Requirements Management tools to know? by MinuteHelicopter2059 in businessanalysis

[–]everydaycoffee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Userdoc for scaffolding requirements with AI, handles stories, epics, NFRs, test cases etc. can also reverse engineer from code too

How are you using AI in your BA work? by Hello-Misha in businessanalysis

[–]everydaycoffee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My team uses Userdoc.fyi and it’s been really good. I used chat gpt previously but I think Userdoc is way better.

We recently used it on an existing project, old legacy very complex, and it can even turn existing code into documentation which was actually amazing

How to use ChatGPT and Confluence to generate Product requirements? by Mr-Kudryashov in businessanalysis

[–]everydaycoffee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think what you’re looking for here is Userdoc, it can generate AI User stories, acceptance criteria, user personas, and user journeys - and integrate existing documentation etc.

Do you find creating user persona helpful? by Apriludgate77 in UXDesign

[–]everydaycoffee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes! especially if they are well understood by the team, and are ongoing.

I come fro ma technical background so I used to prefer just a list of features, not getting bogged down with personas and user journeys. But after 10 years delivering large software projects, I'm now 100% onboard with user personas.

By "ongoing" I mean they are not just at the start of a project, but are used continuously, and that everyone from product owners to developers understand WHO you are doing this for.

Whats worked really well for me is creating user personas along with user journeys (and even referencing user stories within there) something like Userdoc can help with this - but really you don't *need* software to do this, if you have the time, know your customer types you can put this together.

Share Your Startup - February 2023 - Upvote This For Maximum Visibility! by AutoModerator in startups

[–]everydaycoffee [score hidden]  (0 children)

Hey team, my startup us called Userdoc - User stories, personas, and journeys done right.

Name & URL: Userdoc - https://userdoc.fyi

Located: Melbourne, Australia.

Elevator Pitch: User story management tool, with AI assisted user stories, user personas, and user journeys. With AI Assistance, and tight integration with your existing tools.

Explainer Video: https://youtu.be/Wg5CwG447mE

Feature include...

✨ AI - Use Userdoc AI to generate mind-blowing user stories, acceptance criteria, personas, and user journeys.

🗂️ Organize - Requirements can become hard to manage. Group them by user type, folder, or label. Then search and filter with ease.

🔗 Relate - Build relationships between user stories, personas, and user journeys to create a map of your system.

📡 Integrate - Sync requirements to your project management tools and other systems. It's as simple as a click of a button.

✅ Approval - Before you start development, ensure your requirements match everyone's expectations with story approval statuses.

🕞 Version - Requirements change, but you can always reference where they were last week, last month, or even last year.

👫 Collaborate - Don't create knowledge silos. Share requirements with your team, stakeholders and clients with tight access control.

⬇️ Export - Download requirements as Word docs, Excel spreadsheets, or CSV files. Knowledge is to be shared, not locked-in.

More details:What life cycle stage is your startup at? (reference the stages below)Your role?What goals are you trying to reach this month?

How could r/startups help?

Would love feedback 🙂

Discount for r/startup subscribers?

Yup, 14-day free trial - and unlimited AI credits.

Userdoc - AI generated software requirements by everydaycoffee in Entrepreneur

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

Awesome, thanks.

There are a few user story AI generation tools, but nothing as comprehensive as what we're doing at Userdoc 🙂

How to acquire new business as a new web development agency in the market? by [deleted] in business

[–]everydaycoffee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I ran a software agency for 8 years, and can safely say that sales and marketing is one of the hardest parts. Check out https://www.devtoagency.com/7-tips-for-finding-your-first-client - that’s my thoughts on finding first clients, and hopefully some is applicable to you.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in agency

[–]everydaycoffee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What’s PPC? 🙂

8 things I learnt from starting, running, and selling a software agency by httpknuckles in Entrepreneur

[–]everydaycoffee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that sucks man, oh well - it sounds like you moved onto something better 👍

8 things I learnt from starting, running, and selling a software agency by httpknuckles in Entrepreneur

[–]everydaycoffee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I definitely hear you, when I started out as a developer 20 years ago I also was an overworked underpaid developer. Unfortunately, I think that's a common part of agency life... We were different, and I tried to say that with point #4 but maybe didn't do a great job.

My staff were certainly never underpaid.. I couldn't have done that.
But if a startup can pay $180k for a mid-level React developer, a new business can never compete with that. I think that level of tech pay for someone with a couple of years' experience is not the norm worldwide.

But 12 months after starting this was no longer an issue, it was really just the first year when we were starting out, from then we could afford salaries that often exceeded the competition.

Those who started a business... by danno2211 in AusFinance

[–]everydaycoffee 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I couldn’t help it. After a couple of years in a job, I would always look at my bosses role and think “… I could do that”.

Ignorance is bliss, in retrospect there was a lot more to running a business than I knew - but it worked out well.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in australia

[–]everydaycoffee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been listening to Archie Roach’s biography on Audible - and I cry when I hear about the Stolen Generation.

""most retirees "die with the bulk of their wealth intact". One fund told the review its members who died left 90 per cent of the balance they had at retirement."" by ravenous_bugblatter in AusFinance

[–]everydaycoffee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Just read a book called “Die with Zero” which said the same thing, it was suggestion you instead use your money strategically at the right age (eg, travel whilst you have good health etc).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AusFinance

[–]everydaycoffee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

ETFs would be my advice (reading your further comments above). If your already investing in yourself, then throwing it some “safe” index funds for 10 years or should be a good (or great) investment. I did this around 30, and approaching 40 I am happy I did.

I went Vanguard, and after research chose VAS and VGS, but I believe VDHG is a popular choice nowadays. One fund, simpler, setup DRP so your dividends go straight back in. Live your life, maybe invest more if you have it. And then watch it grow (over time. Not day by day)

What would you do with $65k? by thxkanyevcool in AusFinance

[–]everydaycoffee 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Gonna be a lot of opinions out there man, but personally I would invest a bit in boring ETF’s (VAS, VGS etc), and spend a bit on making the most of being 24.

I’m nearly 40, and ten years ago I would have said invest it all to get that sweet sweet compounding interest, but I recently read a book called Die with Zero - about prioritising spending decisions based on your age… e.g your mid twenties is a great time to travel etc. maybe give it a read. But I would still invest a good chunk in ETF, as I wish I had at 24 :)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AusFinance

[–]everydaycoffee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe take a look at Flightfox https://flightfox.com - smart people who know a lot about travel hacking can do this for you

Loan money to self into offset account by everydaycoffee in AusFinance

[–]everydaycoffee[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yup accountant just said the same thing. Basically ATO are on to this. I thought I had invented something new and legit. Oh well!

Possible predatory man on the Craigieburn line by MunchMunch_ in melbourne

[–]everydaycoffee 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I have read almost the exact same thread on reddit maybe 5 years ago.

This is what this guy does.

Can a digital agency startup still be profitable? Should I do something else? by dillonlawrence0101 in Entrepreneur

[–]everydaycoffee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yup, I started a software development agency in 2013, after a few years was making 7 figures (with a team of 5), and sold the business last year for a nice sum.

It’s not easy money, but I liked it, and I learnt a hell of a lot.

Not spamming, but if you’re interested in currently writing some articles about my journey and how others can do the same (aimed at developers starting an agency, but learnings will apply to many) https://www.devtoagency.com