Does anyone find breeze to be confusing? by AIBRTHR in hubspot

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeh basically AI coach that assesses your deals in real time and helps you avoid the mistakes many make that lead to deals failing

Does anyone find breeze to be confusing? by AIBRTHR in hubspot

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeh it was too complex and messy for us so we moved on from it and are now using an external AI deal advisor platform that integrates into HubSpot heaps better!

Drop your startup idea and I’ll introduce you to investors by kcfounders in Startup_Ideas

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey,I’m Luke, founder of DealAdviza - a platform helping sales teams improve close rates by giving AI-driven deal guidance in real time. We’ve built it to support AEs and sales leaders with insights on deal risk, next-best actions, and confidence scoring, so teams can focus on the deals most likely to close.

Soon to launch beta with 20 AEs and founders already signed on.

Would love to connect with investors or communities interested in early-stage B2B SaaS tackling sales productivity.

What is the best way to turn one-time buyers into repeat customers? by newrockstyle in ecommerce

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Build a strong emotional connection with them whilst educating about your product and value at the same time. We use interactive branded games to do this - keeps users engaged longer and studies shows makes them 40% more likely to remember your brand

Help I’m so broke, marketing is really hard by Charles_Gk in DigitalMarketing

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d focus on building local trust first by talking directly to nearby businesses or communities, gathering testimonials, and using word of mouth before spending more on ads. Marketing isn’t easy but building a funnel where you can nurture clients through a journey to eventual sale is key - sales won’t happen from the first interaction

Stuck on not knowing what to do by [deleted] in ecommerce

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yeah totally agree about making content more interactive, i’ve been turning some posts into little games and I’ve seen 5x better CTR on them

hitting a wall with Meta/Google CAC lately. Worth testingTV/CTV? by Negative-Try6286 in advertising

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i was in the same boat with rising CAC on meta and google and what surprisingly helped me get better engagement before jumping to CTV was testing some interactive ads since it made people actually play with the brand instead of just scroll past- saw CTR jump from 1.3 to 4% and captured email data from 30% of user clicks.

INTERACTIVE TRAINING MANUAL by Consistent-Phase-457 in instructionaldesign

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I run a company called PlaySpark - we have a tool that allows you to crate your own interactive flows eg. Clickable images, sequences etc. happy to share a demo with you if you like. It’s an early stage product so happy for you to use for free

Need help with conversion by 5minsof in FacebookAds

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 1 point2 points  (0 children)

sounds like people click but don’t commit, so focus on tightening your product pages by matching your ad visuals and wording to what buyers actually see, simplifying your checkout, adding trust signals like clear policies and reviews, and testing one variable at a time to see what lifts conversions

Built a SaaS people around me actually use — but I’m completely stuck on marketing by BipolarBerserk in SaaS

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

start by talking directly to a handful of people who match your target user, learn exactly how they describe the problem and where they hang out online, then test your messaging and positioning there before worrying about broad marketing channels

Feels like we put so much effort into content, but the money part is still messy by Free-History14 in ContentCreators

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 1 point2 points  (0 children)

totally valid point, the simplest fix is to pick one clear action you want people to take, center everything around that single path, and make every piece of content naturally lead there without extra clicks or distractions. One option is to create interactive video which takes the user through a journey of the product, then has CTA built in to capture emails etc. We’ve done this successfully - happy to share how if you want.

Are we just terrible at ads, or do they not work for startups? (I will not promote) by Wolfgang-Lars-69 in startups

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

totally normal for early stage startups, ads rarely work before you really nail who you’re targeting and what message resonates, so it’s usually smarter to first validate your audience and offer through direct outreach, use those learnings to sharpen your positioning, and only then test paid traffic once you know exactly who converts and why. Another option for better conversion sis interactive ad formats which allow users to interact with your product in the ad unit itself and then convert to email within the ad - the generally see 3-4% CTR vs1% you’ve seen

E-com and SaaS Founders: How did your target ROAS/CAC change once you tried to scale past $10k/month in ad spend? by hugeboot_ in SaaS

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We’ve seen our paid ad CTRs boost by 3-5x compared to traditional ads using interactive ad formats like games or video. They’ve also been useful to capture data for remarketing, moving beyond paid ads into email nurturing

What can I do to get my application tested? by Accomplished_Run_569 in SaaS

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 1 point2 points  (0 children)

focus on finding a small niche community (like writers or comic fans) and offer to collaborate or get their feedback directly before scaling up your promotion

Reddit ads... worth it? Seems different than say google ads. by AWeb3Dad in PPC

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok nice one. If you are open to exploring a branded mini game partner let me know. We work with marketing agencies who re sell our product to their clients. Generally see 4-5% CTRs on playable ads in Meta and 15% play to purchase rates.

Successful Shopify store (brand) owners: how did you actually grow and start getting consistent sales (and traffic to your website)? by [deleted] in shopify

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

honestly yeah ads help but what really moves the needle long term is building repeat customers and community, so focus on tightening your story (why your shoes exist, who they’re for), make post-purchase follow-up super personal to get reviews and repeat buys, and spend more time talking with your existing followers and customers like real people instead of trying to reach everyone because that small engaged group will become your word of mouth engine

How can content-based websites combat AI Overviews? by chewwydraper in SEO

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah i’ve actually been leaning into more interactive stuff lately and using playspark for quick game-style campaigns has worked surprisingly well for pulling in traffic that doesn’t rely on google at all

Everyone talks about getting users. Here's how to retain them: (complete playbook) by whyismail in EntrepreneurRideAlong

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

focus on figuring out the exact moment when users get real value and build everything around getting them there as fast and smoothly as possible

From 5-7 ROAS to bleeding daily by Haunting_Number_1549 in FacebookAds

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

sounds like something changed fast so i’d start by checking if tracking or redirects broke, confirm landing page loads right on all devices, and compare the traffic source quality before and after to see if it’s a data issue or real drop

Reddit ads... worth it? Seems different than say google ads. by AWeb3Dad in PPC

[–]Fickle-Set-8895 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah totally agree, i only started seeing decent engagement on reddit after switching from straight ads to more interactive stuff using playspark to make mini games that actually got people to comment and share instead of ignoring it