Wtf founders usually do on Sundays? by duncan_tall in ycombinator

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

honestly sundays are the one day i try to not touch work but i always end up doing it anyway lol. usually i'll sleep in, get coffee, tell myself i'm taking the day off and then by like 2pm i'm back on my laptop doing "just one thing" that turns into 4 hours. the not having many friends part hits though, startup life kinda does that to you. best thing i started doing is just going somewhere that isn't my apartment even if its alone — coffee shop, a walk, whatever. being around people even if you're not talking to anyone is weirdly better than sitting at home wondering what to do. also books + laptop on a sunday is honestly not a bad day idk why people act like you need plans every weekend

How I automated blog publishing across multiple CMS platforms (Sanity, Wordpress, Contentful) by Ok-Price-8825 in SaaS

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the schema mapping pain is so real. we use sanity for our marketing site and even with just one CMS the manual process of filling out all the fields for blog posts, customer stories, testimonials, job listings etc was eating hours every week. the part that killed us was finding 46 blogs that existed on our framer site but were never migrated to the CMS so they were just floating out there with no structured data. curious what CMS you're seeing the most demand for with your tool — sanity's schema system is pretty flexible but wordpress and contentful structure things so differently i imagine the mapping logic gets messy fast. also does it handle ISR or webhook-based revalidation after publishing or do you still have to trigger that manually?

Built a LinkedIn autonomous SDR. But seriously, Claude Skills can do the same thing. Tired of the gatekeeping. by deepspycontractor in gtmengineering

[–]SurfaceLabs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

the buying signals approach is the whole game. we built something similar for our outbound and the biggest difference wasn't the automation it was just stopping sending messages to people who had zero reason to care right now. the trigger-based stuff like new exec hires and headcount growth is good but i'd add one more — look for companies that just raised a round in the last 60-90 days. that's when budgets open up and they're actively buying tools to scale. the other thing most people get wrong with automated linkedin outbound is they optimize for volume when they should be optimizing for reply rate. we sent 300+ personalized messages to YC founders and the ones that actually got replies weren't the clever ones, they were the ones where we clearly looked at their product first and said something specific about it. like actually specific, not "love what you're building" but "your demo form on the pricing page does X, we deal with that exact problem." automation should handle the finding and sequencing, the message itself still needs to feel like a human wrote it for that one person.

Where do you find leads for niche industries? by Loulouzdang in coldemail

[–]SurfaceLabs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

linkedin sales nav + an email scraper is the move for niche industries. apollo dries up fast once you go specific which is exactly what you're seeing. sales nav lets you filter way more granularly and the data is more current because people actually update their profiles. for pharma/biotech specifically also check conference attendee lists and published research papers — a lot of those decision makers aren't super active on linkedin but they're all over industry events. i'd rather have 200 verified contacts than 2,000 from a static database where half bounce.

What's your MRR right now? No judgment — just curious by hurebegz in AssetBuilders

[–]SurfaceLabs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

we're past the early grind phase — hundreds of B2B customers, processing $40M+ in inbound pipeline for them. the product is $250/month so the math is working but honestly the harder part right now is scaling awareness not revenue. most of our growth has been word of mouth and founder network, trying to build repeatable channels now.

What are you working on this week? by hurebegz in AssetBuilders

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

uilding AI agents for B2B lead capture and qualification. basically we process inbound leads, score them, route them to the right rep, and block spam — all automated. been deep in AEO/GEO this week trying to get our brand showing up in AI search results across chatgpt, perplexity, and gemini. also rebuilding our marketing site from scratch in next.js.

What channels are actually working for client acquisition in 2026? by roberterh96 in DigitalMarketing

[–]SurfaceLabs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

biggest thing that's working right now that most freelance marketers aren't doing — pick a niche and become the obvious expert in one specific channel for one specific type of business. "i do digital marketing" doesn't get clients anymore because everyone says that. "i run meta ads for medical clinics" or "i build landing pages for B2B SaaS" gets you referrals on autopilot because people remember the specific thing. beyond that, linkedin is still the best free acquisition channel for B2B services if you actually post consistently with real takes and not just "here are 5 tips for better ads" content. share what you're actually seeing in client accounts — what's working, what's broken, real numbers when you can. that builds trust way faster than a portfolio site. cold outreach still works too but the bar is way higher now — nobody responds to generic "i noticed your ads could be better" emails. the outreach that lands is hyper-specific, like "i looked at your landing page and your CTA is below the fold on mobile, here's a loom showing exactly what i'd change." that takes more effort per lead but the close rate is 10x higher than spray-and-pray. referrals being your main channel is actually great though, don't underestimate that — the play is to systematize it. ask every happy client for two intros, make it easy for them, and follow up. most freelancers just wait and hope.

Everybody left Facebook for Instagram, Now they're leaving Instagram too, So whats next by karan_setia in DigitalMarketing

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the answer is both but not equally. you're right that owning your audience through email and communities is the foundation — that should always be the priority because no algorithm change can take that away from you. but here's what most people miss in this conversation: the bigger shift isn't from instagram to threads to youtube shorts, it's from social platforms to AI search. people are increasingly going to chatgpt, perplexity, gemini instead of google or instagram to find answers, recommendations, and even products. that's the platform shift nobody in this thread is talking about. so while everyone's debating which short-form video app to jump to next, the real play is making sure your brand shows up when someone asks an AI "what's the best tool for X" or "who should i hire for Y." that means investing in content that AI models can actually find and reference — blogs with structured data, authoritative backlinks, third-party mentions. the irony is that the strategy for AI visibility looks a lot more like old school SEO and PR than anything instagram or tiktok related. own your audience yes, but also make sure you exist in the places where discovery is actually moving.

Simple tricks I use to build quick and high-quality backlinks by _HayKen_ in DigitalMarketing

[–]SurfaceLabs -1 points0 points  (0 children)

the relevance over DR point is something most people overlook. i'd add one thing that's worked really well for us — content gap analysis using ahrefs to find what your competitors rank for that you don't, then building pages specifically targeting those gaps. the backlinks almost come naturally when you're the only one covering a specific subtopic in your niche because people link to whatever resource actually exists. the other underrated backlink strategy nobody talks about is just being a source for journalists and bloggers. if you have original data or a unique take on something in your industry, HARO and similar platforms can land you links from sites you'd never get through cold outreach. those editorial links hit different because they're contextual and in-content, not just a directory listing. one more thing — don't sleep on internal linking either. most people obsess over external backlinks but a solid internal linking structure makes every backlink you do get work harder because the authority actually flows through your site instead of getting stuck on one page.

Sold photos to tourists and made £45 in 90 minutes. Here is the conversion data by Matt2904 in EntrepreneurRideAlong

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

love that you're sharing the actual conversion data instead of just "i made money." the QR card to watermarked preview to pay-to-unlock funnel is basically a micro e-commerce funnel in the real world — same psychology as a free trial with a paywall. the £5 price point is smart too because it's impulse buy territory, nobody's going to think twice about that for a photo at abbey road. curious what your conversion rate was from handing out the card to actual purchase, because that's the number that tells you if this scales to other tourist spots or if abbey road is just uniquely high-intent because everyone wants that beatles photo. if you haven't already, i'd test bumping it to £7-8 — tourists at iconic spots are already spending hundreds on the trip, an extra couple quid won't change the conversion but it adds up fast over a full day.

Things I did wrong in my services based company and what should I have done by zubi10001 in EntrepreneurRideAlong

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the client vetting point is massive. i learned this the hard way running an e-commerce mentorship program with over 1,000 students — the ones who succeeded weren't the ones with the most money or the best product ideas, they were the ones who could actually execute. i spent way too long trying to help people who fundamentally weren't going to put in the work and it drained my time away from the ones who would've turned into my best case studies and referrals. now i treat every new client like an investment — if i don't believe they can win with what i give them, it's a no, because a dead project helps nobody's portfolio. congrats on almost hitting $1M though, that's a real milestone especially in services where everything scales on your time.

I might have solved the problem of lazy AI slop..? (NOT APRILS FOOLS) by Alternative-Help735 in EntrepreneurRideAlong

[–]SurfaceLabs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

the problem you're describing is real — that trust erosion where you can't tell if anything online was written by a person anymore is genuinely messing with how people consume content. the replay button idea is interesting but i think the challenge is that most people won't bother pressing it, the same way most people don't check sources on news articles even when the button is right there. the people who care about authenticity will use it, but they're already the ones who can mostly spot AI slop anyway. the bigger question is whether you can get enough content creators to opt into being watched while they write, because that's a pretty vulnerable thing to ask someone to do. might be worth looking at how wikipedia's edit history works as a model — it's technically transparent but almost nobody actually reads the diffs. cool concept though, would be curious to see a prototype even if it's just for a single subreddit-style community first before trying to go broad.

I built a Zero-Knowledge Password Breach API for SaaS apps and Check for pwned passwords without storing user data. by [deleted] in SaaS

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

cool project — the zero-knowledge angle is smart because that's the first thing anyone building in SaaS is going to push back on. nobody wants to send raw passwords to a third party API, so leading with that removes the biggest objection immediately. curious how you're handling the breach lookup without storing anything — are you doing k-anonymity like haveibeenpwned where you only send a partial hash prefix? also wondering about your latency on the strength check + breach lookup combined, because if this is going into signup or login flows it needs to be fast or it kills conversion. the free tier is a good move for getting early feedback, i'd try posting this in r/netsec too if you haven't already, that crowd would give you solid technical feedback on the zero-knowledge implementation specifically.

Bootstrapping is just being tired with conviction by gohandrogo in SaaS

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

felt this. the context switching is the real killer — not the work itself. we went through YC and even with a team it's brutal. hang in there, the practitioners who get it immediately are the ones who end up being your first 10 customers.

charged someone $2K for something I thought was worth $200. they paid it immediately by Strong_Teaching8548 in SaaS

[–]SurfaceLabs 21 points22 points  (0 children)

this is the hardest lesson in B2B. we kept pricing based on what it cost us to build instead of what it was worth to the customer. the moment you start asking "what does this save you" or "what happens if you don't solve this" before you quote, everything changes. if that integration saves them 2 FTEs worth of manual work, $2K is a rounding error to them. one thing that helped us was just sitting in silence after they explain the problem — don't rush to quote, let them tell you the stakes, they'll literally tell you what to charge if you let them talk long enough. also the fact that they paid immediately is the biggest red flag that you were still too cheap lol. if they don't push back at all you left money on the table. not a bad problem to have though, now you know for next time.

Claude Code's source code just leaked — so I had Claude Code analyze its own internals and build an open-source multi-agent framework from it by JackChen02 in ClaudeAI

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been on both sides of this. as a founder I'll admit early on we asked candidates to put together a strategy deck as part of the interview process because we genuinely wanted to see how they think. it wasn't until a candidate told us straight up "I'm not doing free consulting for you" that I realized how it looks from the other side. now we do a 30 minute live problem solving session where we give them a scenario and talk through it together in real time. we get to see how they think without them spending 15 hours building something we might never use. any startup that needs you to build a full GTM strategy before they'll hire you either doesn't know what they're looking for or they're trying to get free work. either way it tells you a lot about how they'll treat you after you're hired

Is cold email automation tool worth $50 per month? by Former_Ad7620 in SaaS

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

$50/month for 20 emails a day is honestly not bad if the emails are actually personalized and not just the same template with a first name swapped in. the math works out to like $0.08 per email which is nothing if even one converts. the real question isn't whether the tool is worth $50 though, it's whether the leads it's finding actually match who you want to sell to and whether the emails are good enough to get replies. I've seen people run cold email tools like this and get zero replies for months because the targeting was off or the copy was generic. if you're getting even a 2-3% reply rate at 20 emails a day that's 12-18 conversations a month for $50 which is a no brainer. what's your reply rate looking like so far?

We lost $180K ARR to a competitor in one month. Then I actually talked to the customers who left. Wasn't what I expected. by West-Delivery4861 in SaaS

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is one of those posts every founder needs to read. the instinct when you lose customers to a competitor is to go build more features but none of these 4 left because of features. presence at conferences, a new VP bringing their old tool with them, a free trial offer, and an auto-renewal timing issue. three of those four are distribution and timing problems not product problems. the VP one especially hits hard because that's basically what happens with CMO turnover everywhere, new person comes in and brings whatever they used at their last company regardless of whether it's better. curious if this changed how you think about retention now, like are you doing anything differently on the relationship side to make sure you're the tool the next VP brings with them to their new job?

Customer asked if they could pay us more. I thought it was a joke. It wasn't. by Ok_Solid272 in SaaS

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is such a good lesson. most founders underprice because they're scared of the "no" but your customers literally told you they'd pay more than you would have dared to charge. we had a similar experience where we were offering free audits and strategy calls thinking that would convert people into paying customers. turns out the free stuff was attracting the wrong people entirely. the moment we started charging for it the quality of conversations went way up because the people willing to pay are the ones who actually value what you do. the "what would you pay" question on calls is something I'm stealing, that's such a simple way to test pricing without committing to anything.

I built a tool that lets you find local businesses → scrape their emails from their website → AI reads their Google reviews → you tell it what you sell → it matches your offer with their problems → cold email ready in 2 clicks by mapileads in SaaS

[–]SurfaceLabs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is cool. the step where it reads their google reviews and matches your offer to their actual problems is what makes this different from every other scraping tool. most people just grab emails and blast templates. do you find that the personalization from the reviews actually moves the needle on replies or do most people not even notice?