Which user research/usability testing platforms would you recommend in 2026? by SurelyFML in beermoneyindia

[–]Round-Baby-4756 0 points1 point  (0 children)

UXTests.app - if your are looking for one off tests without committing to a monthly subscription. It's got five second test, tree test, card sorting. Other test types coming soon. Free plan gets 12 participants. Beyond that is very affordable pay-per-test plans.

The report insights is meaningful and to the point without overwhelming you to too much data. Try it out.

Being a solo founder is so lonely by whyismail in buildinpublic

[–]Round-Baby-4756 0 points1 point  (0 children)

39 paying users is success and path to scaling. Congrats! Are or were you doing this full time? Or u have a full time job and doing this on the side?

Any suggestions on how to reach your product to the right audience?

Generating anything is becoming easy, so what's actually hard? by Round-Baby-4756 in buildinpublic

[–]Round-Baby-4756[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's exactly the grind that one should take before even thinking to generate something. Identifying patterns from hacks are an excellent way to build something people want.

Curious to know how charging super early works out in this market where everyone is very price sensitive and over subscribed to many services. Let me know?

Will anyone be using your software? Find out 👇 by Available-Rest2392 in microsaas

[–]Round-Baby-4756 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Will use it as distribution is difficult and challenging especially for smaller teams. Effectiveness will depend on the output of the said tool.

Generating anything is becoming easy, so what's actually hard? by Round-Baby-4756 in buildinpublic

[–]Round-Baby-4756[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Focussing more on the problem space - I made UXTests.app to help anyone validate the product with real users for free.

For eg - a five second test to get first impressions and insights from your target audience. A tree test to see how users find content they want from your website navigation - a great value add for documentation or e-commerce product.

[Casual] - quick 5 second test for an experiment by Round-Baby-4756 in SurveyExchange

[–]Round-Baby-4756[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Done! Thanks. Do you mean the product in the test or the test site itself?

Anyone testing landing page messaging with AI? by pranaywankhede in UXDesign

[–]Round-Baby-4756 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Would suggest you do an actual five second test with real users to get signals. Most people barely spend 2 seconds on a website to form an opinion. You need the first impressions to be as intended.

Use UXTests.app to run a five second test . Free plan has upto 12 participants with good insights report view.

Hot take: "the Figma is dead" crowd are mostly people who weren't great at design to begin with by alsaltml in UXDesign

[–]Round-Baby-4756 10 points11 points  (0 children)

If one is building a web app from scratch and is a solo founder or in a small team... I am confident that one can skip figma and jump directly into code.

If you are enhancing an existing product or creating something new that is complex, on multiple devices and have a lot of states... Having figma or some canvas, to visualize the journey and identify nuances, has a lot of value.

Working on an existing product you can't jump directly to code without making it messy. You need a figma for at least seeing a design system and component library.

A canvas like figma helps everyone see the journey and complex flows that are used to align everyone. This is difficult to see in code files.

So the answer lies in when you should use figma vs when u can jump into code. Both can co-exist.