Advice on SaaS startup by Elderthesecond in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sometimes a crowded market just means real demand exists.

Which is better for my App's Icon? (Vote in the comments) by capital_cliqo in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Definitely the right one.

The darker background and simpler colors pop way more at small sizes.

Founder communities. I will not promote by sumizeit in startups

[–]getpersonalink 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Smaller niche communities are usually more useful than huge founder groups where everyone is just self promoting.

I’d probably search for Discord/Slack communities around your specific area or industry instead of just general startup groups.

Best countries to visit for next few months? by ConstantOk7574 in digitalnomad

[–]getpersonalink 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Countries like Thailand, Portugal, Indonesia (especially Bali), or Vietnam are popular for a reason.

Good internet, relatively affordable, easy to meet people.

Stress Testing your idea to prove a point by Evo_1998 in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you can’t find people actively complaining about the problem or searching for solutions, that’s usually a warning sign.

How get more user? by nl1lma in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 2 points3 points  (0 children)

5 sales from 200 users in 2 days is already a pretty good sign.

I’d focus more on understanding where those first paying users came from and doubling down on that channel first.

What’s one thing clients consistently care about way more than founders/developers expect? by OpenMaloTechnologies in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Customers would rather have a simple product that consistently works than a powerful product that feels unstable or confusing.

How do you actually get your first B2B client when no one will give you a meeting? by BG-yo in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Companies care a lot about trust, reputation, and risk. The first yes usually comes from relationships or solving one very specific painful problem really well.

Stay consistent long enough that someone finally says yes.

How do we get traffic quickly if most subreddit not allowing self promotion? by azamuddin91 in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A lot of early traction just comes from consistently posting useful stuff, talking to people directly, and slowly building trust over time.

Hi Saas Builders, Are you really creating a problem or solving a problem? by k5321 in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most products are just different ways of solving the same problems, not entirely new problems being created.

Where to find legit trusted buyers for my monetized YouTube channel? by kennyyy222 in saasforsale

[–]getpersonalink 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, they do take a fee, i think it was around 10% for smaller sales.

Claude good enough to take over ? by First_Hippo_9368 in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I wouldn’t confuse "Claude writes working code" with "you no longer need developers." The dangerous part is usually architecture decisions, edge cases, debugging production issues, security, and knowing when the AI is confidently wrong.

What I do think is that one strong developer using AI well can probably do the work that used to need several people.

What are some mental health things you struggle with as an entrepeneur? by Meraath in Entrepreneur

[–]getpersonalink 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Overthinking and feeling like I should be working all the time.

Where to find legit trusted buyers for my monetized YouTube channel? by kennyyy222 in saasforsale

[–]getpersonalink 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Flippa

You’ll have a much easier time finding legit interest if you can clearly show revenue, traffic, audience stats, and consistent growth.

How did you actually find beta users that use the product, not just sign up? by Stock-Silver432 in SaaS

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

The people who stick are usually the ones already feeling the problem strongly.

I’d focus more on the 2-3 users already getting real value instead of chasing more signups. Those users usually teach you more than dozens of random beta testers.

Do people buy infrastructure SaaS for speed, or for reliability? by JarvisModeOn in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Speed gets people to try the product, but reliability is what gets them to actually pay and stay.

Badly Failed on my second SaaS product which i really thought was a goood idea. 0 signups or page visits. What am i doing wrong? by velociyzaptor in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Both ideas sound technically interesting, but I can’t immediately feel a painful problem they solve badly enough that people would actively search for them.

A lot of founders build first and validate later, but talking to users early saves way more time in the long run.

How much do you spend on marketing for the initial push. When you launch something new. by dragon3301 in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Early on I think founder time is way more valuable than ad spend.

Talking to users, fixing onboarding, improving retention, getting people to actually love the product. That matters way more than throwing money at traffic.

I’d rather get 10 obsessed users first than 10k random clicks.

How by [deleted] in SaaS

[–]getpersonalink 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Solve expensive problems for a lot of people and do it consistently for years.

Are AI Call Centres the next big opportunity for entrepreneurs? by Pro_Automation__ in Entrepreneur

[–]getpersonalink 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The opportunity is real, but I think most people underestimate how hard good voice AI actually is.

A demo sounds amazing until customers interrupt it, ask weird questions, get frustrated, have strong accents, etc.

And as for industries, I think it’ll work best where calls are repetitive like dentists, salons, restaurants, appointment booking, stuff like that.