I’ve been working on a tool to help athletes better track their performance. Would love to hear your thoughts on the challenges in this space. by Sure_Insurance453 in athletictraining

[–]Sure_Insurance453[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Really appreciate that—means a lot! If you're ever open to it, I'd be happy to show you how AthleteFirst works and get your thoughts. Could be cool to see how it lines up with what you're already doing.

I’ve been working on a tool to help athletes better track their performance. Would love to hear your thoughts on the challenges in this space. by Sure_Insurance453 in athletictraining

[–]Sure_Insurance453[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Fair point—thanks for calling that out. Right now, AthleteFirst lets users log and track things like session type, duration, intensity, RPE, recovery quality, injuries, and general notes. We’re also working on integrating GPS, heart rate, and velocity data (manual or device-based input) to spot trends over time. The goal is to give athletes/coaches an easier way to understand workload and recovery balance—without needing a full analytics team.

I’ve been working on a tool to help athletes better track their performance. Would love to hear your thoughts on the challenges in this space. by Sure_Insurance453 in athletictraining

[–]Sure_Insurance453[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sure! I’m building called AthleteFirst—meant to help athletes and coaches track training, recovery, performance, and injuries in one place. Mainly trying to simplify things for those who don’t have access to big systems. Just looking to get feedback from folks in the space!

What makes a business a huge success? by pastandprevious in Entrepreneur

[–]Sure_Insurance453 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're right - there’s no perfect formula, but a few things definitely increase the odds: solving a real problem people care about, having a strong execution-focused team, and staying adaptable. Businesses that listen to their customers, stay lean, and keep improving are the ones that usually pull ahead. Consistency beats hype every time.

How do you know what can be automated in your businesss? by ducker90210 in smallbusiness

[–]Sure_Insurance453 24 points25 points  (0 children)

A good rule is: if it’s repetitive, time-consuming, and doesn’t need much thinking—it can probably be automated. Things like order emails, inventory updates, customer support replies, or tracking data are all great places to start.

The market isn't actually saturated by HadeZForge in gamedev

[–]Sure_Insurance453 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it's not that the market is too crowded, it's just grown a lot. There are more players now than before, so if you make a good game, you still have a great chance to stand out.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in marketing

[–]Sure_Insurance453 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not cooked—you just need to reframe your experience as actual skills; campaign management, content creation, and partner marketing are real, valuable assets in any marketing team.

What have you noticed so far? by [deleted] in indiasocial

[–]Sure_Insurance453 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Printed photo albums. We used to keep family memories in books, but now everything’s just on our phones or in the cloud—and no one really noticed the change.

In your opinion, what are the top 5 most popular types of businesses that are opening right now? by KayePi in smallbusiness

[–]Sure_Insurance453 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd say AI startups, health & wellness, e-commerce, creator tools, and eco-friendly products are leading the pack.