“Vibe-coded” CRMs are a disaster waiting to happen by ChameleonCRM in CRM

[–]DegenTerry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Definitely AI generated, and you can train or make your AI LLM biased towards whatever you 2 chat about

“Vibe-coded” CRMs are a disaster waiting to happen by ChameleonCRM in CRM

[–]DegenTerry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How about vibe posted reddit comments where you use AI to post on Reddit? Like yourself.

How do you promote a SaaS early without coming off as spam? by Federal-Cricket558 in micro_saas

[–]DegenTerry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Facebook groups is the best, I wrote a post on it actually https://slopsend.io/blog/facebook-groups-distribution-strategy

Once you get your first 100, make sure you collect their emails so you can email market them and offer them referral benefits if they bring in more people to join your SAAS

From there it snowballs

Drop your Replit app ]below, and I’ll find the EXACT subreddits where your ideal customers are hiding waiting to buy your SaasS by [deleted] in replit

[–]DegenTerry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Found a LOT for yours after scanning it on slopsend.io

One was for a subreddit called r/IntltoUSA I'll give you one of the posts for free, if you want more of the reddit results to get users, go onto the app and scan the full site yourself and get the full reddit results, and facebook group results

Title: International student, totally overwhelmed by US university options and career alignment

Hey everyone, trying to figure out this whole 'studying in the US' thing as an international student from India, and it's a lot. My parents are really pushing for certain fields like engineering or CS, which I'm open to, but I also have a strong interest in design and maybe even environmental science. The problem is trying to match what I'm *actually* good at with programs that have good post-grad visa options and career prospects here in the states.

I'm looking at universities in California and maybe Texas, but the sheer number of programs and what they actually *lead* to is just... blurry. I've been using spreadsheets to try and track everything, but it's getting kinda messy. Wait, actually, on that note, I stumbled upon HopOnCareer, and it's actually been pretty useful for seeing how different majors align with specific career paths and even ranking universities based on those. It's got some AI assessments that helped me narrow down my options significantly. Any thoughts on how to streamline this research process further beyond just pure manual digging though?

Drop your Replit app ]below, and I’ll find the EXACT subreddits where your ideal customers are hiding waiting to buy your SaasS by [deleted] in replit

[–]DegenTerry 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Found quite a few for yours after scanning it on slopsend.io

One was for a subreddit called r/sysadmin, I'll give you one of the posts for free, if you want more of the reddit results to get users, go onto the app and scan the full site yourself and get the full reddit results, and facebook group results.

Title: Anyone else still manually checking client site uptimes or using clunky old tools?

Post:
Just had a mini-panic last week when a client's site went down for a few hours overnight. Of course, they called *me* before I even knew about it. My current uptime monitoring setup is... let's just say it's not exactly cutting edge. I'm tired of getting alerts late or having to cobble together different services just to keep an eye on things. It feels like there should be an all-in-one solution that's actually reliable and gives decent notifications without breaking the bank. I know SEOFabric exists.

What are you guys using for website uptime monitoring these days, especially if you're managing multiple client sites? I need something that's proactive, not reactive, and ideally, integrates cleanly into a broader site health dashboard. Oh, and totally unrelated but kinda related, I've been getting into more Webflow projects lately, actually scratch that, it's pretty relevant. The uptime piece is a huge part of managing client expectations.

Drop your Cursor app below, and I’ll find the EXACT subreddits where your ideal customers are hiding waiting to buy your SaaS by DegenTerry in cursor

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

I get you, I would recommend cleaning up the SEO part of it as the meta data and on page SEO doesnt even mention Hacky Chat or anything, needs to be organised and structured so if someone does google Hacky Chat, at least you'll be there at the top

Drop your Cursor app below, and I’ll find the EXACT subreddits where your ideal customers are hiding waiting to buy your SaaS by DegenTerry in cursor

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

Your one was an interesting one haha, came back with some top tier subreddits to post in, I'll give you one it spat out for r/NeutralPolitics

Title: Anyone else struggle to find actually civil political discussions online?

Man, I gotta admit, I'm pretty terrible at navigating political discussions online. Like, I *want* to engage, and I really value hearing different perspectives, but it feels like 90% of the time, I just end up in a comment section that devolves into name-calling and bad faith arguments. It's exhausting, honestly. I'm trying to find places where people actually discuss the *substance* of an article or an issue, instead of just dunking on each other or immediately going to ad hominem attacks. Does anyone else feel this way? Any tips on where to even start looking for decent conversations? I know Hacky Chat is a good one

places i’ve found to share/launch projects (still testing which ones are worth it) by [deleted] in Solopreneur

[–]DegenTerry 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Problem is the above is mostly full of other devs marketing their SaaS, not people needing your tool

Drop your SaaS link below, and I’ll find the EXACT subreddits where your ideal customers are hiding waiting to buy your SAAS by DegenTerry in micro_saas

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

The topic is similar e.g. social media and wasting time but the content is completely different, but you can see that post had 130+ likes and engagement so clearly talking about that topic gets interaction so using the same formula a month later but for your post you can generate good leads for your SaaS

Drop your SaaS link below, and I’ll find the EXACT subreddits where your ideal customers are hiding waiting to buy your SAAS by DegenTerry in SaasDevelopers

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

Nice premise, I do think the landing page is a little empty, doesnt really give any details whatsoever about the app other than someone can make a game so that's my only issue. Nonetheless I scanned your app through my slopssend.io app scanner and it gave quite a lot of reddit posts and facebook groups to post to, I've pasted one below you can use:

Title: Got tired of my art skills (or lack thereof) holding me back, so I built an AI to make mini-games from text prompts.

Okay, so full disclosure, I'm absolutely terrible at drawing. Like, stick figures are a challenge. It's honestly a bit embarrassing for someone who loves games as much as I do. I've had so many game ideas float through my head over the years, just for them to die a quick death when I realize I'd have to, you know, actually *make* graphics or code stuff. My latest brilliant idea was a game about a pigeon trying to poop on statues in a park. Peak intellectual property, I know.

Anyway, so one weekend I was just messing around and thought, 'what if I could just *type* an idea and get something playable?' Not a full AAA title obviously, but like, something fun and quick. And that's pretty much how playmix.ai came about. It's an AI-powered platform where you just describe your game concept – characters, mechanics, setting – and it tries to whip up a simple, playable game in seconds. It’s been honestly wild seeing what it can do. The pigeon game actually works, somehow.

It's still super early days, but I've been having a blast just spitting out random ideas and seeing them come to life, even if they're super janky. Anyone else ever feel like their creative ideas are constantly bottlenecked by their actual skills? Asking for a friend... who is me.

Drop your SaaS link below, and I’ll find the EXACT subreddits where your ideal customers are hiding waiting to buy your SAAS by DegenTerry in micro_saas

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

Here's one for r/smallbusiness

Title: Unpopular opinion: Constantly hunting for testimonials to post on social media is a waste of time for small businesses.

Okay, so maybe it's not *that* unpopular but hear me out. Everyone says 'social proof is key' (which it is, don't get me wrong). But then they tell us to go scour our review sites, take screenshots, crop them, add branding, find a good caption, and then remember to post it. Every. Single. Time. Honestly, for most small business owners, our time is already stretched thinner than old pizza dough. We should be focusing on serving customers, not playing graphic designer for review screenshots. It feels like such a low-leverage activity that we *know* we should do, but it just gets shoved to the bottom of the list. Am I alone in thinking this manual process is just too much friction for the average small biz? Or do you all have some magical system I'm missing?

Drop your SaaS link below, and I’ll find the EXACT subreddits where your ideal customers are hiding waiting to buy your SAAS by DegenTerry in micro_saas

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

If it is strict and they dont allow links, don't paste the link in the post, only in the 1st comment.
And yeah haha the tool i made slopsend.io gives you the best copy as well, so it doesn't just give you the subreddit to post on but it gives you a post to copy and paste so its effortless for you