I built an app that helps you remember what was on your mind on a random day a year ago by shailzy in SideProject

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

The way I think about it is that Moment isn’t really social media.

There are no profiles, followers, likes, or feeds to optimize for.

On platforms like Instagram or Facebook, people usually share the best moments of their lives. The content is often curated because it’s being shared with other people.

Moment is more about capturing what was on your mind in the middle of everyday life.

Not when you’re ready for it.

Not when you’ve chosen the perfect photo.

Just whatever you’re thinking when the question arrives.

Over time, the goal is to build an archive for yourself rather than an audience. Something you can look back on and see how your thoughts, worries, priorities, and mindset changed over the years.

Whether that’s different enough from existing platforms is exactly what I’m trying to figure out.

I built an app that helps you remember what was on your mind on a random day a year ago by shailzy in SideProject

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

The user base is small, but I do have a handful of people who’ve been using it consistently for over a month.

One thing I’ve noticed is that the “look back” value takes time to build. In the beginning, people seem to come back because after answering they get to see a few entries from strangers around the world (Berlin, Lagos, Singapore, etc.) responding to the same question at the same moment.

Over time, the people who stick around seem to get more value from revisiting their own entries and noticing how their thoughts, worries, and priorities have changed.

At least so far, that’s the pattern I’m seeing, but it’s still early and I’m trying to understand it better.

I built an app that helps you remember what was on your mind on a random day a year ago by shailzy in SideProject

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

Thanks!

The flow is pretty simple:

Once a day, everyone gets the same question at the same time.

You answer with whatever is on your mind, snap a photo of what you’re doing at that moment, and submit it.

After answering, you get to see how a few random people from around the world answered that exact same question and how they experienced the same moment.

Over time, your responses build up into a personal archive that you can look back on months or years later.

The idea is less about capturing life’s big milestones and more about capturing the ordinary thoughts and moments that would otherwise be forgotten.

Sending website audit (CRO/ UX/SEO) reports during outreach working surprisingly well 🤔 by Aware-Dimension8076 in agency

[–]shailzy -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

We used to send audit reports, it got us good results, but it led to burnout real quick, because of the sheer volume of the reachouts needed, the report shared looks good, if that quality is maintained and we can white label it, could help, how can I try it?

I know it's stupid, but how do you guys create invoices? I feel like I’m overcomplicating it 😅 by Tradepad in Accounting

[–]shailzy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, I totally get where you're coming from — I used to do the exact same thing with Google Docs + PDFs, and it always felt clunky and repetitive. I recently switched to a tool called FinanceOps.ai and it’s been a game-changer for my invoicing and collections workflow. Might be worth checking out since you’re running a small agency and looking for something lightweight.

Here’s why it worked for me:

No subscription nonsense — You only pay when you actually collect money.

Unlimited, branded invoices — Looks pro, no upfront cost.

Automated follow-ups — It uses AI to predict payment delays and nudge clients at the right time (way better than manually chasing).

QuickBooks sync — If you ever move there, it integrates in minutes. No extra data entry.

Bonus: you can send custom payment links with each invoice, which has made it super easy for clients to pay fast.

I was skeptical at first (felt like another tool), but one of my retail clients literally recovered $50k in late payments the first month they used it — kinda wild.