
James Ashford, GoProposal
Bootstrapped SaaS to 8-Figure Exit (No VC, No Problem)
James Ashford is the founder of GoProposal, a proposal and pricing platform for accountants which he bootstrapped and sold for an 8-figure sum. James didn't have a tech background. He wasn't an accountant. And he'd never built software before. But he noticed something broken: accountants couldn't price their services. They'd guess fees based on what the last client paid. Proposals took days. Deals fell through because people got busy. So he built a simple solution. A digital menu that let any staff member price and close deals in 15 minutes. The first version? A WordPress plugin that cost £4,000 to build. Before writing a single line of code, James did something unusual. He calculated how much money he needed to never work again (£5 million), identified the companies that might acquire his business (Sage, Intuit, Xero), and printed their logos on his wall. This wasn't optimism—it was his bootstrapped SaaS exit strategy from day one. To crack the accounting industry as an outsider, he traded 10% of his software company for 10% of an accounting firm. Instant credibility. Then he wrote a book in two weeks, made it an Amazon bestseller, and used it to build a waitlist of hundreds before launch. His marketing philosophy was simple: market like a celebrity chef. Gordon Ramsay shows you how to cook his recipes for free. You still go to his restaurant. James gave away everything—the methodology, the frameworks, the exact playbook. People still bought the software because they wanted it done faster. The bootstrapped SaaS approach forced creativity. When he realized a single conference cost £25,000, he hired a full-time videographer instead. Twelve months later, the pandemic hit. Competitors who relied on events were stuck. GoProposal dominated online. By the time he sold, GoProposal had over 1,100 customers, a 78 NPS score, and playbooks for every single process in the business. Three potential acquirers approached him within months of each other. The exit price? 8 figures. The multiple? One he still doesn't publicly share because it was "crazy."


