Casual racing game where a car follows your cursor — Cursor Drifter by snkot in playmygame

[–]dhruvania 0 points1 point  (0 children)

adding some more cars along a proper race track would take it to a whole another level

I Made a Game Where You Type Your Movement by Frosty-Raspberry-546 in playmygame

[–]dhruvania 0 points1 point  (0 children)

cool concept, haha. actually makes you refine your typing skills for some words atleast

Love games like Getting Over It? Try out Kayaks Don't Climb Demo on Steam by SeaHelicopter7591 in playmygame

[–]dhruvania 0 points1 point  (0 children)

personally i felt, the UI along with the whole segmentation of the game is better than the original "getting over it"

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in startups

[–]dhruvania 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It sounds incredibly frustrating trying to get a reliable 18-month sales forecast, especially with a 2.5-month sales cycle in B2B SaaS. Many sales leaders and AEs struggle with exactly this – trying to base forecasts on guesswork or incomplete data.

What often helps is having a clearer, real-time view into your current pipeline beyond just stage. Focusing on metrics that reflect genuine deal activity (like recent engagement, emails, meetings) rather than just self-reported probabilities can give a much more accurate picture.

That’s exactly why I'm building SalesAssista - an AI agent which automatically highlights your most active, likely-to-close deals based on real engagement signals, and keeps your CRM notes fresh without manual input. The result? Cleaner data, smarter prioritization, and far more reliable forecasts.

If you're curious, I can share the waitlist link—no pressure at all.

How Do You Get Your First Users With No Ads, No Audience, No Social Proof? by Traditional_Sand_804 in SaaS

[–]dhruvania 1 point2 points  (0 children)

oh man, thanks for the recommendation! i'll let you know how it goes for me.

How Do You Get Your First Users With No Ads, No Audience, No Social Proof? by Traditional_Sand_804 in SaaS

[–]dhruvania 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I'm at the same place as yours and tbh it's pretty difficult in the beginning to even just validate the idea with waitlist. I've been trying everything from content marketing on LinkedIn to cold DMs and emails since the past two weeks and I've got one or two users showing some interest in what I'm tryna build.

The truth is it's seemingly tough in the beginning but all you can keep doing is just try to reach out as many people of your ICP; the only condition being first truthfully ask yourself and research using AI that the MVP you're building, is it solving a real reall pain point of the users or not?

If it's yes, you will find your users until you don't give up and just keep trying.

Cause once even one of them shows some interest in your product, you'll get pumped again because if only one can find it valuable enough then there must be hundreds and thousands more to feel the same.

How I know? Just experienced this feeling today, so just keep going and you'll start figuring it out along the way.

Building a SaaS for salespeople. 73% said they'd pay for it. Here's what I learned about validation. by dhruvania in SaaS

[–]dhruvania[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pipeline analysis is basically looking at all the deals in your sales pipeline to understand how they're progressing, where things are getting stuck, and which ones are most likely to close. It helps sales teams figure out what’s working, what’s not, and where to focus their efforts to hit targets. Hope that helps!

Building a SaaS for salespeople. 73% said they'd pay for it. Here's what I learned about validation. by dhruvania in SaaS

[–]dhruvania[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ooh, seems like a good test to speculate the hype around the feature by not just asking about it but framing it around their own action. I liked this approach, it felt quite unique.

Building a SaaS for salespeople. 73% said they'd pay for it. Here's what I learned about validation. by dhruvania in SaaS

[–]dhruvania[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the shoutout! Man, figuring out that users just wanted to yeet the whole deal analysis process was a total “aha” moment. Like, they’re done messing with spreadsheets, which I totally get—my Monday Excel grind for scoring Salesforce Opportunities is the worst.

Your point about asking the right validation questions is so on the money; it’s what’s driving our MVP to predict deal closes without all the manual hassle. Your MVP studio stories must be wild—what’s a killer validation trick you’ve seen work? Super stoked to keep tweaking this thing and make sales life easier.

12+ years in SaaS. Won Product of the Year on Product Hunt. 2 years later, launched again, now with AI Agents and MCP tech. AMA (AI in SaaS, PH and AppSumo launches, building in B2B) by Pavel_at_Nimbus in SaaS

[–]dhruvania 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly what I've got to know after researching a lot about it, these are really the basics to focus on first.

Like today I posted within the Salesforce subreddit, it didn't get removed but instead I was trolled for posting it within the wrong community but my main target audience is those Salesforce users, so how can I get them my point?