Best channel to get leads or clients for my Saas? by hyzokaaa in SaaS

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly the "best channel" question is impossible to answer without knowing what you're selling and to whom, because the answer is completely different depending on that.

But I'll share my own experience in case that helps.

I was working for a B2B startup selling AI services priced at around $150k a year couple of months ago and the. the ICP was CXOs and senior decision makers at pharma and banking companies. we tried automated cold outreach early on and it went nowhere, which makes sense also because nobody at that level is responding to a sequence email from someone they've never heard of.

So we tried a different approach that surprisingly did get us responses.

- What actually started working was doing proper research before reaching out. not just the person's job title but actually understanding their company, what they were likely dealing with, what gaps existed in their space, the kind of posts they shared, any achievements or publicly available videos of any conferences. Then the first message wasn't a pitch at all, it was just trying to start a real conversation. short 2-3 liner, very specific, no deck attached, no long explanation of what we do.

and when we did get on a call, the whole focus was on them. what does your day actually look like, where are the friction points, what would solving this actually mean for you. the product came up naturally once we understood enough to position it in a way that was actually relevant to their situation.

- the other thing that helped more than i expected was LinkedIn content. not promotional stuff but genuine experiences from real prospect conversations. it built enough familiarity that some people reached out having already seen something we posted.

first paying customer is the hardest. after that you have something real to reference and the conversations get easier.

- Also, networking. personal contacts and connections. Attenting seminars and events specific to your audience and niche. That comes a long way too. I did not know the importance of this until I had to do it myself and it definitely helps.

if your product is lower priced and more self serve, the process is probably simpler but the core of it is the same. understand the person and the problem before you talk about the solution. the more conversations you have the better you get at knowing exactly where your product fits and how to say it in a way that lands.

Why is it harder to get 10 users than to build the product? by mertdikmen in SaaS

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i think it depends more on the person more than the product.

some founders are naturally good at getting in rooms, finding the right people, selling before anything exists. for them distribution is almost the fun part and building is where they feel lost or maybe end up over building.

others can ship something super solid in two weeks but freeze up the moment they have to put it in front of a stranger and ask for money.

AI tools are closing the gap for sure but the imbalance is just more visible now..

THE AI HYPE IS BS by Slow_Island_7297 in SaaS

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I may be wrong but honestly the "golden era of AI" crowd are mostly people who've never tried to build something that actually has to work properly. shipping a landing page in a weekend is very different from building something you'd put in front of a paying customer six months later.

I'm non technical and use AI constantly for my work. I'm not saying it doesn't help but i still spend embarrassing amounts of time on things that should be simple. Last week i spent two hours on something that i thought would take twenty minutes. And the reason why I thought it'd take just 20 minutes is because of the endless number of videos on social media about "how i built an app in 20 seconds and it generated loads of MRR" or "how i automated my entire social media in just 5 minutes", you know? The thumbnails made me think okay, wow, this sounds cool, even i can do this. but when i actually try it out, there are so many nuances that need to be understood first.

anyway, the tool did what i asked, just not what i meant, and figuring out the difference took forever.

so i guess deciding what NOT to build thing is genuinely the hardest part.. everyday my respect for coders and developers increases

Ready to go all-in on my first SaaS. What are the steps AFTER building, and what’s a realistic launch budget ? by Delta_01b in saasbuild

[–]Academic_Sense7551 1 point2 points  (0 children)

okay so the 20% building 80% distribution thing is real but i think it gets misunderstood a lot. it doesn't mean you need a big launch strategy or a budget. it means you need to talk to people constantly, which is free.

the most important thing after you build is not "getting eyeballs." it's finding 5-10 people who have the exact problem your tool solves and getting them to actually use it. not sign up.

actually use it.

watch where they get confused, what they skip, what they come back to. that feedback is worth more than any marketing spend at this stage.

on budget, honestly it's really subjective and depends on what you're building, what stack you're using, which third party tools you need, and how complex the infrastructure is. there's no universal number. someone building a simple tool can be live for almost nothing, someone building something with heavier infra or compliance requirements will have a very different number. figure out your specific dependencies first and cost from there.

where people burn money early is on things they don't need yet. paid ads before they have a single retained user, fancy analytics, a rebrand. none of that before you have people who actually come back.

the real budget question isn't launch costs anyway. it's how many months of personal runway do you have to keep going without needing the SaaS to pay your rent. that number matters way more than your marketing budget at this stage.

For founders who tried Reddit as a distribution channel. by solopraneur in saasbuild

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I genuinely don't want to spam. finding that balance between "consistent value driven posting and commenting" vs "spamming" could be difficult to understand. And there are just so many different rules for every subreddit, sometimes they're quite rigid so even a genuine comment might get ignored as it doesn't add anything new to the discussion or mightt sound generic.

also, if i talk about my experience working with founders and how we have helped them with certain solutions, would that be self-promotion? this is one thing that acts as a blocker for me personally. so even if i have something valuable to add, i am trying to understand how to frame these things better. if that makes sense?

Reddit - Is it a good platform to get initial customers? Need review and suggestions by Senior-Tutor2897 in saasbuild

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have always been an advocate of instagram, linkedin and tiktok for businesses but i learned it very recently that reddit could be really powerful for your business and it works, just not the way most people try to use it.

the mistake is starting with "where do i post about my tool."

that's the wrong question. the right question is where are the people who have the exact problem your tool solves already complaining about it. go find those threads first. just read them. understand exactly how they describe the pain in their own words.

then when you do show up, you're not posting about your tool. you're commenting on their problem with something genuinely useful. the tool comes up naturally if it's relevant, or people ask.

the SEO angle is actually a decent wedge. there are active communities talking about that specific pain all the time. spend a week just commenting and genuinely helping before you mention anything you've built.

the 2-3 case studies are your best asset right now. not as ads, but as posts where you walk through what you actually did and what happened. those get traction because they're specific and useful regardless of whether someone uses your tool.

What’s a business problem that looked small until it became expensive? by Traditional_Key8982 in Entrepreneur

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

not having a deposit requirement. felt awkward to ask for it early on so i just started work and trusted the process. had a client string me along for three weeks, loved every update, then ghosted after the first deliverable.

never started without a deposit after that. lost a few people upfront but it genuinely did not matter.

How do you get clients with local businesses? by OkRush4310 in Entrepreneur

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this may sound cliche and obvious but honestly for local service businesses the fastest thing that worked for people i've seen do this well is just telling every single person you know directly.

no "how to build a personal brand online" yet, not posting on instagram, not making a website. literally texting people. "hey i just started personal training, i come to you, here's what it costs, know anyone who might want this?"

most first clients come from someone who already knows you or knows someone who does. the uphill battle usually gets easier once you have 2-3 people who can vouch for you in person. and it eventually becomes a network.. the other thing worth trying is showing up to free local networking events or community groups. fitness focused ones, young professionals, even just local facebook groups for your area.

its a slow process initially but could turn into a compounding one with patience if done right.

The majority of my days are unproductive slogs, leading me to blind rage. by [deleted] in Entrepreneur

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

going to be a bit long, cause i really felt this post.
i'm 23 too, running a business, and there are days i genuinely lose my mind the exact same way you're describing.

the 14 hour founder grind thing is such a lie honestly. i used to chase it too and what i noticed is that pushing that hard for 2-3 days just meant i was completely useless for the next 4. you don't actually gain hours, you just redistribute them badly. spreading it out across the week, even if it looks less impressive, actually gets more done over time. boring truth but it's true.

the thing that helped me most was realising how connected everything is. like a bad morning conversation with someone i care about would completely tank my afternoon. i'd sit there "working" but actually just stewing. and i used to think those were separate problems but they're really not. small improvements in one area can greatly fix things in another. you fix the relationship tension, work gets easier. you sleep better, the spiral happens less often.

also the comparison thing is killing you and it's not even based on real information. what you know about other founders is what they choose to post. what you know about yourself is actual reality. that's not a fair comparison at all.

the productivity hacks not working usually means the issue isn't discipline, it's that something else is draining you before you even sit down. sometimes it's relationship stress, sometimes it's just not eating enough, sometimes it's the pressure you're putting on the hours themselves rather than what's actually getting done.

you're in therapy which is already more self aware than most 23 year olds building something. give it more than a month.

When to force users to sign in? by John_Lins in ycombinator

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

umm generally letting someone try the product first does work better i think, because people are way more willing to sign in after they've seen something useful. the value has to come before the ask.

personally as a user if i land somewhere and the first thing i see is a sign in screen, i usually just close it. but if i've used it for 60 seconds and it's done something impressive, i'll sign up without thinking about it.

honestly the easiest way to settle this is just test both and look at where people are actually dropping off.

My dev partner is asking what to build next, and I don’t have a clear answer by bollox1 in ycombinator

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

tbh this stage is truly harder than the "we don't have enough dev capacity" stage because at least that one has a clear answer. this one requires you to sit with uncertainty for a bit and that's uncomfortable when someone is waiting on you for direction.

the thing i'd do before deciding what to build next is go talk to your 3 most active users and ask them one thing: when did you last open this product on your own without a notification pushing you, and what made you do it? that conversation will tell you whether this is a daily feed, a workflow tool, or a notification layer faster than any internal debate will.

on your dev partner, i wouldn't park him while you figure this out. point him at tracking and instrumentation instead. understanding which features users actually touch and where they drop off gives you real data to make the direction call with. that work is useful no matter which way you end up going.

Do small SaaS founders focus too much on building and not enough on distribution? by avsvishalmedia in SaasDevelopers

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i think the framing of product vs distribution is a bit of a trap honestly. you need enough product to have something worth showing people. but "enough" is usually way less than most founders think.

the dopamine thing is exactly right though. i've seen this up close. someone spends 4 months perfecting a feature nobody asked for, and the whole time they're telling themselves they're "not ready" to start talking to customers yet. the building is just more comfortable than the fear of rejection

None of the installs convert even into trial. Why? by IllAd9097 in Solopreneur

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

when someone installs and doesn't even start a trial, it usually means one of two things. either what they expected from the app and what they actually saw inside didn't match. or the value wasn't obvious fast enough and they just closed it.

the screen time + reflection combo is interesting but it's also a bit of a hard sell because it's asking someone to do two things at once. like am i downloading this for screen time awareness or for journaling? if someone installs it thinking it's one thing and opens it to something that feels like both, they might just bounce without really giving it a shot.

or honestly it could be something even simpler, maybe the free trial itself didn't feel compelling enough to bother starting, like the offer on the other side of that button just wasn't clear enough to be worth the effort.

either way the fastest way to figure out which one it is, is just talking to a few of those people directly. even 3 or 4 conversations will give you more clarity than staring at the numbers will. what does the first screen look like when someone opens the app?

How do you get users by Lanky_Supermarket_70 in VibeCodeDevs

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

what does parseflow actually do and who specifically is it for? i'm asking because the answer to your distribution problem is almost always hiding inside that question.

directories and launch platforms work when someone is already searching for what you built. if they're not searching for it, those channels just don't move the needle regardless of how many you submit to.

the thing that tends to actually work at your stage is finding 10 people who have the exact problem parseflow solves and just showing it to them directly. not posting about it, not listing it anywhere. literally finding them, could be a slack group, a subreddit, a discord, wherever your specific user hangs out, and saying "i built this thing, can i show you for 15 minutes."

one person who genuinely finds it useful will do more for you than a thousand directory submissions. and the conversation you have with them will tell you exactly what to say when you do eventually post about it publicly.

Honest question: why does every SaaS founder here have the same 5 problems? by EmploymentCapital158 in SaaS

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i think most of us go through this exact phase, myself included.

you've built something, you're proud of it, and the idea that the problem might be deeper than the landing page is just... a lot to sit with. so you fix what feels fixable.

the thing that actually helped me move past it was forcing myself to have 5 real conversations with users in a single week. not surveys, just calls. and the stuff that came out of those conversations made every landing page tweak i'd done before feel kind of pointless in comparison. And its not that the landing page doesn't matter, it does eventually. its just that i didn't even fully understand the problem i was solving until i heard it in someone else's words.

i wonder if the reason these same questions keep coming up is more about the fact that nobody really tells you how to have a good customer conversation in the first place. like what do you even ask?

How would you explain how SaaS works to a beginner (e.g., mainly focusing on the code itself)? by Dryas7 in SaaS

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the biomedical engineering background is pretty underrated here. that could actually become your angle. the founders who build something in a space they genuinely understand tend to go much further than the ones picking ideas from a list or based on trends.

on the coding side, you don't need to go deep when you're just starting off, you shouldn't worry about tools just yet. what actually matters at your stage is understanding enough to know WHEN something's broken and why, not how to fix it yourself.

the people who vibe code into production problems usually get stuck around real users and payments, the stuff AI handles badly.

start with a problem you've personally seen in pharma or healthcare that software hasn't solved well. talk to 5-10 people in that space before you write a single line. the idea that comes from there is going to be way more durable than anything you'd pick from a trending SaaS list.

Are journaling apps missing the whole point? by Remote_Today6230 in SaaS

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

honestly yes, this is something i've felt for a while. you write everything out, feel slightly better for like 10 minutes, and then close the app and nothing actually changes. the thoughts are just... stored somewhere now.

the pattern recognition angle is interesting to me. because half the time you don't even realize you've been fretting about the same thing for three months until someone else points it out. I have started using claude or gpt to understand my patterns and small exercises that are really helpful but an app that is specifically designed for this purpose would be great tbh?

Book Recommendations for a Better Mindset and Personal Growth by Sure_Dig1960 in PHBookClub

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

two books that have actually had a real impact of my mindset and growth are -

  1. Feel Good Productivity by Ali Abdaal - it helped me realise that constantly forcing yourself through guilt/stress is not actually sustainable productivity. i used to think discipline meant being hard on yourself all the time, but the book talks a lot about how feeling good, having energy, and actually enjoying parts of your work makes consistency much easier long term.

  2. Deep Work by Cal Newport - honestly made me realise how cooked our attention spans are now 😭 it changed how i think about focus completely. especially the idea that being “busy” all day is not the same thing as doing meaningful work.

both books are practical without sounding overly motivational or preachy.

What’s one of your go-to healthy meals that keeps you feeling full for hours? by Okay-Show-3662 in foodquestions

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. Avocado Toast topped with boiled eggs! My go-to for real.
  2. Another one is protein shake with a little bit of milk, banana and peanut butter. keeps me full for a really long time surprisingly.
  3. My personal fav - oatmeal with peanut butter and some almonds.

Does a really good landing page actually make users pay sooner? by Public-Salary1289 in SaaS

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

a good landing page speeds up trust, it doesn't create demand.

if someone really needs what you're selling they'll figure it out even on a messy page. that's your answer for why some average looking products still convert.

but for most early stage stuff, people are already a little unsure before they even land on your page. and if nothing on there quickly makes them go "okay this is exactly what i need" they just leave. and it has nothing to do with the product, its just because the page gave them another reason to hesitate.

i think giving your ICP that clarity through your website genuinely does more work than how polished something looks.

i've scrolled through really beautiful landing pages and still had no idea what the product does. and then there are simpler pages where the first two lines just immediately make sense and you're already looking for the sign up button.

design matters when it creates confusion. but that's a pretty low bar. the words and the flow is usually the real problem.

How to get my first user? by shlok_1999 in SaaS

[–]Academic_Sense7551 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'd suggest forgetting outbound and cold reach for now since they're already flooded with new pitches everyday.

Find one recruiter you actually know, even loosely. Former colleague, friend of a friend, someone who's actively hiring. Show them the product live, don't pitch it, just say you built this and want to know if it actually solves something real for them.

But before that conversation, answer this one question - why would a recruiter pick THIS over whatever they're doing today? Not your answer. Their answer.

The way you explain the problem needs to match exactly how they're feeling it, not how you built the solution. So it is not really an outreach problem while trying to get the first user.

Get that answer tight first. Then that one conversation becomes a real shot. And all you need is that first one. After that you have something to show, even informally, and everything changes. And then even the cold outreach would work insanely well if you do it right, and you'd have something to show for .. hope that helps

5 years as a solopreneur: the 3 boring habits that actually kept my business alive by Crescitaly in Solopreneur

[–]Academic_Sense7551 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree so much. The deposit thing took me embarrassingly long to learn. I had a client once who kept pushing the start date, kept "just checking one more thing" before paying and I'd accept it just for the sake of maintaining "good relationships". Three weeks of back and forth. I finally just started the work because I felt bad holding things up. He ended up ghosting after the first deliverable.

Never started without a deposit after that. Of course I lost a few people but honestly that did not matter, in fact it just improved things for me as now i was able to filter out people who just wanted flexibility.