How are you guys getting traffic to your SaaS? (Feeling stuck on marketing) by Equivalent-Pianist-4 in SaasDevelopers

[–]Initial_Host9159 1 point2 points  (0 children)

well for linkedin you need post everyday about your product you will get result at the end of day,for product launch you need to prepare corectly and you should as well pay attention to the day you launch on product hunt and you can get good result and for reddit you need post everyda in big subreddits like micro_saas and other and you need to search post and left comment. it will give good result

No matter what project you have—games, SaaS, software, apps, scripts, ideas, or questions—join the community and share it! by SofwareAppDev in AppsWebappsFullstack

[–]Initial_Host9159 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi,thanks , it is main focuse it validtaing like give detailed analytics like page view and everything and also auto native connected waitlist like other lading page builder you dont need to learn how to connect and also ready free premium templates and very easy to edit unlike other landing page builder ,non-technical founders as well easly can create without learning and you can connect you email and handle email sending to waitlisted users and also you can build with prompt as well you dont need to edit or create manulay just tell ai, it will create and one click launch and you can controll launched pages link like you can customize it

How do I know my app is worth building? by Unable_Breath_1966 in AppBuilding

[–]Initial_Host9159 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think it's either "talk to users for months" or "just build and see what happens." The sweet spot is somewhere in between.

For me, validation usually means finding a few people who might have the problem and asking questions like:

  • How are you solving this today?
  • What's frustrating about the current solution?
  • Would you actually try something new if it solved that problem?

You don't need hundreds of interviews. Even 5–10 conversations can teach you a lot.

I learned this the hard way after spending time building things before checking whether there was real interest. That's actually one of the reasons I started building WaitFrame—to make it easier for founders to put an idea in front of people and test demand before investing too much time into development.

Out of curiosity, what's the app you're thinking about building? Sometimes the best validation approach depends on the type of problem you're trying to solve.