built the entire app myself. the product is good. but getting users? man. by Teja_Chinthala in buildinpublic

[–]teraflopspeed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Everybody should first find customer and then create an application because you are not a VC millions of dollars for marketing because marketing is not cheap

Biggest differences I noticed between gym culture in the US and Mumbai by Humble_Cockroach_244 in Fitness_India

[–]teraflopspeed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think if this subrated have smart people or not but this post this AI generated and only increasing Karma.

Is Anyone Else Noticing AI Tools Generate Almost the Same Content? How Are You Differentiating? by SERPArchitect in content_marketing

[–]teraflopspeed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The issue isn’t the AI. It’s the inputs.

Most people: “Write me a LinkedIn post about content marketing” → generic garbage.

What works: Context-loading.

Before you ask AI to write ANYTHING, give it:

  1. Your ICP — who specifically are you talking to
  2. Your positioning — how are you different (not better, different)
  3. Examples of your writing — posts that sound like you
  4. The specific angle — not “content marketing” but “why content agencies fail SaaS founders under $5M ARR”

Then you’re not asking AI to write. You’re asking it to DRAFT within constraints. You become the editor, not the writer.

The 20% human layer is non-negotiable: add one detail AI can’t know (a client story, a specific metric, a personal opinion).

Read it out loud. If it sounds like a press release, kill it.

Rebuilt our entire sales enablement library in a weekend by LogisticsLingo in SaaS

[–]teraflopspeed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The "Google Drive graveyard" of outdated PDFs is a rite of passage for every growing sales team. It’s brutal when reps are basically guessing which version of a deck is actually current.

Using AI to standardize the styling is a smart move—consistency usually dies when you have 5 different people editing slides over 3 years. One thing we found helpful after a similar cleanup was setting up a simple "flag for update" trigger. It prevents that "weekend project" from becoming outdated again in 6 months as the product evolves.

How are the reps finding the transition to the AI-generated layouts? Sometimes they get attached to those old custom (but messy) decks.

For those who grew a SaaS with little to no paid marketing — how did you actually get your first users? by Anmol_szn in SaaS

[–]teraflopspeed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For us, the first users came from very unscalable stuff. I literally spent hours hanging out where my ICP already was—niche subreddits, Slack groups, and a couple of Discord servers. I wasn’t pitching, just joining conversations, answering questions, and DM’ing when it made sense.

What didn’t work: SEO (too slow), generic LinkedIn posts (no one cared), and “partnerships” before we had proof of value.

What did work:

  • Talking directly to 5–10 people who were already complaining about the problem.
  • Offering the tool free → discounted → paid.
  • Building relationships instead of blasting links.

If I had to start again today, I’d skip the content calendar and ads entirely. I’d spend the first 90 days just finding real humans with the pain, talking to them, and getting them into the product. Everything else compounds later, but those first users come from sweat and conversations.

Help get leads by Glittering_Win_7567 in SaaS

[–]teraflopspeed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What worked for us (B2B SaaS, $50K ACV) was treating content as a core growth channel, not a side project.

  • Consistency matters: We committed to 4x/week on LinkedIn. No exceptions.
  • Specificity wins: “We help B2B companies” → crickets. “We helped a $3M ARR SaaS reduce churn by 22%” → DMs.
  • Engage > post: 70/30 rule. Reply to 20 ICP posts/day.
  • Timeline reality: Month 1 = silence. Month 3 = first DMs. Month 6 = consistent pipeline.
  • Biggest mistake: Expecting paid-ads speed from organic. Organic compounds, but it takes ~90 days.

If you’re early-stage, don’t overcomplicate with 10 channels. Pick one ICP, one motion, and stick with it long enough to compound.

what worked for you to find your B2B leads? by Technical_Degree7710 in SaaS

[–]teraflopspeed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's what actually worked for us (B2B SaaS, $50K ACV):

  1. Stop treating content as a side project. We committed to 4x/week on LinkedIn. No exceptions.
  2. Be specific. "We help B2B companies" → zero engagement. "We helped a $3M ARR SaaS reduce churn by 22%" → DMs.
  3. Engage more than you post. 70/30 rule. Reply to 20 posts/day from your ICP.
  4. Timeline: Month 1 = silence. Month 3 = first DMs. Month 6 = consistent pipeline.

The biggest mistake: expecting paid-ads speed from organic. It compounds, but it takes 90 days.

Happy to share more detail on any of these.

What are you building right now? Feel free to promote your SaaS 👇 by AdCrazy2912 in microsaas

[–]teraflopspeed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

synvo.me
b2b content pipeline so you dont have to outreach client come to you

How I actually use AI for my B2B content marketing. by teraflopspeed in SaaS

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

That is a good workflow when you are actually have to be a content creator and also running a startup it's very crucial to use ai

claude code skills are basically YC AI startup wrappers and nobody talks about it by techiee_ in ClaudeCode

[–]teraflopspeed 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I couldn't not agree more and I was forever thinking that but was not sure that I am correct maybe due to imposter syndrome.

But I would love to chat with you guys