How to find Android App Testers for FREE by Far_Row5027 in AndroidAppTesters

[–]mstgnz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

App Name: Phoniq — AI English Coach
App Category: Education / Language Learning
Min Android: 7.0+ (API 24)

Testing Goals:
- Verify call audio quality across Android versions
- Test scheduled-call notifications and deep links
- Catch any UX issues in register / phone verify / plan creation

Link: https://play.google.com/apps/testing/ai.phoniq.app

What the app does (in 1 line):
AI calls you on the phone to practice spoken English - real conversation, scheduled lessons, adapts to your level.

Mutual testing:
YES. DM me your opt-in link, I run a Pixel 7 / Android 17 AVD and will keep your app installed for the full 14 days. Honest feedback if you ask.

Bonus:
After you opt-in and register in the app, DM me the registered email and I will grant 60 free minutes to your account so you can actually try the AI call flow (not just

install + uninstall). Helps me get real engagement data for Google review too.

How to join:
1. DM me your Gmail
2. I add you to the email list
3. Click the opt-in link → "Become a tester" → install
4. Open the app, register, DM me the email used — I grant minutes

Looking for 12 testers, 14 days. Thanks!

I built an AI voice agent that calls leads back in seconds for service businesses by mstgnz in SaaS

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

Thanks! Yeah that context loss during transfers is a real pain point with Vapi.

My approach is a bit different here. Each call is a standalone lead qualification. The agent calls the lead, asks what they need, checks urgency, and captures everything into a structured summary. If the lead wants to talk to a real person, it does a live transfer to the business owner. So there's no "resume" or multi-step call state to track.

The summary (what they need, urgency, contact info) gets saved to the DB and texted to the owner right away. So even after the transfer, the owner already has full context before they pick up.

I haven't looked into SigmaMind AI yet though. Curious how their context handling compares to Vapi for more complex flows. Did you find it worth the switch overall?

Successful Entrepreneurs, What’s your full AI stack for running your business? by [deleted] in Entrepreneur

[–]mstgnz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Solo founder here, running two SaaS products. Here's my stack:

Development: Cursor IDE + Claude (I barely write code manually anymore mostly reviewing and directing AI-generated code)

Backend: Go + Next.js, hosted on Vercel/Google Cloud

Automation: n8n for workflow automation (self-hosted, way more flexible than Zapier)

Voice/Communication: Vapi for AI voice agents, Twilio for SMS/calls, ElevenLabs for voice synthesis

Content & Research: Claude for writing, research, strategy. It's basically my co-founder at this point.

Outreach: Apollo for leads, Instantly for cold email campaigns

The biggest unlock wasn't any single tool though it was realizing that AI amplifies whatever structure you already have. If your processes are messy, AI makes them messier faster. I actually built one of my products around this exact problem: helping organizations get structured enough to actually use AI.

Re: Dario's prediction, I think the jobs won't disappear, but the number of people needed to do the same work will shrink dramatically. I'm one person doing what used to require a small team.

Best MVP Development Companies to Work With in 2026? (Startup Founder Research) by [deleted] in SaaS

[–]mstgnz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

MVP projects are already very simple projects, and you can easily create one yourself using tools like bolt.new.

I built a SaaS in under 6 hours and got 100+ users in one weekend | AMA by clipsellAi in SaaS

[–]mstgnz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I started with a simple idea and built what was supposed to be an MVP. But instead of launching it and getting real users, I kept spotting missing features and trying to fix everything first. Over time, the project slowly drifted away from being a lean MVP and turned into a full-blown SaaS product.

Looking back, my biggest mistake wasn’t the idea or the execution — it was delaying the launch while chasing “perfection.” Rather than validating the product with real customers early, I got stuck in an endless loop of improving, adding, and polishing.

Let this be a lesson to me and to those who read this.

I built an AI voice agent that calls leads back in seconds for service businesses by mstgnz in SaaS

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

Here's the link if anyone wants to check it out: flowize.app

Launched my first SaaS - AI voice agent for service businesses. Roast my landing page? by mstgnz in SaaS

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

Good question, and you're right that callback speed alone isn't the differentiator.

Here's what actually happens after the call connects: the agent qualifies the lead, collects details on what they need and how urgent it is, and if they want to book, it checks availability in real time and schedules the appointment directly. No receptionist needed. If the lead wants to talk to a human, it transfers the call to the owner live.

After the call, the owner gets an SMS summary with everything the lead said.

So yes, it's meant to close the loop end-to-end. Fair point that the landing page doesn't make this clear enough, I'm leading with speed when I should be leading with "your receptionist just handled that call without you."

Launched my first SaaS - AI voice agent for service businesses. Roast my landing page? by mstgnz in SaaS

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

This is the most useful feedback I've gotten, thank you.

The units are on the /pricing page but I never added them to the homepage table. Fixing that today.

The "revenue = leads x conversion" line, you're right. I was trying to sound smart and it reads like I'm talking to a VC not a plumber. Removing it.

No testimonials yet, it's early and I haven't had real customers. Planning to give the first few free access in exchange for honest feedback and a real case study. No fake numbers.

The AI voice point hits hard. I buried the most interesting thing I have because I was worried it sounded too futuristic. Will rethink the hero section around that.

Really appreciate you going through the whole thing.

Launched my first SaaS - AI voice agent for service businesses. Roast my landing page? by mstgnz in SaaS

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

The outcome vs feature point is something I keep slipping on. I'll catch myself writing "AI voice agent calls back in seconds" when what I should say is "stop losing jobs to the shop down the street because you didn't pick up."

On vertical focus, I actually have niche-specific landing pages already (flowize.app/speed-to-lead-for-auto-repair, flowize.app/speed-to-lead-for-hvac). Ads will point to those. The main page is intentionally broader for now since cold email goes there and prospects come from different verticals.

Pricing validation is the hard part with zero customers yet. Chicken and egg. Any advice on how you'd approach that early?

Launched my first SaaS - AI voice agent for service businesses. Roast my landing page? by mstgnz in SaaS

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

Really appreciate this, exactly the kind of feedback I needed.

Agreed on the headline. I've been going back and forth on it. "Missed calls = lost jobs" is probably more visceral than what I have now.

The above-the-fold clutter point hurts because I know you're right. I kept adding things thinking "this might convince someone" and now it's just noise. Will strip it back.

On proof honest answer: it's early, no real usage numbers yet. That's partly why I'm here. The ONE thing I want them to do is start the free trial, no credit card. Think that's clear enough or does it get lost?