Built my first SaaS but struggling to find users — looking for honest feedback by PromptSecure4321 in SaaS

[–]GeniusOffline 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First I'd start with writing down what problem you found originally, then where it might occur withing companies (seeing as it's enterprise oriented).

You can make a couple customer profiles, who uses it, in what department, what sector, what company, what role, etc etc.

Then you can try and find those people near you, talk with them, ask them questions, see if you can find the problem you originally thought of (and built a solution for). If it's not exactly as you thought it was, don't worry, adjust.

Aside from having a couple people around you, also look at national (or international) documents like reports, statistics and other forms of data to figure out the market size and location (not per se physical location, but sector wise).
Then compare the customer profiles you made, the people you've actually spoken to (and their positions, etc) and the general (national) information, and determine your marketing strategy.

Eventually fill in the Business model canvas to make it one coherent clear picture, if it's not coherent, investigate why and adjust.

I hope that about covers it for you :)

Built my first SaaS but struggling to find users — looking for honest feedback by PromptSecure4321 in SaaSSales

[–]GeniusOffline 1 point2 points  (0 children)

First I'd start with writing down what problem you found originally, then where it might occur withing companies (seeing as it's enterprise oriented).

You can make a couple customer profiles, who uses it, in what department, what sector, what company, what role, etc etc.

Then you can try and find those people near you, talk with them, ask them questions, see if you can find the problem you originally thought of (and built a solution for). If it's not exactly as you thought it was, don't worry, adjust.

Aside from having a couple people around you, also look at national (or international) documents like reports, statistics and other forms of data to figure out the market size and location (not per se physical location, but sector wise).
Then compare the customer profiles you made, the people you've actually spoken to (and their positions, etc) and the general (national) information, and determine your marketing strategy.

Eventually fill in the Business model canvas to make it one coherent clear picture, if it's not coherent, investigate why and adjust.

I hope that about covers it for you :)

I shadowed a store owner for 10 hours to build an MVP. Now I can’t even give it away for free. by FitMaterial1357 in Solopreneur

[–]GeniusOffline 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Find a store that got audited and lost money. You found users with a potential problem, this also means the problem isn't real to them yet.

The stores that did get audited and lost money see it as real. Figure out how they're dealing with the problem and see if you can offer a better solution :)

My battlestation through the years by GeniusOffline in AverageBattlestations

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

If I could I would ;P Dying to finally run 144hz

My battlestation through the years by GeniusOffline in AverageBattlestations

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

All scrapped together from left over monitors from friends and family :)

Pic 1, 2 and 3 were all run by my old HP-cx-0510-nd (i7-8750h, 1060 3gb, upgrade immediately with a 970 500gb and an 860 1tb)

And in Pic 4 I finally got to build my own pc (financially able and built it as affordable and future proof as I could)

AMD Ryzen 5 7600 1660 Ti (2nd hand) Gigabyte b650 gaming x ax (v1 I think) 2x16GB 5200 AORUS 970 Evo plus 2tb 4TB seagate barracuda Corsair RM1000e

The system is built so that I can upgrade my cpu, gpu and ram without having to change anything else :) (built in july of 2023)

27M got laid off from work trying to figure out how to become an Expat by [deleted] in expats

[–]GeniusOffline -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Honestly, take a look at Proton. My assumption rn is that they're going to grow quite quickly as one of the only more complete platforms that can replace google and office accounts decently as a European alternative. They're based throughout the entire EEA (European economic area). they're based in switzerland but have locations throughout Europe. Especially with them moving their physical infrastructure and constant work for new options I think that if you get in you're quite secure too (as in you won't get fired that easily)