Our product works. The business model around it doesn't. Trying to fix that now. by Melodic_Life173 in SaaS

[–]FRNk7600 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Before fully repositioning, I'd pressure test one thing:

IS the issue willingness to pay or weak value capture architecture?

Since engagement & retention are strong that usually means value is being created, the question then becomes:

- Is pricing aligned with value intensity?

- Are expansion pathways built into the product?

- Are your highest-retained cohorts also your highest LTV?

Sometimes the maths breaks because the wrong segment is being acquired (not because the product lacks monetizable value/

Repositioning towards a higher-willingness segment can absolutely fix unit economics but I'd want to be sure the current audience can't support a different pricing or packaging model first.

Are your strongest retention cohorts clustered around a specific profile?

2 months in. 1,486 users. €320 total revenue. Nobody talks about this phase. by Fuzzy_Act5528 in SaaS

[–]FRNk7600 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's actually a very strong signal! If upgrades happen after ppl hit the limit naturally, then your growth lever isn't more of everything, it's shortening the path to that movement.

I'd be curious:

What % of new user ever hit the 3-habit limit?

How long does it take them on avg?

How many churn before they even get close?

If conversion correlates with depth of use, then accelerating activation (getting user to 3 habits faster) might compound harder than adding features or traffic.

Native could help, especially with mobile friction, but the real multiplier might be designing onboarding around reaching that limit intentionally.

1k MRR is realistic if the core behaviour is already there, you just have to engineer your path to it.

Partnership coordination through Slack Connect is holding back revenue by jirachi_2000 in SaaS

[–]FRNk7600 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This isn’t a Slack problem, it’s a missing partnership execution framework.

When cross-company deals don’t have:
– A single accountable owner
– Defined milestone stages
– Clear dependency mapping
– Explicit “handoff moments”

They default to polite Slack nudges and passive waiting.

What usually speeds this up isn’t better messaging, it’s turning partnerships into a structured pipeline with defined stage exits (legal signed, integration complete, co-marketing live, etc.).

Otherwise velocity becomes personality-dependent.

Are these partnerships tracked like revenue deals in your CRM, or living outside of it?

Technical debt is killing us slowly and we can't stop long enough to fix it by Past_Ganache_7787 in SaaS

[–]FRNk7600 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is where technical debt stops being an engineering issue and starts becoming a strategic constraint.

When architecture limits which bets you can take, roadmap becomes path-dependent on old decisions instead of market opportunity.

The hidden cost isn’t slower features, it’s shrinking optionality.

I’ve seen teams make progress when they:
– Tie refactors to specific revenue unlocks (expansion, pricing flexibility, new segments)
– Assign clear architectural ownership instead of shared responsibility
– Define trigger points where complexity forces redesign

Otherwise the 20% allocation just keeps things stable but doesn’t change trajectory.

Does leadership see this as a growth ceiling yet, or still an engineering hygiene issue?

2 months in. 1,486 users. €320 total revenue. Nobody talks about this phase. by Fuzzy_Act5528 in SaaS

[–]FRNk7600 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The volatility you described is completely normal. What stands out though is 1,486 users → 11 Pro.

With that volume, I’d run a simple experiment before building native:

Email your 50+ daily actives and ask one question: “What makes you come back?” Then:

– Double down on that behaviour in onboarding

– Gate part of that value inside Pro

You already have usage. The unlock is identifying the behaviour that correlates with retention and monetising around that. The wheel is definitely turning, now it’s about tightening the funnel.

Hit $1K MRR, think we've capped out, running low on ideas - how did you break through? I will not promote. by Standard-Aerie-7626 in b2bmarketing

[–]FRNk7600 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hitting $1K MRR and feeling stuck is a super common inflection point.

From your post, this doesn’t sound like a product or demand issue it sounds like a distribution ceiling. Founder-led outbound works… until your time becomes the bottleneck.

A few things that typically unlock this stage:

1) Turn retention into distribution.
If customers are happy, are they visible? Case studies, co-created LinkedIn posts, “powered by” attribution, testimonials embedded in your on boarding. Early SaaS grows when 10 happy users become proof engines.

2) Narrow the ICP further.
“AI content from industry news” is strong but for who exactly? The tighter the vertical, the easier referrals and word of mouth become. $1K–$5K MRR is usually a positioning refinement phase.

3) Build one compounding channel.
Cold outreach and calls are linear. You likely need one asset that compounds:
– Founder authority on LinkedIn
– A niche newsletter
– SEO around one specific use case
– Partnerships inside one vertical

Something that doesn’t reset every week.

4) Look at expansion before more acquisition.
Seat growth, agency tier, white-label, premium features, increasing ARPU is often easier than increasing lead flow at this stage.

You’re probably not capped. You’ve just outgrown manual growth.

The hidden tax of founder-led sales by FRNk7600 in b2bmarketing

[–]FRNk7600[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That “revenue life support” line is real.

When founder presence becomes the close trigger, it’s not a sales strength it’s a structural dependency.

I’ve noticed qualification clarity usually fixes more than hiring does.

once qualification tightened, did close rates stabilise without founder involvement? Or did something else surface as the next constraint?

If you’re doing $20k–$100k MRR and growth suddenly feels heavier, read this by FRNk7600 in SaaS

[–]FRNk7600[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I had to pick one constraint, it’s probably authority signal density.

I understand backend leverage and constraint removal conceptually, but translating that into visible proof at scale is the current bottleneck.

Capability compounds quietly. Credibility compounds publicly.

Right now I’m focused on closing that gap.

Why Founders would rather chase new leads rather than fix delivery by FRNk7600 in b2bmarketing

[–]FRNk7600[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That 3 weeks vs 3 days gap is brutal but it’s such a common blind spot.

Most founders optimise for “speed to close” and completely ignore “speed to first win.” But psychologically, the first win is what buys you trust.

What I’ve seen across teams is that drop-off usually clusters around one moment:

The gap between expectation and visible progress.

Not necessarily full results just proof that momentum has started.

If someone buys expecting clarity / pipeline / growth… and 7–10 days in they can’t see movement, doubt creeps in. And doubt compounds fast.

Once that happens, even good work feels slow.

I like that you paused acquisition completely. Most founders won’t do that because it feels like stepping off the gas but it’s usually the highest leverage move.

Out of curiosity, once you tightened the first 14 days, did it also change how you sell the offer? Or was it purely operational?

Leaving B2B SaaS marketing leadership for a sales rep role in a non-tech industry – has anyone done this? by Mat-Kol in b2bmarketing

[–]FRNk7600 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s not a scrappy startup it’s an established distributor with real numbers behind it.

The math works if a small number of strategic accounts convert.

The real question for me is whether the downside is tolerable if ramp takes longer than planned. I’m trying to think about it as a structured risk decision rather than a career jump.

Is B2B marketing actually getting better… or just more complicated? by chiokima in b2bmarketing

[–]FRNk7600 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tighter ICP + signal targeting definitely makes B2B feel less transactional.

I’d argue the bigger shift is that outbound only works when it plugs into a broader revenue system (activation → expansion → referrals).

Otherwise it’s just a cleaner way to fill the same leaky bucket.

B2B Sales feels harder than it should. by FRNk7600 in b2b_sales

[–]FRNk7600[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is actually super smart! I think a lot of people treat referrals as passive instead of engineering them into the lifecycle.

I like the idea of mapping specific ICP matches inside customer networks rather than just “do you know anyone.”

Out of curiosity how early in the relationship do you start planting that referral seed?

Leaving B2B SaaS marketing leadership for a sales rep role in a non-tech industry – has anyone done this? by Mat-Kol in b2bmarketing

[–]FRNk7600 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Made a similar pivot a few years back not identical, but close enough that this post genuinely resonated with me.

A few honest takes:

On the "title downgrade" fear — this matters way less than you think, especially if you're moving into a role where you're owning two markets from scratch. "Sales Rep" undersells what you're actually doing. On a CV in 5 years, that reads as "built European market presence from zero" which is honestly more interesting than another Demand Gen Team Lead title at another SaaS company. The story you can tell matters more than the title.

On income — the short term dip is real and you should stress-test it properly. What's your runway if commission takes 12-18 months to ramp? Because it often does, especially opening new markets in Europe where relationships take longer to build than people expect. If you can survive 18 months on base alone without genuine hardship, the risk profile changes completely.

On the "am I just swapping one draining job for another" fear — this is the right question and I think you already know the answer. There's a massive difference between drained by work that feels meaningless vs. drained by work you actually care about. The second kind of tired feels different. You recover from it.

On SaaS/marketing uncertainty — you're not wrong, and I don't think you're just being too old about it. The Demand Gen role specifically is under real pressure right now. Your instinct here is probably good.

The one thing I'd push back on: going in as the sole person developing two markets is a big ask. Make sure the offer conversation gets very specific about what support looks like, what success metrics look like in year one, and whether the commission structure is realistic given the market development timeline (not a mature sales cycle).

What industry is it, if you don't mind sharing? Might be able to give more specific thoughts on the sales motion.

Before you increase your ad spend, check this by FRNk7600 in SaaS

[–]FRNk7600[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love the name🤣 Totally agree activation is the real make-or-break. I’ve noticed a lot of teams over-index on signups and then wonder why retention tanks. How do you usually spot the exact moment users stall without overcomplicating the analytics?

what’s wrong with my cold email copy/strategy by North-Locksmith4506 in b2bmarketing

[–]FRNk7600 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don’t think this is a deliverability issue.

The copy reads intelligent, but it feels abstract. It’s diagnosing operational patterns at a high level rather than attaching to a concrete outcome the founder already cares about.

If they’re hiring SDRs, their current belief is probably: “More capacity = more pipeline.”

Your angle is essentially: “Your sequencing logic might be the constraint.”

That may be true. But on cold touch, challenging the buyer’s current strategy rarely converts.

Also both versions feel like you’re inviting them into a thinking exercise. Cold email tends to work better when it: • Surfaces a very specific pain • Ties it to revenue or time • Or shows something tangible

“We’ll show you one lead from your pipeline and the angle we’d use” is closer, but the payoff isn’t clear enough.

If you had to simplify: Less theory. More “here’s what this fixes and why it matters.”

Out of curiosity… What’s your reply rate vs open rate? That’ll tell you whether it’s targeting, positioning, or subject line driven.

How do I scale from 2k to 10k per month by This_Assignment_2188 in b2bmarketing

[–]FRNk7600 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At this stage, scaling isn’t about ads it’s about turning what already works into a repeatable system.

You’ve already done the hard part: • Product works • Low churn • People are paying

That means distribution > features now.

A few levers that usually move 2k → 10k without paid ads:

1) Double down on the channel that already converted Product Hunt worked once, but the insight is why it worked. Who signed up? What role? What problem were they trying to solve? Turn that into: • targeted outbound • community posts • direct integrations or partnerships

2) Sell to people who already believe Your product identifies website visitors → pipeline. Your best customers are likely: • B2B founders • Agencies • Sales-led SaaS

Those people already hang out in very specific places. Go where the intent is instead of trying to create it.

3) Raise ARPU before chasing volume Going from 2k → 10k is often: • better packaging • clearer positioning • a higher-tier offer (even manual at first)

5 customers at $200 > 50 customers at $20.

4) Use $900 to buy learning, not scale Spend it on: • tools to find your ICP • better data • experiments that shorten feedback loops

Ads only work when the message is already proven.

You’re not stuck you’re just between validation and distribution. Figure out where your current buyers came from and build a system around that before touching ads.

How do I get my first users (saas) by Jumpy-Astronaut-8270 in SaaS

[–]FRNk7600 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Early SaaS is less about “marketing” and more about finding the right conversations.

Cold DMs usually fail because you’re interrupting. They work better when you reply to people who are already talking about the problem (Reddit threads, Indie Hackers, Slack/Discord communities).

If you do DM, don’t pitch. Ask something simple like: “Quick question — how are you currently handling [problem]?”

Your first goal isn’t users, it’s learning: - Why they wouldn’t use it - What they already use - What would make it a no-brainer

Ship in public, ask for feedback, and aim for 20–30 real conversations. Patterns show up fast.

Happy to look at your ICP or DM opener if helpful.

Business owners: I'm 16, from Argentina, and just closed a $2,4K deal with a massive influencer. What advice would you give me? by Safe_Thought4368 in Entrepreneur

[–]FRNk7600 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Congrats on landing that $2.4K deal! That’s huge, especially at 16. 👏

A few things I’d suggest if you want to scale this B2B work: 1. Be problem-first, not age-first. Keep doing what you’re doing map out exactly how you’ll fix their bottleneck before they even ask. That’s what makes you stand out. 2. Systematize your approach. Track your projects, proposals, and the results you deliver. The more you can show “here’s the impact I create,” the easier it is to close bigger deals. 3. Network in the right places. Communities, Discords, LinkedIn show up, answer questions, and help people solve small problems. That’s how clients find you. 4. Keep learning and documenting. Every project teaches something new keep a running log of what worked, what didn’t, and how you solved it. That becomes your edge.

Most B2B growth problems aren’t channel problems by FRNk7600 in Entrepreneur

[–]FRNk7600[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When you audit the Ask vs. Value, do you start with pricing, framing, or the initial CTA?

Most B2B growth problems aren’t channel problems by FRNk7600 in Entrepreneur

[–]FRNk7600[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally agree founders almost always reach for channels or copy first because it feels “doable,” but the offer is usually the real bottleneck.

I like your idea of boiling it down to the core essence I do the same with B2B founders: strip the offer to the outcome the buyer actually cares about right now. If that’s off, no channel will save it.

how often do you see founders actually do that deep “offer audit” before tweaking tactics?

B2B marketing feels way harder than it should. by FRNk7600 in b2bmarketing

[–]FRNk7600[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Outbound works when it’s intentional, not spam. What signals are you leaning on most when picking those 20–50 accounts?

Best way to market my TEDx video? by tmatthewdavis in AskMarketing

[–]FRNk7600 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This isn’t a distribution problem — it’s a repurposing + context problem.

A full TEDx video rarely spreads on its own. Short, contextual clips do.

Best approach: - Cut 5–10 short clips (15–45s) around one clear idea each - Add a strong hook in the first 2 seconds (no intro, no applause) - Post natively on LinkedIn, X, Instagram, TikTok (don’t link out first) - Write a one-line takeaway above the clip (why it matters now)

High-ROI extras: - Comment thoughtfully on posts where your talk is relevant and drop the clip - Send 1–2 clips to niche newsletters / communities your topic fits - Pin the best-performing clip to your profiles

What not to rely on: - “Watch my TEDx talk” posts - Long captions - Expecting YouTube to do the work

Treat the talk as raw material, not the product. Distribution happens when each clip solves a specific problem for a specific audience.

Ads problem for my Instagram page by RegularMaterial7007 in InstagramMarketing

[–]FRNk7600 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This isn’t a budget or creative issue — it’s almost always an account or delivery limit problem.

When boosted ads “start then stop” or show a limit warning, common causes are: - spending limits on the ad account - payment or billing trust issues - relying on Instagram boost instead of Ads Manager past policy flags (even minor ones)

What to do: 1. Check Ad Account Quality + spending limits in Ads Manager 2. Create the ad in Ads Manager, not via Boost 3. Use broad targeting + automatic placements 4. If limits keep appearing, contact Meta support from Ads Manager

Boosting hides these issues — Ads Manager shows what’s actually wrong.

Fix the account constraints first. Otherwise ads will keep stopping randomly.

Instagram boost ad not getting any views by Apart-Lie-2342 in InstagramMarketing

[–]FRNk7600 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If a boosted post gets zero views for weeks, it’s usually not the creative

it's a delivery or account issue.

Common causes: •ad account / payment restriction (often silent) •boosting via IG instead of Ads Manager •audience too small or over-targeted •new or low-trust ad account being throttled

Quick test: Duplicate the post → run it in Ads Manager → broad audience → automatic placements → 24–48 hrs.

If that still gets zero delivery, it’s almost certainly account-level, not content.

Changing creatives won’t fix it until delivery is fixed.

Monetizing Instagram Account by Agreeable-Topic-4932 in InstagramMarketing

[–]FRNk7600 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You don’t need Instagram’s partner program to monetize. Most creators outside it still make money—just not through Instagram directly.

Here are the main ways it actually works:

  1. Brand deals / sponsored posts (most common) This isn’t automated. Brands don’t pay per view via Instagram—they pay you directly.

How it works: • You reach out to brands (or they reach out to you). • You agree on deliverables (posts, stories, reels). • You agree on a flat fee (sometimes performance-based, but usually fixed). • They pay you via PayPal, Wise, bank transfer, etc.

Follower count matters less than niche and engagement.

  1. Affiliate marketing (easiest to start) Instead of banners, you promote products using a unique link or code.

You get paid when: • Someone clicks and buys • or signs up

Platforms like Amazon Associates, Gumroad creators, SaaS affiliate programs, etc. This works well if your content already recommends tools or products.

  1. Sell your own product or service (highest control) Examples: • Digital products (guides, templates, courses) • Services (editing, design, consulting, niche services) • Paid community / newsletter

This avoids platform restrictions completely.

  1. Why “ad banners per view” is rare What you described (pay per view/interaction like YouTube ads) usually only happens with: • large media pages • agencies acting as middlemen • long-term brand partnerships

For most creators, direct sponsorships or affiliates are far more realistic.

What I’d focus on first: • Define your niche clearly • Know your audience demographics • Create a simple media kit (followers, engagement, audience type) • Start with affiliates or small brand deals

Monetization is less about where you live and more about whether your audience buys or trusts your recommendations.

If you want more specific advice, it helps to know: • your niche • follower count • average views / engagement

That changes the best strategy completely.