30 employees. 10 engineers
Seed-funded startup
3 active product environments. Rapid feature releases
A fast-growing SaaS company with 30 employees had reached a critical scaling phase. They operated across development and staging environments, production systems and regional cloud deployments.
Their PostgreSQL databases were running across infrastructure on Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud. Initially, database management was handled by backend engineers. But as customer acquisition increased, infrastructure complexity began growing exponentially.
New feature releases required:
Backend engineers were managing infrastructure alongside product development. As the company scaled, PostgreSQL environments multiplied across development, staging, and production. The leadership team began searching for a sustainable model for database management without DevOps team expansion. What worked at 5 engineers was no longer working at 30.
As growth accelerated, the absence of structured database management without DevOps support became a bottleneck. Three major issues emerged.
1. Engineering Bottlenecks from Manual Infrastructure
Without centralized systems, backend engineers handled PostgreSQL provisioning, backup configuration, version upgrades, monitoring alerts, and replication setup. This created hidden operational debt.
Every release cycle required database validation. Every new environment increased configuration risk. The startup needed structured database management without DevOps team dependency, not more ad-hoc scripts.
The team realized infrastructure was slowing innovation.
2. Multi-Environment Drift and Inconsistency
The company maintained multiple PostgreSQL environments such as development, staging, production and regional replicas. Without standardized workflows, configuration drift began appearing.
Managing multi-environment infrastructure without a DevOps function increased operational risk. They required a platform that enabled database management without DevOps complexity, while ensuring consistency across environments.
3. Rising Pressure to Hire DevOps
As database complexity increased, leadership considered hiring Senior DevOps engineers, Site Reliability Engineers, dedicated database administrators.
However, hiring added significant payroll costs, longer onboarding cycles and organisational overhead. The company wanted to delay hiring until absolutely necessary.
The thought of trying to explore scalable approaches to database management without DevOps expansion, would help them focus on automation and centralised lifecycle control.
SelfHost provides a structured framework for database management without DevOps dependency, specifically designed for growing startups. Instead of fragmented workflows, SelfHost enables:
This can transform database operations from reactive to structured. SelfHost introduces templates and provisioning workflows that allowed:
This significantly reduces the engineering effort required for database management without DevOps support. Instead of each engineer reinventing processes, workflows can become standardised.
Also as their infrastructure spanned multiple providers, they require unified control. SelfHost provides:
This makes database management without DevOps oversight operationally feasible, even in multi-cloud environments. Engineers can regain focus on core product development, feature velocity, customer success initiatives, and infrastructure can stop being a recurring blocker.
The company observed:
The startup achieved:
Metric
Environment Consistency
Operational Overhead
Multi-Cloud Control
DevOps Hiring Pressure
Before
Config drift
Engineer heavy
Fragmented visibility
Immediate hire
After
Standardised setup
Automated workflows
Can delay hiring
Improved margins
"Nextsaas delivered our entire platform ahead of schedule—flawless execution and real partnership."
"From a product perspective, SelfHost solved a bottleneck I didn't realise we had. Our engineering team used to spend 15-20% of sprint capacity on database operations - scaling, backup verification, incident response. That's now close to zero. If SelfHost disappeared tomorrow (no offense), our databases would still be there. That's rare and it matters for long-term planning."
Eric Brian
Product Manager at ZOOP
Deploy self-hosted PostgreSQL and scalable cloud databases with automation, high availability, and full infrastructure control.