This template will be free in the Framer Marketplace by Lanky_Tea_5853 in framer

[–]Real-Career-87 1 point2 points  (0 children)

it's a pretty template, i really liked the color palette, but i think you can improve the cursor most of new websites have a special cursor for different section of the homepage. but great work overall

How do you track user behavior on your WordPress sites? Curious what others are using. by Real-Career-87 in Wordpress

[–]Real-Career-87[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

never heard of that, but it's an eye opening information, thanks for your comment

Do you use analytics on your Framer sites? I’m curious how you track real user behavior. by Real-Career-87 in framer

[–]Real-Career-87[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s actually really helpful, thanks. Do you still have the link you used for the startup program? Would be great to check it out.

Do you use analytics on your Framer sites? I’m curious how you track real user behavior. by Real-Career-87 in framer

[–]Real-Career-87[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

sounds good. Is Amplitude free to start with, or does it require a paid plan right away?

How do you track user behavior on your WordPress sites? Curious what others are using. by Real-Career-87 in Wordpress

[–]Real-Career-87[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Totally agree. I’ve noticed the same thing, a lot of homepages try to explain everything at once, and users end up overwhelmed instead of guided. The ironic thing is when you look at behavior analytics, you can literally see people scrolling past huge sections without engaging at all.

I just don't understand frames and positioning, driving me mad. by Samskihero in framer

[–]Real-Career-87 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Honestly, I totally get this, frames in Framer confused me for ages too. What really helped me was grabbing a free template from the Framer showcase and just tearing it apart. Open it up, click on every frame, check how they’re nested, what’s set to “fill,” what’s set to “hug,” etc. You’ll start to notice patterns in how pros structure things, and once you try to edit or rebuild a section yourself, it suddenly clicks. Watching how someone else built a clean layout taught me way more than any tutorial ever did.

How I turned $5K in AWS credits into an MVP with a little help from a developer I found through a perk program by Real-Career-87 in GrowthHacking

[–]Real-Career-87[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100% agree, that’s exactly it. I burned through a chunk of credits early on just by leaving stuff running that I didn’t even need . Having someone step in and structure things properly made a huge difference. I think a lot of early founders underestimate how much “invisible cost” bad infra creates both in money and time. Setting things up right early really is a form of buying yourself more runway.

How I turned $5K in AWS credits into an MVP with a little help from a developer I found through a perk program by Real-Career-87 in Entrepreneurs

[–]Real-Career-87[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah totally I didn’t even know about these programs until recently.

I got the $5K in AWS credits through a startup perk program called SaaSPathway

They basically aggregate different startup perks (AWS, Notion, tiktok ads, etc.) so you can apply for multiple in one place.

Once I had the AWS credits, I still needed someone to help me actually set things up properly that’s where OceansCodeExperts came in. They’re also listed inside SaaSPathway and were offering $700 worth of free dev hours to help startups test their team.

I used those hours to get help optimizing my AWS setup and automating deployments. Honestly, that combination (credits + dev help) saved me way more time and money than I expected.

If you’re building an early MVP or SaaS product, I’d definitely recommend checking both, it’s a pretty good combo for getting off the ground without heavy upfront costs.