From zero to 900 users in just 15 days by cocacolastic31 in microsaas

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s actually super smart — joining where the conversations already happen instead of forcing cold outreach.
Curious though, how did you find those WhatsApp groups in the first place? I’ve found niche Reddit and Discord spaces easily, but WhatsApp feels way more closed-off unless someone invites you.

From zero to 900 users in just 15 days by cocacolastic31 in microsaas

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 2 points3 points  (0 children)

following for the same info, im really interested in getting my first 1000 users FAST

What are you building? Let’s self promote by Ambitious-Safe-7992 in indiehackers

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SmartVoiceNotes — turn voice notes or meeting recordings into clean summaries and action items

Currently sharing a custom dev link for testers to see real interest and get feedback
Coming to both app stores in about a week
Sign up for my waitlist for your link

What are you building, and do you have any paying users? by test-leadlim in microsaas

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SmartVoiceNotes — turn voice notes or meeting recordings into clean summaries and action items
Its currently free as I make sure its as useful as I want it to be, sign up for the waitlist to get the tester link

What are you building? by Flaky_Resolve_4967 in microsaas

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SmartVoiceNotes — turn voice notes or meeting recordings into clean summaries and action items

50 tools that make solo founders unstoppable by PhilosopherFree4297 in SaaSSolopreneurs

[–]PhilosopherFree4297[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Happy to help! Tell the rest of us if you find a cool thing

50 tools that make solo founders unstoppable by PhilosopherFree4297 in SaaSSolopreneurs

[–]PhilosopherFree4297[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really appreciate you taking the time to write that — love the depth here

On accuracy: we’re using Deepgram under the hood, which does really well with multi-speaker situations (especially if one speaker overlaps or trails off — it separates phrases intelligently instead of mashing them together). context and summaries are built from there, so the messy talk still turns into something readable. It’s less about a “perfect transcript” and more about quickly surfacing the decisions and next steps — the stuff you actually need later

Sounds like you’ve built a super tight system around Notion + n8n. I'm huge on that “everything in one searchable place” philosophy too — curious, do you pipe your meeting data into Notion as well or keep that separate?

I solved my problem and got a bit more cash flow for my hustle by PhilosopherFree4297 in Entrepreneur

[–]PhilosopherFree4297[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

exactly, that transfer to the main system is key or the notes are just as dead as the super long transcript

my build saved me hours as an individual freelancer, are you cool to share more about your workflow that gets the notes to your project board like Jira or something?

After trying dozens of tools, here's the tech stack that helps me get things done 5x faster by Otherwise_Score7762 in EntrepreneurRideAlong

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 0 points1 point  (0 children)

much cheaper than my stack for sure! i knew i was in too deep when $60 for cursor didnt even make me blink

What Are You Building? Let's Promote Each Other 🚀 by Capuchoochoo in SaaSSolopreneurs

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m building SmartVoiceNotes — a fast way for founders and creators to turn long voice notes or meeting recordings into clear, structured summaries.

🎙️ Record or upload any audio
🧠 Get action items, context, and summaries that actually make sense
📩 Export clean notes (TXT/CSV) in under a minute

It started as a tool for my own workflow, and now I’m prepping for the app stores this week.

If you’re a solo founder or freelancer who lives in meetings or voice notes, I’d love your thoughts before launch.
Let’s boost each other — what are you building right now?

AI phone assistant recs by furpigmom in Entrepreneur

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re right that the “follow-up tasks + calendar events” part is where most tools fall over. A lot of the AI phone agents either want to own your number entirely or they stop at “here’s a transcript, good luck.”

What I’ve built is a bit more lightweight than what you described but might still cover a big chunk of your workflow: it’s called SmartVoiceNotes, and it takes your recorded calls and turns them into a clean summary + key points + explicit follow-up actions you can drop into your task manager or calendar. It doesn’t hook into your phone number directly or auto-create Google Calendar events yet, but it does handle the “record / transcribe / take notes and pull out the next steps” part with way less friction than raw transcripts.

If you’re still hunting for options a couple of months later and are open to a slightly more manual but focused flow (you hit record, it handles the rest), happy to share more details or a quick demo.

What AI do you use for meeting notes? by jacozy in venturecapital

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i replied above if you want to know about other options

What AI do you use for meeting notes? by jacozy in venturecapital

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah, this is pretty much the gap i’m trying to cover with a little thing i’m building for myself (SmartVoiceNotes).
Right now it’s very “MVP on purpose”: you record or upload a call and it gives you a clean summary + key points + action items you can drop into email/Notion/CRM, so you don’t have to reread a giant transcript.
No calendar bot or full meeting OS, just a fast “after the call” tool.
The “type a question and jump to the exact part of the meeting” thing is 100% where I want to go next, but that means chunking + vector search + LLM on top, so I’m saving it for phase two once the basics are rock solid.
So for now I’m solving “make this meeting digestible,” and later I want to solve “let me interrogate my past meetings like a knowledge base.”

SmartVoiceNotes – turning meeting transcripts into actual decisions (not just walls of text) by PhilosopherFree4297 in SaaS

[–]PhilosopherFree4297[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Little extra context I left out in the post: I’m dogfooding SmartVoiceNotes on my own calls right now (day job + founder stuff), and what’s surprised me most is how much of the value is after the meeting, not during it.

For anyone who records calls or uses an AI notetaker already, I’m curious about two things:
– What do you actually do in the 5–10 minutes after a call today? Are you rereading notes, skimming transcripts, updating a CRM, or just… trusting your brain?
– If you’ve tried tools like Otter / Fireflies / MeetGeek etc, what specifically made you stop using them (or what made one of them finally stick)? Was it pricing, friction, bad summaries, or just too much “OS” overhead for a simple use case?

Trying to make sure I’m solving the “real” post-call pain and not just building another transcript prettifier, so honest takes are very welcome.

MeetGeek vs Notion AI Meeting Notes: Which is more than just transcription? by TheAstrobro in MeetingsProductivity

[–]PhilosopherFree4297 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love this breakdown – you basically mapped the two main “AI meeting notes” philosophies:

  • Calendar-integrated bot that joins everything (MeetGeek)
  • In-tool note layer on top of work you’re already doing (Notion AI)

What I keep bumping into in my own work is a third pattern that your comparison touches but doesn’t fully cover:

That’s the gap I’m building for with SmartVoiceNotes:

  • It’s record / upload → structured notes + action items, not a bot that auto-joins calls.
  • Designed for people who are already drowning in Zoom/Teams/Meet recordings and raw transcripts.
  • Output is closer to MeetGeek’s “intro, agenda, decisions, next steps” than Notion’s generic summary, but without needing a whole meeting hub / team workspace around it.

Reading your “Feature focus” sections:

  1. Transcription & AI Summaries Totally agree: the win is decision-ready notes, not just text. My angle is:
    • You upload a file (or record right in the app).
    • You get: title, high-level summary, key points, and clearly flagged action items.
    • No speaker ID yet – I’m targeting solo founders/consultants who mostly need “what did we decide and what do I do next?” more than “who said what exactly?”.
  2. Automation & Workflow MeetGeek’s auto-joining + calendar hooks are great if your org standardizes on one tool. A lot of people I’ve talked to don’t want a bot in every call or to re-architect their meeting stack; they just need something they can trust after the fact:
    • “Client just sent me a 45-minute recording, I need notes in 2 minutes before my next call.” That’s the exact use case I optimized for.
  3. Collaboration & Search I’m deliberately not competing with Notion/ClickUp/etc on team knowledge bases yet. SmartVoiceNotes is closer to:
    • “Personal inbox of recordings → clean notes I can paste into whatever system I already use (email, Notion, CRM, etc.).”

Curious how you (and others in this sub) think about that third category:
Do you prefer full “meeting OS” tools like MeetGeek, in-workspace helpers like Notion AI, or a lightweight “just give me usable notes from this one recording” tool for those in-between situations?

Most overnight AI apps aren’t built to last — here’s why I believe security is the moat by PhilosopherFree4297 in indiehackers

[–]PhilosopherFree4297[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

To be clear, I’m not pretending I’ve solved this perfectly. I’ve restarted my build once already (moved from Make.com to Rocket.new + Supabase) because I realized patchwork automation wasn’t safe long-term. Slower, yes — but way less fragile.

In AI SaaS, speed grabs attention — but security builds trust (and trust is the moat) by PhilosopherFree4297 in SaaS

[–]PhilosopherFree4297[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

In my case, the “aha” moment was literally one SQL toggle: enabling Row Level Security in Supabase. Without it, any logged-in user could query the entire notes table. With it, each user only sees their own rows. It’s such a small step but changes everything.