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2026 Revenue

$100K

Customers

20

Funding

$1.7M

Avg ACV

$5K

Team

5

Founded

2024

How Homie grew to $100K revenue and 20 customers in 2026.

Homie is a Helsinki-based network-led growth platform founded in 2024 by Markku Viornin and two co-founders through Antler's Helsinki residency. The company maps relationship data from public and permissioned sources to identify the warmest introduction path between a salesperson and a target prospect, pricing its service on an outcome-based model tied to meetings generated rather than a fixed per-seat fee.

As of May 2026, Homie had been commercially live for approximately three months, serving roughly 20 paying customers and approaching $100K in annualized recurring revenue after doubling revenue in its first months of selling. The company raised a pre-seed round of approximately 1.5 million euros (roughly $1.65 million USD) earlier in 2026, following a small day-zero fund from Antler and roughly one year of beta work with design partners.

The five-person full-time team, majority engineers, is targeting $1 million ARR by the end of 2026 using its own platform as the primary growth channel, with zero outbound sales effort beyond organic LinkedIn posting. Markku Viornin told Latka the company spent approximately 18 months coding before generating its first dollar of revenue, reflecting the complexity of building a predictive warmness model that scores how well two people actually know each other.

Last updated

Homie Revenue

Homie approached $100K in annualized recurring revenue in May 2026, roughly three months after launching commercial pricing. Markku Viornin told Latka the company had doubled revenue within those first months of selling and was on track to hit the $100K ARR mark by the close of that month.

Homie revenue chart — $100K in 2026 (Source: GetLatka)
Homie revenue chart — $100K in 2026 (Source: GetLatka)
YearMilestoneQuote
2026Homie Hit $100k revenue in May 2026
2024Launched with $0 revenue

At the time of the interview, Viornin described the company as approximately 25 percent commercialized, meaning the team was still selectively onboarding customers while continuing to build features. The company's ARR growth target for the full year 2026 is $1 million, which would represent roughly a 10x increase from the May 2026 run rate. Viornin said the plan is to reach that target using Homie's own platform as the sole growth channel, with no paid advertising or traditional outbound sales.

Homie Valuation, Funding Rounds

Homie raised a pre-seed round of approximately 1.5 million euros, equivalent to roughly $1.65 million USD, earlier in 2026. The round followed a small day-zero fund provided by Antler Helsinki at the start of the residency in 2024, which Viornin described as a very low amount. Total funding stands at approximately $1.65 million USD.

Homie Capital Raised & ValuationCumulative capital raised and post-money valuation by roundCapital raised (cum.)Valuation$0$0$0.2$0.2$0.4$0.4$0.6$0.6$0.8$0.8$1$12024Source: GetLatka.com interview on May 19, 2026 with Homie CEO
YearRoundAmountValuation% SoldQuote

Viornin told Latka the pre-seed was raised primarily on the strength of the team and concept rather than on significant traction, noting the company had only a handful of paying customers at the time of the raise. Antler Helsinki is the identified investor in the round.

Founder / CEO

Markku Viornin is the CEO and co-founder of Homie. Before founding Homie, Viornin led growth at a B2B SaaS scale-up, where he observed that deals involving personal connections closed at dramatically higher rates than cold outbound, an insight that became the founding thesis of Homie.

Homie has three co-founders. Viornin is the commercial lead. Kalle, the Chief Business Officer, was one of the first employees at Finnish adtech company Smartly. The third co-founder, Alex, joined later as CTO after initially contributing pro bono. Viornin told Latka that he and Kalle hold approximately equal equity, with Viornin holding roughly 1 percent more, and that Alex holds a somewhat smaller stake. The team wrote its first line of code during the Antler Helsinki residency at the end of 2024 and spent approximately 18 months coding before generating its first dollar of revenue, with roughly one year of that period spent in beta with design partners through 2025.

We don't have Homie's Founder / CEO on record yet.

Q&A

QuestionAnswer
What's your age?-
Favorite online tool?-
Favorite book?-
Favorite CEO?-
Advice for 20 year old self-

Customers

Homie had approximately 20 paying customers as of May 2026, all of them B2B sales teams seeking to generate meetings through warm introductions. The company uses outcome-based pricing tied to meetings delivered rather than a fixed per-seat subscription, a model Viornin said was designed to lower the barrier to trial and create a positive-ROI dynamic for buyers, including a refund provision if stated goals are not met.

Viornin told Latka the company was still in an experimenting phase on pricing and had not yet fully commercialized the product, describing the current state as roughly 25 percent of the way toward a full commercial launch.

Homie serves 20 customers.

Homie Business Model

Homie generates revenue through outcome-based contracts rather than fixed per-seat subscriptions. Customers pay when Homie's platform helps them secure meetings through warm introductions sourced from their personal networks. Viornin told Latka the model is structured as a win-win, with refunds issued if the platform does not hit agreed goals.

The company's primary growth channel is its own product, using network-led introductions to acquire customers with zero outbound sales effort. Organic LinkedIn posting is the only supplementary channel in use as of May 2026. Viornin said the company also recently launched an MCP integration and is building APIs, indicating early moves toward a platform or developer-facing layer. Profitability was not discussed in the interview and is not confirmed.

Point-in-time figures shared on the GetLatka podcast, each linked to the exact moment it was said on camera.

Customers (2026)

20

Around 20 customers.

Homie Employees & Team Size

Homie has five full-time employees as of May 2026, comprising the three co-founders plus two additional hires. The broader team, including contractors and part-time contributors, numbers approximately eight people. Viornin told Latka the majority of the team are developers, and that the company intends to remain lean through 2026 and 2027.

Homie employs approximately 5 people as of 2026. It serves 20 customers that rely on its solutions.

Homie Team GrowthReported headcount over time0134562024202520260055Source: GetLatka.com interview on May 19, 2026 with Homie CEO
YearMilestone
2026Reached 5 employees (June 2026)

Frequently Asked Questions about Homie

What is Homie's revenue?

Homie generates $100K in revenue.

How much funding does Homie have?

Homie raised $1.7M.

How many employees does Homie have?

Homie has 5 employees.

Where is Homie headquarters?

Homie is headquartered in Finland.

Full Interview Transcripts

HomieMay 19, 2026

Nathan Latka (00:00) Hey folks, my guest today is Marku Viornin. He's the Helsinki based founder who previously led growth at a SaaS scale up where he discovered that deals involving personal connections closed at dramatically higher rates than cold outbound. So he co-founded Homie through Antlers Helsinki residency in 2024. It's a network led growth platform. All right, Marku, you ready to take us to the top? Markku (Homie) (00:22) Yes, thanks for the invite. Have you already survived from the emotional damage from the poker tournament? Nathan Latka (00:28) Yes, we Marku. I don't know if you took all my money, but somebody took all my money at the sassiest poker tournament. Markku (Homie) (00:35) Okay, perfect. Waiting for the next game. Nathan Latka (00:39) It was good, it was fun. Yeah, so hey, us what you're selling here. What's the software do? Markku (Homie) (00:44) Yeah, so as you just said, the whole idea here is that, like, called outbound. Like, it's easier than ever to do. You know, you have sales automation tools, have AIPDRs, SDRs. But at the same time, if you look for the results, like, you're not the only one using those tools. So it's like, there's so much volume. And if you put your shoe, like, put the, like, buyer shoes, they are... flooded with messages on LinkedIn emails, getting phone calls. So the whole idea is how we can rebuild that trust. And what I figured out in my previous GX in different companies was that every time there was a personal connection, for example, happy customer recommending us, we hired a new employee who had ICP, either customers on the personal network, the sales hit rate skyrocketed. And I started to think like, like, hey, this is really nice, but it's quite random how that can be scaled. So that's kind of the origin of HOMEy. What we do, we collect a lot of different relationship data from the internet. And then we are trying to package them in as one like prediction, how well two people know each other. What is the warmest path to your like target customer? Nathan Latka (02:05) So you're only using public data. In other words, I'm not connecting my Gmail account to you and you're scraping like my Gmail to find connections, right? Markku (Homie) (02:11) Not right now, but it's in the roadmap. So mainly public data, but also utilizing Gmail. Now we have a calendar invite, so now we have the fact that we know each other. At least we have a podcast together episode. yeah, a bunch of different data. Other is public, other is like you need to give permission. Nathan Latka (02:35) How are you going to market here? I noticed when I click find my new customer, it goes to a calendar invite. So this is to me, what this says is either your local, your low ARPU too. So it's under a hundred bucks a month to use it, but you want to learn from me. So you want to call or it's so expensive where you need to put touch on the sale. Which one is it? Markku (Homie) (02:52) I would say like neither of those. I think we've been now live commercially live for a months and we are kind of like 25 % commercialized this yet. So we are kind of still learning what works the best. We want to still build few features functions to go like full force. now like when we have a... Like when somebody is interested in that, we want to have a call. We want to see what they are doing when they're signing up. So yeah, it's all about learning for now. Nathan Latka (03:28) Yeah, there you go. Learning. So that was my first thing. As I said, you're probably doing this to learn. to be clear though, are you post revenue at this point? Do you have at least one customer? Markku (Homie) (03:31) Okay, okay, yeah Yeah, yeah, like we have now like with few months, like we have doubled the revenue and now in the third month we are looking like 100k ARR, but still like not yet commercializing this fully. Nathan Latka (03:53) Okay, that's great. So you launched pricing three months ago and now here in May of 2026, you're already above 100K of ARR. Markku (Homie) (04:00) Yeah, we are looking at the of this month to hit the 100k. Nathan Latka (04:04) That's great. And how many customers would that represent? Is that two customers, a hundred customers? Markku (Homie) (04:10) around 20 customers. Nathan Latka (04:12) Wow. How did it take me back to when you wrote the first line of code? When was that? year? Markku (Homie) (04:17) That was during the Anthro residency, the end of 24. So we've been in beta for like a year where we had a few design partners and we kind of wanted to see if the whole concept works. Like are those warm intros actually, you know, coming as a close one? Nathan Latka (04:24) Okay. There's a lot of folks at zero right now trying to launch with design partners and they're struggling with how to convince a design partner to convert to a paying customer. How did you do it? Markku (Homie) (04:46) I think for us the main thing was about the pricing. like still, I think like fixed price user-based pricing is kind of like the most common. But what we figured out was like, what if we turn it to outcome-based? So how we are pricing is that we are pricing like if we are getting meetings for you through those one intros. So in a way it's like a win-win situation, like positive ROI. We refund it, we don't hit the goals. So that's quite like, we are lowering the barrier to try it. Nathan Latka (05:21) So if I sign up with you today and I say, want you to help me recruit CEOs that I could potentially invest in at Founder Path, they have to have at least five million of revenue and we have to have some overlap with them. I have to personally have some overlap with them. And you bring me those customers and you, is it you tee up a phone call, you tee up an email introduction and I pay you what, 100 bucks per intro? Is that sort of how it works? Markku (Homie) (05:44) So our focus is just to what we are doing. So I know you have a lot of LinkedIn connections, but you probably know, let's say 150 of them really well. So what we are doing, we are focusing on those folks and we are looking if they know somebody who is word of your investment. And then we are collecting a lot of data from their connections and trying to understand if, well, they are LinkedIn connections, but... Do they actually know each other? Are they ex-colleagues? Have they reacted to each other on social media? Have they studied in uni? These kind of things. And then we offer you kind of the data and you make the action. ⁓ It needs to be you who is asking the intro. It still needs authenticity. Kind of like we don't want to be compared to called outbound. or like sales automation where there's a lot of mass like we are focusing on the quality for our customers. So the message needs to be coming from you. Nathan Latka (06:49) Why is that the strategy though? mean, some of them are my most successful contractors I work with. I pay them for a specific unit of labor. So some of them, the unit of labor, let's just use an example, right? If you help me sign up a 10 million ARR CEO to call on my podcast and I record the podcast, I pay you X amount of money and they just go to work. I never talk to them. They know the thing, they know the price per job to be done. I don't have to do any work. They send it from their email and it works. Why not price that way? Markku (Homie) (07:16) I mean, like it's your network, not ours. Like we are not sending messages to your friends who know somebody who you should talk with. It's all about them opening the door for you. So it needs to be coming from you, if that makes sense. Nathan Latka (07:31) It doesn't make sense. I'm not following actually. Markku (Homie) (07:33) So as our customer, you would be coming to the platform and you would be collecting a lot of different data or we will collect a lot of different data ⁓ from you and from your close ones, from your close network. And then we are trying to look who from those people know somebody that you want to meet or record or invest. And then we suggest like... how should you reach out? the person that you know is kind of the connector there. And you send a message to that person that, hey, could you introduce me to this person? Because you seem to be like old uni friends back in the days. Nathan Latka (08:17) I get that, but why don't you do the work? So for example, I'm going on a European tour here shortly. I'm recruiting CEOs in Vienna, Berlin, Stockholm, Hamburg, and Amsterdam. Right. I'm working with partners to help me like find those folks. So if I used homey, why couldn't you use my network publicly find who I'm close to in Berlin? And then you send an email that says, Hey, we're helping Nathan who I know, you know, find more CEOs to work with in Berlin. Do you know anybody? And the email thread is you plus me copied. plus that other connection that you have identified as a connector in Berlin. Markku (Homie) (08:48) It's an interesting approach. I don't say that we won't build it in the future, but what I'm finding challenging is that will that become a mass as well? Because it will come in from me, who is random. But if it's coming from you, yeah, I don't say never, but I have some doubts. Nathan Latka (09:03) but I'm copied. I just think the world is moving to a world where you have to do the work for your customers, right? You sent me an Excel file saying you should reach out to these 35 people. Well then I still have to go do all the work, right? I just think the big companies are gonna be the ones that actually do the work for customers. I'm just pushing you on that. I'm just curious how you think about that, that's all. Markku (Homie) (09:28) Yeah, I mean, like, it would be great if like we can do the whole workflow. like, you would just sign up and wait for results. But for now, like, like what we want to still kind of hold is like, like humans are interacting with each other and it's all about the trust. And I feel like if we or our agent is the one who is kind of sending those messages, like we are kind of missing the whole narrative here. Nathan Latka (09:54) Well, yeah, I disagree with that. I'll just say, because that email, the cold email can say something like, hey, Nathan is paying for me. I'm an agent that helps him connect to his network in person to build trust in Berlin. He's busy. So he's using me to help him save time. He'd really like to meet with you in Berlin, right? That's the opposite of, hey, Markku (Homie) (09:56) But maybe they could... Nathan Latka (10:13) you know, it's a cold email from Nathan, he doesn't care about me, I'm trying to spend in-person time with you. So I don't know where this world is going, right? It's fun to talk to someone at you at the early stage where you can literally build anything and see how you're thinking about building. Markku (Homie) (10:23) Yeah, no, no, but that's an interesting take. I still feel that it needs to be coming from you. like, because like, yeah, maybe last thing, then we can move on. I don't want that intro request to be transactional. It needs to be like personalized. So for example, you, probably don't send the message to your friend that like, Hey, you know, this person, could you do the intro? You probably want to start with that like, it was nice to poker together in Saucist. By the way, this person I saw that's like, is your ex colleague from from Meta. Do you know him well enough that you can make an intro? He is a like weak blurb. I think that works better. You don't, you know, burn the breaches, you know, just sending random requests to your friends. Nathan Latka (11:17) Yeah, so that email copy is great. Why can't you just do that for me? I connect my inbox and you send that email. The whole point is like, if you send me stuff to do work, then I feel like I'm not getting as much value from Homey as I could and I'm willing to pay less versus if you just do it for me, it's way helpful. We're beating this in the ground so we should move on. But I get your point. You're still trying to figure this out. What are you helping people do right now? Are you helping them meet people in person? Are you helping them just get a demo done? What is the thing that you're doing for your current 20 paying customers? Markku (Homie) (11:22) Yeah. So all of them are like sales at companies. So what they want, they want a meeting. So whether it's discovery, demo, yeah, just getting face to face. Nathan Latka (11:47) Yeah. That makes sense. Okay, talk to me more about how you funded the business. Are you bootstrapped or have you raised? Markku (Homie) (11:59) So we called the handler, they give you like a day zero fund that's super low. We managed to build better with that money and then we raised the pre-seed earlier this year. That was like one and a half million euros. Nathan Latka (12:14) Okay. Okay. So 2020, 2026, you raised about 2 million USD on, on like a seed round, basically. Markku (Homie) (12:24) I would call it pretty simple, yeah. Nathan Latka (12:25) Precede, precede, okay. What was the market like when you went out and raised that round? What did your deck look like? Were you just basically able to raise that money off the 100K of ARR and 20 customers you have, or what were the proof points investors asked for? Markku (Homie) (12:38) We didn't have a lot of traction back then, so I think it was more about the concept. I don't think we still have a product category, what we are building. So it was about the team, the concept. Of course, you need to have the traction nowadays when you're funding, showing that there were couple of paying customers. But that wasn't, I would say, the moneymaker there. Nathan Latka (13:03) And what your founding team, is it just yours or a couple of you guys? Markku (Homie) (13:07) Yeah, I'm the least technical guy, so CEO. Then Kalle is the CBO. He's one of the first employees from Smartly, if you know Finnish at the company. Now quite global. And then actually Kalle's uni friend. He started to do Brobono as a CTO. And at some point we were like, shit, we really need to get him full time. So yeah, he's the third co-founder. Nathan Latka (13:30) That's great. How did you guys, I mean, it's always hard, right? When you have multiple co-founders at the start to figure out, who owns what equity? How did you guys have that conversation? Or did you do the lazy thing and just split it a third equally? Markku (Homie) (13:41) ⁓ Not equally. So me and Kalle, we met in Amstor. I was actually looking for technical co-founder. It's super hard. And then, you know, I'm also like, I've been like ages in B2B SaaS doing commercial. Kalle has been more in the product. So it was quite nice fit. And then a bit later, Alex joined. So he has a little bit like smaller stake there. So... But yeah, me and Kalle, it was quite equal. I think I have like 1 % more. But yeah. Yeah. Nathan Latka (14:12) Fair enough, fair enough. Okay, and how are you, you as you scale, said you're about to break 100K of ARR. We're recording this in May of 2026. As the rest of the year sort of goes on, how are you growing and do you think you can break a million of ARR by the end of the year? Markku (Homie) (14:27) Yeah, that's the goal. And right now, we are doing zero outbound. ⁓ So the whole goal is to eat our own dog food to hit that one million. Nathan Latka (14:36) Yeah, that's a good point. That's a good point. People say, hey, if you started in 2024, it's now 2026. It's taking a while to grow. Shouldn't you be growing faster eating your own dog food? Markku (Homie) (14:44) Yeah, well, as I said, like now in 26, we have actually commercialized this. yeah, it has taken quite a lot to build. Nathan Latka (14:52) What made it so difficult to, to, launch? Yeah. What made it so complex to build? You're basically coding for 18 months before your first dollar of revenue, right? Markku (Homie) (15:00) Yeah, the whole model that we have for this warmness, like predicting how well two people know each other, it has been, it's quite complicated. ⁓ But at the same time, I feel like that's our most. Nathan Latka (15:15) Yep. I'm just thinking, love how you put the manifesto on the website because it helps people understand sort of what you believe in and this pricing, like, you like, are you changing this vibe? mean, are testing this sort of violently right now, or are you pretty locked into this pricing? Markku (Homie) (15:28) I would say we are still in an experimenting phase. For example, we just launched MCP. They're building APIs. So there's a lot to cover and understand what actually hits. So yeah, I think it's like, yeah, I love to experiment. So probably even with that one million AR, we are still figuring things out and trying new things. Nathan Latka (15:52) And, and how else besides, you know, slouching cold outbound that you just mentioned in using your own dog food. there anything else in terms of gross strategies you're using today, whether that's SEO or paid ads or anything like that events. Markku (Homie) (16:04) Well, as I said, we haven't yet fully commercialized this. So mainly just eating our own dog food. Well, we are posting something organically on LinkedIn, but that's all. ⁓ If somebody is booking a meeting, of course we are taking it. But as I said, I still want to build, even though we've been already building one year. ⁓ yeah, it might be a Finnish way of thinking, taking time to build. ⁓ I can see your frustration there. Nathan Latka (16:37) No, no, mean, look, everyone wants to grow faster. ⁓ That's, you know, that's think that's that's universal. So you're in Helsinki, how big is the team today? Markku (Homie) (16:45) We have around eight people, mainly developers. Nathan Latka (16:47) Okay. What do mean around eight people? There's a ninth you like don't remember or what? Markku (Homie) (16:51) ⁓ Some of them are more like contractors, ⁓ not everybody's full time, that kind of thing. Nathan Latka (16:59) How many are full time? Markku (Homie) (17:01) Full time we have five people. So three co-founders plus two people. Yeah, I think, well, that's the case to grow in like 26, 27, like trying to be super lean. Nathan Latka (17:03) So it's good, you're small, nimble, you can move quick. Yeah, very cool, Mark. Hey, look, if people want to follow you online, where can they find your story? Markku (Homie) (17:19) Well, use homey.com, you can check the manifesto that you mentioned. ⁓ Of course, happy to connect with people on LinkedIn. Nathan Latka (17:26) Guys, there you have it. Use homie.com, turning your network into pipeline with smart introductions, wrote the first line of code in 2024, 2025, uh, brought on their first design partners, went through the antler program and in 2026 close to 2 million, uh, USD pre-seed, uh, round. you know, right now in May here of 2026, approaching a hundred K of ARR with 20 customers with our team of five folks looking to scale here using their own tool as they now fully commercialized. They only started selling about three months ago now scaling quickly. Mark who thanks for taking us to the top. Markku (Homie) (17:56) Hey, thanks Nathan. It was fun. Nathan Latka (17:58) All right.

Data and Sources

All figures on this page are taken directly from interviews or are estimates from public sources and proprietary models. Not financial advice. Read full disclaimer.

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Homie Revenue 2026: $100K ARR, $1.7M Raised