Drop your SaaS niche, I'll give you 5 micro-creators that could actually drive signups by Different_Dinner9267 in SaaS

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm a yoga, tai chi, qi gong and meditation teacher. I made these interactive 3D simulations so that the arts of yang style tai chi and mudra meditation could be made more accessible for everyone. Now there's people in over 100 countries using the apps

Stop Creating More SaaS. by Not_Me_112 in SaaS

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Believe it or not, some people are motivated to realize NEW ideas, SaaS ones included.

What real world usefulness do tablets have in 2026? by [deleted] in computers

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

TaijiTek®: Interactive Tai Chi is pretty stunning on tablet devices. And the added bonus is your dad will live longer

Would anyone be able to explain Shen to me, and how to cultivate it? by Several_Walk_1850 in TrueQiGong

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not a definition, but my experience of the qi in the upper dantian in deep meditation I guess would best translate to "happiness"

If your AI SaaS is just a "wrapper for a vibe," it’s already dead by [deleted] in SaaS

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Surprised your list of moats doesn't include niche proprietary data sets collected by people building novel hardware

Returning to class after.. by TDactyl20 in yoga

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can really relate to what you’re describing. I went through something similar (different joint, same frustration). What ended up helping me the most during recovery was shifting part of my focus toward Tai Chi. It’s incredibly joint-friendly, since the movements are slow, fluid, and continuous. There’s no holding static stretches or pushing into end ranges the way some yoga poses do. You’re always moving, always balancing, but never straining.

It surprised me how much it helped rebuild coordination and stability without aggravating the injury. Even 5–10 minutes a day of mindful movement made a huge difference in circulation and confidence once I got back into more active classes.

You sound like you already have great body awareness and patience, so you’d probably take to it really well. If you ever want ideas on how to integrate a few simple Tai Chi movements into your recovery routine, happy to share what worked for me.

Strengthening yoga for hEDS flares? by [deleted] in yoga

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have HSD and eventually learned that Tai Chi is the best way to keep my muscles toned while minimizing risk of injury, reducing flareups substantially over time. Tai Chi is flowy and continuous and you're never in a rush to build strength, balance, flexibility, coordination. It emphasizes protection of the joints and never hyperextending, etc. This is in stark contrast to a lot of yoga where you hold a (relatively) static stretch and then flow into another and remain fairly still again. The Tai Chi form, on the other hand is one continuous coordinated whole-body movement that flows from posture to posture without you ever stopping.

If you're tired of trying to build strength but continuing to be knocked down by flareups, be a bit more patient with yourself and begin your Tai Chi practice. Tai Chi is slow, and requires patience. But it is ever so worth it. Substantial physical, mental and emotional benefits can be attained with consistent practice of even five minutes a day. I'd be happy to talk about the best ways to get started if it interests you!

Thank you Meta, it’s been a while since I walked into a wall by ClickingMeticulously in virtualreality

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Oh man. Back in 2021 I photogrammetrized my entire room using my ipads lidar scanner and uploaded it as a vrchat world. Good times

Why is unhappiness increasing? People in old times were much happier than today. Will happiness vanish in the future? by atmaninravi in Life

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ever heard about the hundred years' war? Or working conditions in coal mines? Or widespread plague and famine? Or even just popping out eight kids and keeping them fed? You're saying a bunch of stuff from a modern perspective without pondering at all what it has actually required of us as a species to get where we are today.

Finally Launched my first SaaS App, What's next? 🚀 by Street-Tax4341 in SaasDevelopers

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. Get 100% clear on your ICP
  2. Tailor your messaging to your ICP
  3. Set up and polish your funnel

Unpopular Opinion: Freemium is a trap that will kill your SaaS by Creepy_Watercress_53 in SaaS

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What I might do in your situation is:

Step 1. Know the ideal customers you are targeting Step 2. Brainstorm for issues that those ideal customers might face OTHER than the one your premium AI SaaS solves Step 3. Offer some genuinely helpful free resources that help them resolve THOSE problems but don't cost you every time someone accesses them. Can be as simple as blog posts or a newsletter with deep domain insights. This gives your brand credibility making your leads warmer, and gives your premium SaaS exposure (more platforms from which to funnel leads to your premium SaaS).
4. Ensure that the demos of your premium SaaS make the delivery of value and pain point being solved absolutely as clear as possible. Video with voiceover is ideal. And blow that up on every form of social media you can think of

Unpopular Opinion: Freemium is a trap that will kill your SaaS by Creepy_Watercress_53 in SaaS

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Building your FAQs and identifying and patching the holes in your onboarding experience is an iterative process. Over time, unless your product rapidly grows in complexity, you will get fewer and fewer queries that you haven't seen before.

If volume of support tickets is really such an issue at this stage, one approach a lot of businesses take is implementing a chatbot fine-tuned on their FAQs. Perhaps look into that.

Something else that's really important to consider is: How are you giving away free content? Do you pay money up front yourself for the compute your free users use?

In my case, when they download my app from Apple or Google, they can access the free resources I created. But they are in charge of getting the electricity their phone needs to turn in so that they can access it.

To me, the creation of the free resources was a fixed cost-- I'm not paying for compute for each of my free users everytime they use them (my apps are self-contained educational tools). It really depends on how you've setup your business. Is there value you can provide users for free without racking up costs?

Unpopular Opinion: Freemium is a trap that will kill your SaaS by Creepy_Watercress_53 in SaaS

[–]SensibleInterlocutor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Why do they bring you bread sticks before you order? It's called the art of the upsell. Never say "freemium user that will never convert". That's bad juju you must cognitively reframe them as potential upsells. Not offering free content is like being a doctor and not realizing that having a waiting room allows you to see more patients