North Carolina local Bob Flora started his digital jigsaw puzzle business in 2001, as an escape from the corporate world where he worked as a software engineer. “I wanted my own software business,” he says, “and I chose digital jigsaw puzzles as a product after seeing my young nieces playing them on a computer. I realized there was a need for a better quality jigsaw puzzle program and thought building it would be a fun development challenge. I also recognized that jigsaw puzzles represent a large market that could be tapped by successfully attracting search traffic from Google Search.”
What started as a PC game program with only modest success eventually began to pivot to a web-based program in 2009. But as the new website grew, Bob struggled to find a way to earn money from the endeavor. “Originally, I planned to offer paid-premium puzzles in addition to the free puzzles,” he recalls. “But fully implementing a paywall and a paid tier of premium puzzles would take a lot of time, which would leave the website without revenue in the meantime. So I decided to try ads to create a revenue stream over the short term.”