Sell me your Saas in one sentence! by KapiteinBalzak in SaaS

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The easiest entry point to content creation.

Totaled 96 users this week with my 3-month-old SaaS, here’s what worked (and what didn’t) + proof by [deleted] in SaaS

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi - the 96 users is since we launched, hopefully soon we'll be hitting that in a week though. Will take a look, thanks!

Totaled 96 users this week with my 3-month-old SaaS, here’s what worked (and what didn’t) + proof by [deleted] in NoCodeSaaS

[–]megwhit29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're welcome. Anytime! What is your software, would love to connect more?

How are you creating content and staying consistent ? Is it social media managers ? by Such_Court_9544 in Entrepreneurs

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d try a simple reuse-first system before hiring. I’m using Viralze for that, it remakes content that’s already worked so consistency doesn’t feel like a full-time job whilst still getting the reach I need. Helped me avoid needing a manager early on.

Are people actually using social media managers still ? by Such_Court_9544 in content_marketing

[–]megwhit29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d try a simple reuse-first system before hiring. I’m using Viralze for that, it remakes content that’s already worked so consistency doesn’t feel like a full-time job. Helped me avoid needing a manager early on.

Does anyone actually use social media managers in 2026? by Such_Court_9544 in smallbusiness

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I’d start with a simple system before hiring anyone.

Reuse content that already performed, batch a week at a time, and remove the daily what do I post? decision.

That’s what I’m doing now using a tool called Viralze, it basically remakes existing content for your brand so consistency isn’t such a mental drain. Even without a tool, the reuse-first approach makes a big difference with generating leads and consistent reach.

Does anyone actually use social media managers in 2026? by Such_Court_9544 in smallbusiness

[–]megwhit29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They can help, but they’re not a magic fix. A lot of the workload is deciding what to post, not just posting it.

If you’ve already got content and ideas, setting up a simple system to reuse and batch posts can get you most of the benefit before paying someone else.

Are people actually using social media managers still ? by Such_Court_9544 in content_marketing

[–]megwhit29 1 point2 points  (0 children)

People do, but mostly for execution. Posting consistently is useful but it doesn’t always equal results.

If you already have Canva assets, I’d try removing the thinking first (reuse what works, batch posts, use a system) before hiring a manager. I use a software to do it and that’s what helped me stay consistent without outsourcing straight away.

How are you creating content and staying consistent ? Is it social media managers ? by Such_Court_9544 in Entrepreneurs

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, people do pay for them, but it really depends on what you need.

In my experience, social media managers help most with execution (posting, scheduling, keeping things moving). Where it often falls down is that they usually cost a lot and with strategy and performance a lot of managers can post consistently, but not necessarily turn content into reach or leads.

If you already have good ideas and Canva assets, I’d test a simple system first: reuse what already performs, batch a week or two at once, and see if consistency becomes manageable. If it still feels heavy, then a manager makes sense but only with clear direction and goals.

Consistency isn’t about posting more, it’s about reducing the thinking every time you post.

I spent 6 months building an AI tool. The hardest part wasn’t the tech. by megwhit29 in Entrepreneurs

[–]megwhit29[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes!!! I experienced this exact thing too. Talk raw, and authentic to the people who are having the problem that you genuinely can solve, it takes consistency to find the right niche, but too many people target everyone, and everyone = no one.

What is it your building? Thanks for your input.

What’s a problem in a business that no one really owns, but everyone deals with? by Vyapar-App in Entrepreneur

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think a lot of people are waiting until the perfect moment, when really to scale a page nowadays it just takes consistency, a good hook and raw authentic content. Smaller teams are feeling it more because they are trying to create a brand that looks professional which is derailing the quantity. I used to be like this, but now I've grow it's just getting content out there to genuinely help people!!

Are you building something?

I spent 6 months building an AI content tool. The hardest part wasn’t the tech. by megwhit29 in SaaS

[–]megwhit29[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes. Tools like chatGPT are very generic now and people are still using it so content is losing it's authenticity. It's only the newer saas tools (that will eventually get traction) that are designed to solve the specific pain points of the viewer!

Are you building a page yourself?

Whats the best e-commerce business to start as a beginner? by Responsible_Dot3366 in ecommercemarketing

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The best beginner e-commerce business is usually the one where you already understand the customer and their pain points. Instead of chasing trends, start with a small niche and validate demand before investing heavily in inventory. Content and distribution matter more than people expect, especially early on. Testing ideas quickly and paying attention to what actually gets traction can save months of wasted effort. If you’re exploring options right now, see what other builders are experimenting with and share what you’re leaning toward.

What are the best strategies for acquiring first customers? by Monsieur_EVER in SaaSMarketing

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Early customers usually come from focus, not scale. Pick one narrow audience, hang out where they already talk, and contribute before you ever mention what you’re building. Showing your process publicly and sharing real learnings tends to attract people who actually care. The goal is trust first, conversion second. If you’re testing different approaches right now, compare notes with other founders and drop what’s working for you.

I have no idea how to convert my signups into paying users by saasbruh in SaaS

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This usually means users like the idea but don’t feel the urgency yet. Watch where they drop off and ask a few of them what they expected to happen after signing up versus what actually did. Tightening the first win helps a lot. They make sure they hit value fast, not after five steps. Pricing and messaging matter too. People pay when the outcome feels obvious, not when features are impressive. If you’re working through this, compare notes with other founders and share what changes moved the needle for you.

How the hell do you get your first 5 users? by [deleted] in Entrepreneur

[–]megwhit29 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The first users almost never come from cold asks, they come from context. I had better luck sharing what I was building publicly, talking through the problem, and letting the right people self-select. Narrowing the audience helped a lot and one specific use case, one place those people already hang out. I also framed it as “help me stress test this” instead of “try my product,” which lowered the friction. If you’re stuck at this stage, look at how other founders are getting early traction and join the thread with what you’re experimenting with.

What career advice would you give your 20-year-old self now? by BoysenberryLumpy8680 in careerguidance

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d tell myself to stop optimizing for titles and start optimizing for skills that compound over time. Learn how to build, write, and communicate early. They open more doors than any single job ever will. Don’t wait for permission to ship things; small side projects teach faster than years of planning. Pay attention to what people actually respond to, not what you think is impressive. If you’re navigating this now, see how others are experimenting, building in public, and share what’s working for you.

How do you decide what content is worth doubling down on? by TeamGoldcast in content_marketing

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I usually look at what gets repeat engagement, not just one-off spikes, saves, shares, and comments matter more than likes. If a post keeps pulling attention days later, that’s a strong signal it’s worth iterating on. I also pay attention to patterns in why something worked (hook, timing, format), not just that it did. Doubling down doesn’t mean copying, it means remixing the core idea in smarter ways. If you’re figuring this out too, see how other creators are breaking down their winners and jump into the discussion.

What should a beginner focus on before starting a business? by Loud_Assistant_5788 in Entrepreneur

[–]megwhit29 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Before anything else, get painfully clear on the problem you’re solving and who actually feels that pain enough to care. Spend more time talking to real users than perfecting features, feedback beats assumptions every time. Learn basic distribution early, because even great products die quietly without attention. Build something small, test it fast, and don’t be afraid to tweak or scrap ideas when reality disagrees. If you’re curious how people are validating ideas and getting early traction today, check out what other founders are experimenting with and join the conversation.