SEO: We wrote tutorials like “Build a Framer SaaS landing page in under 2 hours”, optimized them for search, and posted them in Webflow/Framer communities. Traffic from these posts now converts at ~3%.
Micro-case studies: Showcasing real sites built with Samurai Plus (e.g., an e-commerce agency launched a sales page in a day). These social posts got unexpected attention because people could “see it working.”
Referral incentives: 15% off for referring a friend (20% for agencies), which drove organic signups while keeping CAC near zero.
Lessons that surprised me Lesson What changed Urgency matters “Founders pricing” messaging alone tripled our conversion early on User stories > screenshots Real-world use cases built trust far faster than polished demos SEO compounds slowly The first month of content drove zero signups—but by month three it became our #2 growth channel Focus beats features We killed 60% of planned templates that got no requests and upped dev on what users were asking for
The new limited-time offer We’ve now hit 160+ paying users and launched our All Access lifetime plan at $89 (normally $649), limited to 20 spots. We’re keeping the messaging simple:
“Lifetime access to 100+ templates + Figma files — one payment, no subscriptions. Only 20 spots. ”
No hype, no ads—just a nod to community trust and urgency.
Why I’m sharing this I’ve seen a lot of early-stage founders either:
Go too wide with features before validating demand
Rely on flashy launches that fizzle
Expect virality without groundwork
Our approach was built-in public: release early, listen hard, iterate fast, and lean on content + user love to grow.
We’re not at unicorns yet—just real traction, sustainable growth, and a community that’s sticking around.
Curious if this approach resonates with anyone building template or content-driven tools—happy to share numbers, growth charts, or talk through what’s working (and what’s not).
Thanks for reading, and thanks to the HN community for the inspiration along the way.
— Marko, founder of Flow Samurai agency and SAMURAI+ ( building Samurai Plus in public, championing design-first PLG)