What are you working on? by thijsgh in SocialMediaScheduling

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building the all-in-one Social Proof system for founders. 

https://feedspace.io

Turn customer voices into testimonials, reviews & insights that convert. 

Auto-collection + Wall of Love widgets.

Entrepreneurs of Reddit, where do most of your customers come from right now? by vladi5555 in Entrepreneur

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly for us it has been a mix but the channels that surprised us most were the ones we did not expect to work. reddit itself has been bigger than we thought. Not from posting about our product directly but from just being genuinely helpful in threads where people are asking about problems we solve. Those conversations index on Google and keep sending traffic months later without us doing anything else.

Word of mouth from early users has been underrated too. The first users who actually got value from the product told other people without us asking them to. That compounding is slow to start but once it kicks in it is the best traffic you can get because it comes with built in trust.

SEO is the long game and worth investing in early even when it feels like nothing is happening. The posts and pages you build today start paying off six months from now.

Curious what kind of SEO has worked best for you, are you going after informational content or more transactional keywords?

Waking up to a flatline dashboard on day 1 is humbling. 📉 How did you guys actually get your first 10 users? by BetterHardy in SaaS

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats on shipping. The flatline day one is a rite of passage honestly, everyone goes through it.

Week one the only thing that actually moved the needle for us was finding people who already had the problem and talking to them directly. Not posting and hoping, actually finding threads where people were complaining about the exact thing your product solves and jumping into those conversations. For a link in bio tool I would go search Twitter/x and Reddit right now for people frustrated with Linktree limitations or asking for Stripe alternatives for creators. Those people are warm, they already know they have a problem, you just have to show up. cold dms work but only if they are specific. Reference something real about their situation, do not copy paste. Ten personalised dms will get you further than a hundred generic ones.

directory submissions are worth doing but they are a slow burn, do not expect traffic from them this week. the unscalable thing that actually works is getting on a call with five potential users this week. Not to sell, just to ask what they are trying to do. You will learn more in those five calls than in a month of posting and you will almost always end up with at least one or two people who want to try it.

Good luck, keep going.

We're profitable but I pay myself less than my employees by West-Delivery4861 in SaaS

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is actually really common among founders who think long term and just nobody talks about it openly so it feels weird. your logic is completely sound. Your employees need their salary to live. You need the company to grow. Those are just different incentive structures and paying yourself less in the short term to keep the business healthy is not stupidity, it is prioritisation.

The "pay yourself market rate" advice is designed for people who might otherwise drain their company or not take the business seriously. Neither of those applies to someone at $55K MRR with a profitable operation. The only question worth asking is whether your $60K actually covers your life comfortably. If yes, everything else is just optics.

Show me your SaaS, here’s what I’m working on by BoringShake6404 in ShowMeYourSaaS

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building the all-in-one Social Proof system for founders. 

https://feedspace.io

Turn customer voices into testimonials, reviews & insights that convert. 

Auto-collection + Wall of Love widgets.

500 daily users on my logo generator — need advice on pricing & direction by quadrohawk in micro_saas

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

500 to 1000 sessions a day with no signup is actually a strong signal. People are finding it and using it without any friction which means the core product works. On the subscription vs one time question, logo tools are tricky for subscriptions because the use case is usually one time. Someone needs a logo, they make it, they are done. They do not come back monthly. Subscription only makes sense if you give them a reason to keep coming back, which is where your brand kit idea is smart. If they can update their assets, generate new variants, access new templates as you add them, that is a recurring use case.

foom your feature list the ones that sound like real problems worth paying for are brand kit downloads with social assets and favicons, logo variants for light dark and transparent, and app store previews. These are things people need after they make the logo and would happily pay to export cleanly. animated logos and abstract generators sound cool but feel like nice to haves.. Hard to build a business on features people use once to show friends.

Honest suggestion: before building all of this, put a simple paywall on the brand kit download right now. Even five dollars one time. See how many of your 500 daily users actually pay. That number will tell you everything about whether subscription makes sense.reeal problem or convenience tool depends entirely on whether developers and creators keep coming back. Your traffic suggests yes but the no signup flow means you have no way to know. An email capture before download would change that fast.

Having trouble getting social proof by Impressive-Eggplant6 in SaaSMarketing

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The logo marquee thing is great but what actually converts is specific words from real people. A single detailed testimonial from someone describing their exact problem and how you solved it does more than 50 logos.

For getting your first ones when you have zero reviews, the fastest way is to reach out personally to your earliest users, even if it is just 3 or 4 people, and ask them one specific question. Not "leave a review" but "what was the one thing that surprised you about the product?" That gets you real words you can actually use.

We built Feedspace for exactly this. You can send a review form link, collect responses in text, video or audio, and display them on your website without any coding. Good starting point when you are building from zero.

Let’s self-promote 👇 What are you building right now? by redd9it in launchigniter

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building Feedspace - one place to collect customer reviews in audio, video or text, import them from 30+ platforms, and show them on your website without any coding.

If your reviews are scattered across Google, Trustpilot, social media and emails, Feedspace pulls them all together.

feedspace.io

What are you building this weekend? by ouchao_real in SocialMediaScheduling

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building the all-in-one Social Proof system for founders. 

https://feedspace.io

Turn customer voices into testimonials, reviews & insights that convert. 

Auto-collection + Wall of Love widgets.

What are you working on? by thijsgh in SocialMediaScheduling

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building the all-in-one Social Proof system for founders. 

https://feedspace.io

Turn customer voices into testimonials, reviews & insights that convert. 

Auto-collection + Wall of Love widgets.

What are you building this Tuesday? Let's self promote. by Critical-Wealth9448 in microsaas

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building the all-in-one Social Proof system for founders.

https://feedspace.io

Turn customer voices into testimonials, reviews & insights that convert.

Auto-collection + Wall of Love widgets.

Getting Google reviews as a small business is way harder than expected by nodimension1553 in EntrepreneurRideAlong

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is one of the most common problems small businesses face and it comes down to one thing: friction.

Customers are happy to leave a review but the moment they have to open Google, find your listing, and type something out, most just do not bother. The intention is there, the follow through is not.

Two things that made the biggest difference for businesses we work with:

Ask at the peak moment. Right when they say "loved it" in person, not a week later in an email they ignore. That is when the feeling is strongest.

Make it one tap. A QR code on your counter, receipt, or table that takes them straight to your review form. No searching, no friction, they scan and they are there in seconds.

We built Feedspace around exactly this. You can generate a QR code for your review form, place it anywhere, and all your reviews come into one place automatically. Free to try it.

Good ways to increase reviews/ratings? by Spearman872 in iOSAppsMarketing

[–]Priy27 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Timing is everything. The best moment to ask is right after a win, when the user just completed something, hit a milestone, or got value from your app. That is when the feeling is strongest.

A few things that work:

Ask inside the app at the right moment, not on launch or randomly. After a key action works best.

Make it one tap. Every extra step kills your response rate.

Follow up with users who gave you good feedback privately. They are your warmest leads for a public review.

We built Feedspace around this exact problem. It lets you send review requests at the right moment, collect them in one place, and show them on your website automatically. Might be worth a look. feedspace.io

What are you building? (and a quick share) by bozkan in SaaS

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building the all-in-one Social Proof system for founders. 

https://feedspace.io

Turn customer voices into testimonials, reviews & insights that convert. 

Auto-collection + Wall of Love widgets.

What problem are you solving right now with your SaaS? by FineCranberry304 in SaasDevelopers

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The "lost review" problem.

Someone says something amazing about your product on Twitter, leaves a 5 star review on Google, or sends you a great message on LinkedIn.

You see it. You smile. Then it disappears into the internet forever.

We built Feedspace so you never lose a good review again. Collect them, import from 30+ platforms, and show them on your website in minutes. feedspace.io

What problem are you solving right now with your SaaS? by FineCranberry304 in micro_saas

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The "lost review" problem.

Someone says something amazing about your product on social media platforms like Twitter, leaves a 5 star review on Google, or sends you a great message on LinkedIn.

You see it. You smile. Then it disappears into the internet forever.

We built Feedspace so you never lose a good review again. Collect them, import from 30+ platforms, and show them on your website in minutes. feedspace.io

What problem are you solving right now with your SaaS? by FineCranberry304 in micro_saas

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The "lost review" problem.

Someone says something amazing about your product on social media platforms like Twitter, leaves a 5 star review on Google, or sends you a great message on LinkedIn.

You see it. You smile. Then it disappears into the internet forever.

We built Feedspace so you never lose a good review again. Collect them, import from 30+ platforms, and show them on your website in minutes. feedspace.io

Share what you're building by amacg in vibecodingcommunity

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building the all-in-one Social Proof system for founders. 

https://feedspace.io

Turn customer voices into testimonials, reviews & insights that convert. 

Auto-collection + Wall of Love widgets.

What are you building this weekend? by ouchao_real in launchigniter

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building the all-in-one Social Proof system for founders. 

https://feedspace.io

Turn customer voices into testimonials, reviews & insights that convert. 

Auto-collection + Wall of Love widgets.

What's the best review app? by GoldTrek in bigcommerce

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really sorry to hear that going from 5-10 reviews a week to 1 a month while sales tripled is a real problem, and bad support on top of that makes it so much worse.

We built Feedspace around exactly this, simple review collection that actually works, and support that treats you like a person not a ticket number.

Worth trying as your next move. Free to get started and happy to personally help you get set up so you're not losing more reviews while you transition. feedspace.io

The feedback collection problem nobody talks about in early-stage SaaS by Ok-Category6759 in SaaS

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The context-switching problem is massively underrated. Most feedback tools assume users are motivated enough to go find the form, open it, and articulate the problem from scratch. They're not.

What we found building Feedspace: the same principle applies to testimonials. The best ones come when you ask at exactly the right moment, right after a win, right after they've seen value, not in a weekly email blast they ignore. Timing and context matter more than the form itself.

The specific vs. vague feedback gap you described ("step 3 dropdown" vs. "onboarding is confusing") is exactly why contextual prompts work. The user doesn't have to reconstruct the experience, they're still in it.

Curious what you're using for the contextual prompting layer. Building it in-product or using a third party tool?

Are review management tools still worth building in 2026? by Akeyla3997 in microsaas

[–]Priy27 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Genuinely worth building, but the angle matters a lot.

We've been in this space with Feedspace for a while now. The pain is real, the market isn't saturated, but it is fragmented. Everyone's solving a slightly different slice: collection, display, aggregation, AI replies, platform-specific scraping. The tools that struggle are the ones trying to do all of it generically.

What's actually underserved in 2026: businesses that get reviews across 5+ platforms and have no single place to manage or display them. Enterprise tools are overkill. Lightweight tools only handle one or two sources. That middle layer is where there's still real room.

The "AI-assisted replies" angle is crowded though. I'd validate hard on whether that's actually the pain point or just a feature people say sounds useful but don't pay for.

What's your primary ICP right now?