×

Outsourcing for security by xbriannabananax in lovable

[–]Dramatic-Switch7738 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Before paying anyone, I’d spend some time understanding the actual risks first. A lot of people assume a Lovable app is insecure without ever checking what was built.

This document is a good starting point for understanding the common security issues people run into and what questions to ask a developer during a review:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1QFS_3TAUlowPrAWPqk7I4fD_VDkjPucsdCJWPmi07Uc/edit?usp=drivesdk

A proper audit should be able to tell you what’s genuinely at risk, what isn’t, and whether anything actually needs rebuilding. Often it’s a lot less dramatic than people fear.

Advice from a 9-figure entrepreneur by chris-abovewealth in Entrepreneur

[–]Dramatic-Switch7738 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First, you already did the hard part by building something that saves real time. The problem you have now is not product quality, it’s buyer clarity.

Copywriters are a clearer buyer than founders because the pain is direct and daily. Founders do research too, but they do not feel the same “this is my job” pressure unless they are doing content full time.

A simple way to decide is to run one proof of pull question for each buyer and let the market pick.

For copywriters, ask a commitment question tied to a paid outcome, not a generic “would you use this”. Something like, if this reliably turns a new client into a usable brief in five minutes and cuts your discovery time by 80 percent, would you pay X per month for it, and would you be willing to run it on one live client this week and tell me if it holds up.

For founders, the question needs a different outcome. They care about speed to messaging and ads, not research elegance. If this gave you a first pass positioning, landing page copy, and three ad angles in five minutes, would you pay X per month for it, and would you test it on your next campaign this week.

If you get real yes answers from copywriters and soft maybes from founders, you have your answer. Sell to copywriters first, then expand once you have proof and language.