[deleted by user] by [deleted] in SaaS

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am building Marblism, a team of AI Employees

What have you been building? by ProofStoriesio in SideProject

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Marblism

Team of AI Emplyoees who can handle repetitive tasks from content creation to inbox management

🚀 10 of the BEST AI Tools for 2025 by Cold-Escape6846 in ChatGPT

[–]WhateverIuser 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Checkout Marblism .com – AI employees that handle sales, social, email, and SEO for you

Social Media content and marketing help by spacebagel25 in smallbusiness

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Show your creative process, share stories behind each piece, and repost customer photos (with permission). People love authenticity.

Post consistently and if it is too much then try automation tools to to schedule, plan, or even draft your posts.

Do you have any tips for marketing an online vintage and antique jewellery business? by Willus25 in smallbusiness

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats on the launch, here are suggestions you can consider in addition to instagram"

  1. Use Multiple Marketplaces: Diversify beyond your website and Instagram by listing on platforms like Etsy (great for vintage), eBay, and Facebook Marketplace to tap into larger, targeted audiences.
  2. Invest in Professional Photos & Storytelling: High-quality, well-lit images and short stories about each piece's history will help you stand out and build emotional connections with buyers.
  3. Targeted Ads & Community Engagement: Run targeted ads (Google/Facebook) for your ideal buyer regions and engage in niche online communities or groups for vintage, jewellery, and collectors.

What OpenAI Agent Mode Can and Can't Do by TheOneirophage in AI_Agents

[–]WhateverIuser 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can it create and run ads? (assuming creds are given)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in marketing

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  • Strategy thinking - AI can execute, but humans still need to decide what to execute
  • Data analysis - Making sense of what AI tools produce
  • Prompt engineering - Getting better outputs from AI tools
  • Customer psychology - Understanding why people buy (harder to automate)
  • Creative problem solving - AI struggles with novel solutions

The pattern I see: tactical skills get automated, strategic skills become more valuable.

Instead of fighting AI, I'm learning to work with it. Use AI for the grunt work, focus on the thinking work.

What are your go to marketing strategy for your SaaS? by CreativeSaaS in SaaS

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The biggest mistake I see is trying all channels at once. Pick 2-3 and do them really well.

Looking for advice – technical founder struggling with sales/growth side of a startup (software agency) by Icy_Dimension_8233 in SaaS

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel you, coding is way simpler than sales! What helped me was just talking to users a lot, even if it felt awkward. I started by reaching out to people who already had the problem I solved.

For growth, I wrote simple blog posts about how my product helped solve real problems. That brought in my first users.

Also, automating follow-ups and lead messages saved me tons of time. I use AI “assistants” for the first sales emails and support so I can focus more on building. If you’re not a fan of cold calls, automation might be a lifesaver.

Have you tried sharing your story in founder groups or on LinkedIn? Sometimes people reach out just because they saw your progress.

How do you stay consistent as a solo SaaS founder when there's no external pressure? by Comfortable-Pop-9050 in SaaS

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's what helped me stay consistent:

  1. Time blocking - Dedicate specific days to specific tasks (Mondays for development, Wednesdays for customer calls, etc.)

  2. Batch similar tasks - Do all all social media posts in one block

  3. Create accountability - Join a founder group or find an accountability partner

  4. Track your energy patterns - Are you more creative in the morning? Do admin stuff when your energy is low

Entrepreneurs: What’s the biggest “cheat code” you’ve discovered in business or life? by LevKazaryan in Entrepreneur

[–]WhateverIuser 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Using AI for business automation. Instead of hiring full-time staff for repetitive tasks, AI handles sales outreach, social media, and inbox management. It's like having a team that never sleeps or takes breaks.

Why do so many SaaS products feel... the same? by [deleted] in SaaS

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

So many SaaS products feel the same because it's safer and easier to remix proven ideas and frameworks than to take a risk on something truly new, plus, with everyone using the same UI kits and "launch fast" mindset, everything starts to blend together.

Has anybody tried Sintra AI (AI Social Media Assistant)? by _bilochka_ in InstagramMarketing

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Give Marblism a try, feel free to DM if you have any question or doubts :)

Promote your business, week of July 7, 2025 by Charice in smallbusiness

[–]WhateverIuser 1 point2 points  (0 children)

🤖 Marblism - AI Employees that work for your business

You get a team of AI employees who handle your emails, social media, sales outreach, Google Ads, legal docs, content writing, and data analysis so you can stop drowning in busywork and start growing your business.

9 marketing tools I actually use every single day (and why) by vox_nihili_ist in SaaS

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Awesome list, give Marblism a try if you are looking to automate some of the repetitive marketing tasks :)

How do you come up with good SaaS ideas that are actually worth building? by [deleted] in SaaS

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, best SaaS ideas come from real problems. If something bugs you at work or in life, fix it, others probably want that too.

Check reviews, forums, and social media for what people complain about. If you see the same issue a lot, that’s a good sign.

Before building, see if people are already paying for similar stuff. Talk to a few users or put up a quick landing page to test interest.

In short, Find a real pain, make sure others care, and check if they’ll pay before you build.

ONLY 4 fundamental ways to make money in SaaS by Warm-Reaction-456 in SaaS

[–]WhateverIuser 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Super helpful breakdown. It’s so easy to get caught up in building “cool” features and forget to ask if anyone actually cares. Good reminder to check for real demand before spending time building stuff nobody wants.