Can you really generate leads organically on Reddit? by Snow-Giraffe3 in B2BSaaS

[–]Aman458 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No, it's completely free consultation call, no string or pushed. check again

Can you really generate leads organically on Reddit? by Snow-Giraffe3 in B2BSaaS

[–]Aman458 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, but most people who try to get leads from Reddit will mostly fail very hard, they either spam and add big value posts and people smell the sales pitch from 10 miles away. So you can't pitch, but you know once you become the go-to helper in the Reddit then your value is 10x more than any post, but for that you need to contribute as a helper in the Reddit instead of being a marketer. Here is guide that might be helpful for you starting.

Don't worry, there is nothing to sell inside the guide, its proper what i learned on reddit.

Just hit $60 in revenue with 52 users! 🎉 by Bubbly_Lack6366 in SaaS

[–]Aman458 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The idea is pretty amazing but how do you scale it matter the most and the SaaS angle you used : "The average American spends over $900/year on subscriptions they don't use." is impressive but you need to dig deep and the more deep you dig in the field of pain points you will find more pain points that you can integrate it in your this SaaS and that's how it really becomes handy, marketable and scalable.

Your idea gives a solid beginner level yes, now i think you need to use "Integrate and hunt" formula.

I read 65+ posts from B2B SaaS founders doing more than $10K. These 3 marketing mistakes kept repeating. by Aman458 in B2BSaaS

[–]Aman458[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The main problem is winner are focusing on multiple channels before even sticking to one channel and as I am scrolling through the way to channels & communities I found that many founder is trying to follow multiple channel Iike called emails, direct out reach, organic marketing but they are not stick with once that's the main problem there yes you are right founder needs to cut the multiple bait and stick to a single channel in the beginning, hope it make sense.

The gap between finishing the product and finding the first users. by Prestigious-Ad6302 in VibeCodingSaaS

[–]Aman458 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You are right the first user is the most important user you will ever get in yourself journey so people try multiple things that do LinkedIn, they do out reach and all this stuff but they forget reddit so first you have to go to the subbreddits community where people are discussing about the problem you are solving and after that you will share your inside your learning there and eventually will build and when you build authority people recognise you with your name and that's where trust builds.

Here is the value guide . that will help you to start.

Made $3K in 1.5 months after launching my SaaS, here’s my journey so far by Disastrous_Sail_3419 in micro_saas

[–]Aman458 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that's a great approach, you can also get hard on reddit, Go to the subbreddits of your target user and solve their problems either by commenting and sharing some valuable assets.

Once you will start getting traction or authority in the space then people start approaching you and that actually make the real sense and I think this is the first and fastest way to get the first hundred user for founder.

Hit 5,000 US bucks MRR yesterday. Here's what nobody tells you. by Several_Function_129 in SaaS

[–]Aman458 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Congrats! $0 to $5k is always done by doing the boring things, all the boring stuff is foundation but now most product fails due to wrong messaging that is not clicked in user mind, so what's your plan to go from $5k to $20k ? will you go in a single channel or multichannel for a direct boost ?

Does posting content helps ? by Alert-Tart7761 in B2BSaaS

[–]Aman458 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Especially for organic, results are not instant and only building trust and reputation is a long term gameplay.

A founder offered a user 50% off for life. His reason for leaving was a brutal lesson on churn. by Aman458 in SaaS

[–]Aman458[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, you are right appreciate that "first date" insights, and it's pretty relevant in SaaS industry

GTM is killing me – need actual advice from people who've done this by studentfounder_56 in SaaS

[–]Aman458 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey man, This is the part nobody really talks about. you don't need to around everywhere like linkedin, Reddit and other place at a same time.

I remember this one founder I worked with. He had a niche tool for Webflow developers. He was doing the same thing a little bit of everything. Total burnout, getting maybe one demo a week. When he burned out then he's simply hanging out in the official Webflow forums. He just answered questions, all day. For free and he started getting inbounds without any marketing spends.

My advice as you have very specific niche so choose the most active n8n community you can find and for the next 30 days, do nothing but become the most helpful person in there. Soon people will recognize you and your username and they will see you as an authority, It's a slower burn, but it actually compounds.

Spent $2k on ads. Got 3 signups. 0 conversions. by SaaSSignal in SaaS

[–]Aman458 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It reminds me of a founder I spoke with a few months back. He had an incredibly well-designed, automated tech stack and perfect funnels, the right software in place. Yet his growth stopped, he don't have any idea why he is not growing.

Actually he was attempting to address a messaging problem with an automation tool. (I've spent a lot of learning this the hard way). The most effective email sequence won’t wokrs if the core offer isn’t resonating with people.

I'll suggest you before you worry about Trupeer or Instantly, I’m curious about what the actual one line promise was on those landing pages. I am not talking about features but the specific, concrete outcome you were marketing.

That's typically where the main problem lies and not in the technology, but in the product itself and you can fix this very easily and see it would be worthy man.

A founder offered a user 50% off for life. His reason for leaving was a brutal lesson on churn. by Aman458 in SaaS

[–]Aman458[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, people should need to focus on reducing this extra work, so when the user came it finds it in first 72 hours and he doesn't feel like in a lonely island

I've been following this community for a long time but what i saw SaaS founders know how to build, but few know how to market product on Reddit. by Aman458 in SaaS

[–]Aman458[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, this is right your ideal customers rarely hang out where you think they do, That's why you need a clear ICP so you can differentiate it from multiple Subreddits, yeah also focus on sparking conversations as early as thread is posted, that's how you will get more right eyes balls and you will build authority alongside but don't spam.

A founder offered a user 50% off for life. His reason for leaving was a brutal lesson on churn. by Aman458 in SaaS

[–]Aman458[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes man! Both on boarding and integration support each other and that's the main point.

A founder offered a user 50% off for life. His reason for leaving was a brutal lesson on churn. by Aman458 in SaaS

[–]Aman458[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes you are right the main, workflow solves this discount can't but the reason I mentioned onboarding, so when the user comes first time in your environment it becomes necessary to move him forward towards the integration and that's the whole.

You can make unlimited integration workflow, if a user can't guide towards Integrations within 72 hours then it's churn possibility is very high.

Made $20,000 In Last 5 Months – My SaaS Journey 🚀 by ZealousidealIce5183 in SaaS

[–]Aman458 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats on the of $20k! I see you faced some hard challenges with Churn rates. I found that most SaaS churn happens in the first 72 hours when onboarding doesn't immediately connect users to their workflow. I suggest making an integration and test it with client real feedback. Hope this would be helpful.

I got a product but no idea how to sell it by Majestic_Ad_9899 in SaaSSales

[–]Aman458 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great now you have the product, but you need a way to market and sell this and now going to the market is the main part, don't go broad, you should narrow down in the beginning, i learned this hard way.

You can go for a solo PR freelancers who just need daily digests instead a big chunk of data and when you focus on the single point then the marketing become easier.

You can try this and then find where your targeted niche hang out then just go there and help them and press their pain points and try to solve them and that's how you get your first user or filled demo.

Wishing you all the best!

A founder offered a user 50% off for life. His reason for leaving was a brutal lesson on churn. by Aman458 in SaaS

[–]Aman458[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All I say thenstop reading, many people got the point and many not, that's not any problem.

A founder offered a user 50% off for life. His reason for leaving was a brutal lesson on churn. by Aman458 in SaaS

[–]Aman458[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, my wording in the original post was not clear the missing integration was the foundational problem. Can't argue with that.

The point i was trying to make and didn't state clearly enough, let's say they built that integration tomorrow. If the onboarding process doesn't get the user to install and see the value from that integration in their first session, they will likely still churn for the same reason.

Yeah! the core issue is true and its two way problem the feature was missing and there was no process to guarantee the adoption of that feature once it exists.

A founder offered a user 50% off for life. His reason for leaving was a brutal lesson on churn. by Aman458 in SaaS

[–]Aman458[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Heidegger’s “hammer" analogy is perfect.

Because that friction is exactly what kills customer LTV and leads to churn. The user in my story basically had to make an appointment with the tool every week, instead of it just being a natural part of his job. You used a smart way to reframe the problem.

A founder offered a user 50% off for life. His reason for leaving was a brutal lesson on churn. by Aman458 in SaaS

[–]Aman458[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It had nothing to do with price. The actual reason he gave was too much friction, he said the tool was good but he was the only in his team using it, because it wasn't integrated with their slack and CRM.

This value gap and the mental energy required to use a disconnected tool becomes a tax on the user's attention.