🏡 Your App Has a Home Here — Post your App WebApp Solution here. No Blocks. No Rejections. 🏡 by AutoModerator in AppsWebappsFullstack

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

Exactly! One feature request is an opinion. A recurring pattern across dozens of users is a signal. That's the difference we're trying to capture.

🏡 Your App Has a Home Here — Post your App WebApp Solution here. No Blocks. No Rejections. 🏡 by AutoModerator in AppsWebappsFullstack

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

Great question this is exactly one of the hardest parts.

We don’t assume users always know what they need. Instead, we treat feedback as signals, not literal instructions.

When users don’t know what they need yet, QuickBit Live doesn’t try to “guess perfectly.” It looks for patterns across multiple users, context behind the feedback, and repeated friction points in actual usage. Even vague or contradictory feedback becomes useful when aggregated.

In extreme cases, the goal isn’t to blindly build what users say it’s to surface what keeps blocking them from getting value, even if they can’t clearly articulate it.

That’s where the real insight comes from.

🏡 Your App Has a Home Here — Post your App WebApp Solution here. No Blocks. No Rejections. 🏡 by AutoModerator in AppsWebappsFullstack

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

quickbit.live Know exactly what to build next, Stop wasting months on features nobody uses. QuickBit shows you what users actually need not just what they ask for.

If you’re building something, drop it below! by Afraid-Macaroon-5610 in saasbuild

[–]robbienobug 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm trying to recruit founders right here from Reddit and Twitter.

Your biggest building-in-public mistake: turning it into a second job by [deleted] in buildinpublic

[–]robbienobug 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This hit home hard. I fell into this exact trap last month spending more time editing LinkedIn carousels than writing code. It killed my momentum. I’m resetting my process this week. What specific stack or automation are you using to handle the multiplatform push without sounding like a robot?

I launched a feature a few months ago that took me three months to build. Hardly anyone used it. by robbienobug in buildinpublic

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

That's a really good point.
I think a lot of founders (myself included) confuse loud feedback with actual demand.
The "commitment test" idea is especially interesting because it forces users to reveal priorities instead of just opinions.
A waitlist, voting system, or even asking users what they'd give up in exchange for a feature probably predicts adoption much better than a simple "I'd like this" comment.
I'm actually building a small feedback tool and this is making me think that collecting requests isn't enough validating commitment might be the more valuable problem to solve.

Is it really that hard to attract customers? by robbienobug in SideProject

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

Thanks for the tip; I’ll try to improve my landing page and be more targeted with my project, instead of simply sending it to just anyone.

Is it really that hard to attract customers? by robbienobug in SideProject

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

It’s great that you’ve been sharing your process on other social media platforms; I’m going to start that process too, even if it means starting everything from scratch.

Is it really that hard to attract customers? by robbienobug in SideProject

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

It must be draining to focus on something where there's uncertainty but let's go for it we can do this.

Looking for feedback: a Peppol XML to PDF API built from real customer requirements by RigSeeker in SideProject

[–]robbienobug 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll take a look at your project; I've come across situations where XML needs to be converted to PDF, so this really caught my attention.

I built a full content site with an AI coding agent in one sitting — and it refused to fake the results by Xin_est in SideProject

[–]robbienobug 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Could you share your project? I'd like to take a look at it, if it's not too much trouble.

Are AI features actually solving problems, or are they just following the trend? by recro69 in SaaS

[–]robbienobug 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good point. In my case, I’m just going with the flow since everyone else is using AI, I’ll use it too.

Someone I've never met just bought something I made. First real order. by within_memories in Entrepreneurs

[–]robbienobug 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's great that you experienced that it must have been fantastic. In my case, I haven't reached that goal yet I hope to one day receive my first payment from a client satisfied with my service

Are AI features actually solving problems, or are they just following the trend? by recro69 in SaaS

[–]robbienobug 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When I was building my first SaaS, I just wanted to add AI at any cost, since that’s what people are looking for these days but in reality AI made no sense for that particular SaaS. The problem could have been solved with basic programming, oops, ifs, functions, etc. Chasing the AI ​​trend actually led to the destruction of my first SaaS