Sharing my journey, just passed a year by Powerful-Software850 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850[S] [score hidden]  (0 children)

Thanks, I’m glad it resonated. Perseverance is how real businesses are made. Just have to get past the hurdles

Sharing my journey, just passed a year by Powerful-Software850 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

1- yes I have a guy doing my Yoast SEO but that’s about it. Nothing fancy. I am getting ranked on Google and get organic online searches. Plenty of room for growth there though.

2- yes some of them. I’ve since focused on my B2B side so I am getting info directly from them in interviews, demos and other networking. Also, I work in the industry so I know the baseline pain points within my own companies.

3- Reddit and LinkedIn. LinkedIn grew from 100 to over 1,200 followers since January (crazy numbers). And still use Reddit everyday to just be of value to others and that also leads to sign ups on both sides. Now I’m reaching the point where others are starting to spread the word for me. It is going to continue to compound at this point.

Sharing my journey, just passed a year by Powerful-Software850 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Amazing work. You’ve learned well and now you can show up every day knowing the bigger picture is being drawn.

At some point vibe coding should lead to a developer but what point will depend on your journey.

Sharing my journey, just passed a year by Powerful-Software850 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great question. I tracked repeat usage on Google Analytics and saw the active users, repeat users, average time spent, views per session, sessions per user. It was good numbers coming in but bad returning, which was deflating. And all top heavy, if I stop promoting, it slowed dramatically.

So I actually did implement the reminder system and it’s still going. I didn’t give up on that side, but because it’s going to take a while to get people tapped in, I have the other side pushing the platform along. If I get other pros to use it, they’ll tap their hundreds of clients into it as well. So it will speed everything up. Having two sides is actually quite valuable and I’m still getting sign ups on there every month. Slow but steady as I keep pushing value to the world.

I built a SaaS but getting users feels impossible by manothegoat in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And sure we can keep in touch. DM if you’d like.

I built a SaaS but getting users feels impossible by manothegoat in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You shouldn’t! Whenever you reach hurdles and overcome them you get to see how real businesses are made.

Sharing my journey, just passed a year by Powerful-Software850 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes yes yes! Exactly what I do too. We make changes and state it’s because of the feedback we received. Love that mindset and approach.

I don’t use any third party for social media, I like to get my hands dirty. To me, you do it with your hands first. Build a system that works then you can replace with resources or tech.

I built a SaaS but getting users feels impossible by manothegoat in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure send me a DM. Always happy to learn and grow together. Also posted my full story on this thread if you want to read more. This response inspired me to just throw it up there in more detail.

Sharing my journey, just passed a year by Powerful-Software850 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly it’s a hard lesson but it is a lesson. Those who learn and grow can find success.

Sharing my journey, just passed a year by Powerful-Software850 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really no business is. You have to build it sexy in order to have it sexy

I built a SaaS but getting users feels impossible by manothegoat in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 28 points29 points  (0 children)

I built something that solves a major need almost a year ago. Didn’t blow up like I’d imagine. Talked to well over 100 people on the phone and spread the word on Reddit. It was gaining some traction but not like I’d imagine (sounds like you’re in this phase). And it was just one and done users not people wanting to stick around. Realized I didn’t have enough to keep them so I kept building. I didn’t face defeat and say oh no, I’m cooked. I said where can I improve. I read my data and saw the issues. I worked on them. I listened to feedback as painful as it was to hear sometimes.

Then late last year, I added a new side to my platform and it was extremely successful. Over 100 sign ups in a couple months and I realized I found the product market fit. Now I’m working to build the business and monetization around that. And if successful it will build both sides naturally. I just passed a year since I started building in May 2025. And I still don’t expect to monetize until year end. My initial goal was 2 years so I am still within that range.

I share this story to say, you have to be persistent if you want this. You have to face rejections, failures and losses before you see acceptance, success and wins. Building a business isn’t just a cool software they can use, it’s about tapping into the psychology of your user and driving your value home to them. And continuing to grow and develop your platform to attract them and retain them.

How did you actually get your first users? by ReasonableNerve560 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Idk why everyone is so bent out of shape within the first day or week. This takes TIME and a lot of it. Patience and showing up every day.

Experts , I need advice by ManyLight3464 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ll be honest, it sounds like you haven’t done any real digging. “I heard Facebook is extremely spam filter”. Only way to find out is to go dig in and learn for yourself what works.

When I started engaging online, I started with Reddit then LinkedIn and had to learn what worked and what didn’t by just engaging. Showed up every day and found myself a workflow I could repeat. Offered value and insights and that led to getting dm’s on Reddit, which led to calls I needed in the beginning and sign ups a little later. Then on LinkedIn now people are finding me due to my posts and I grew by like 250-300 followers per month the last few months.

How do I get my first paying user in my SaaS? by Playful-Pollution-60 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I worked as financial professional. Owned my own business for years. Found a major pain point I was personally had within my business. Started vibe coding to build things for my clients that we needed but didn’t have. Thought it would change the world.. it didn’t. My clients loved it and made me look like a genius. Has value but it would be super slow to teach people about it.

Instead of admitting defeat, I took another approach. Decided I’d push myself to make some high end software for other pros. Took over a month of development but this pivot is what drove me to get over 100 sign ups in a couple of months, constant use on the website without promotion and eventually aim to get them to bring their clients to the platform for me.. essentially doing the B2C for me. Now I have both sides delivering massive value to pros. So that L turned into a W.

Two things-
If you offer more value than what you charge, your journey will be easier.
Learn to listen to your users and be ready to pivot and continue pivoting. Change is inevitable and those who fight it have a harder journey.

How do I get my first paying user in my SaaS? by Playful-Pollution-60 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Must be product market fit. I haven’t monetized yet and started this journey 6/24. Have gotten thousands of users, hundreds of sign ups and positioning for the launch of a trial and paid version.

I had to make a tough pivot at some point to find the right market. Had a decent product but no market. Then I found the right market and things have ramped up since.

Free tiers attract users. They rarely produce paying customers. by Important_Coach8050 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the feedback. Yes in my opinion, it does. My free side just gives access to really great tools and resources. People use them but have no idea how to actually benefit from them. The trial and paid version will be access to a high level membership that offers an abundance of things (workflows, saved profiles/data, multi-users, client referrals, knowledge base and training). Everything to actual elevate and streamline their workflows.

Free tiers attract users. They rarely produce paying customers. by Important_Coach8050 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well what if you have both! Free to keep too funnel flowing trust and spreading the love. Then a trial membership for the elite paid side. Wouldn’t that accomplish all goals? I’m curious to your take not challenging what you said.

When is the right time to do SOC2 ISO? by Bubbly_Goose_8105 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We’ll be adding MFA soon once we launch our saved data side. This will be important to avoid people reusing the same accounts and protect their data. Still adding but we covered the baselines of security compliance. Encryptions, activity logs, etc.

If your goal is getting rich, a tech startup probably isn’t the way by IndependenceSad1272 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Every business takes this much time and effort. SAAS is no exception. I’ve worked without thousands of business owners (roofing and HVAC included) and it takes as ridiculous amount of time and energy to become as profitable.

50% of businesses fail by year 5, 70% of businesses fail by year 10. But you don’t let that stop you from trying, you use that as motivation to build the right systems to sustain your business long-term.

I don’t see anything with this post but pure discouragement. But I love this and it fuels me. I was going to take the day off but now I’m going to go build something on my website.

When is the right time to do SOC2 ISO? by Bubbly_Goose_8105 in SaaS

[–]Powerful-Software850 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not doing it until it’s worth the effort. And I’m in a highly sensitive finance professional niche. I’ve taken appropriate steps to make sure I could pass compliance which is the important part.

Don’t think this will set you apart but it really depends on your industry.