Not looking for theory. What real numbers looked like and whether ads moved the needle or just burned cash. What channel did you use? What was your spend? And did it convert? submitted by /u/Frosty_Ad2682 [link] [comments]
If you have, what is the SaaS you had built it for? how did you distribute it? How many people have signed up? How many sign ups converted into users? submitted by /u/VeterinarianFuzzy830 [link] [comments]
been collecting real cold emails that got responses from busy founders not templates. actual ones that worked. every single one that got a reply did these things started with something specific about the person not about the sender named a problem the…
so I started this thing on friday night. figured, hey, maybe I can actually ship something by Sunday. spoiler: i won’t. it’s supposed to be a tiny tool for scraping linkedin threads without getting rate-limited.…
I've been experimenting with a small project that turns typing into a game. Every keystroke earns XP. Level up, unlock achievements, and build streaks while doing your normal work. Still very early, but I'm curious...…
We're building an XR-based EdTech SaaS platform called VidyaXR. Three months ago, we launched our first public version. Since then: 1,000+ website visitors 60+ registered users ~6% visitor-to-signup conversion ₹0 spent on paid ads Everything came from…
When I started my SaaS, I thought the hardest part would be building it. Late nights coding. Bugs. Launching. Fixing things. I was ready for all of that. What I didn’t expect was how hard it would feel after launch. Refreshing analytics.…
I've noticed a lot of SaaS founders mentioning Reddit as one of their best acquisition channels. The problem is that finding relevant posts feels incredibly manual.…
Had my first acquisition conversation last month and hit a wall I didn't see coming. The buyer's biggest worry wasn't revenue or churn. It was whether the whole thing runs on just me and falls apart the day I leave. Fair concern..…
As everyone is working on some new tool or SAAS , I want to understand from people who have launched the tools and SAAS applications , what could go wrong in the first launch. I see myself resisting to launch the things , having lots of doubts in mind.…
Hello! I hope everyone here is doing well! I’m currently building a SaaS with the goal/forecast of reaching 10,000 users within a year. For now, the solution I’ve chosen is Railway. Is that the most suitable solution for this type of project?…
So I've been working on this projects for arounds 3 weeks. For the past few weeks, I’ve been doing what I think a lot of early founders do when they’re scared without fully admitting they’re scared. I hid behind “strategy”. Go-to-market strategy.…
A couple months ago I was watching my churn climb and I couldn't figure out why. MAU was fine. NPS was fine. People were paying me, then quietly leaving four or five months later.…
I built 13 tools, here is the portfolio. https://launch52.ai/ But only 2 brought real MRR, https://gettrack.link/ and https://zangy.io/ All organic SEO. submitted by /u/EasyMushroom3649 [link] [comments]
The company was StepGenie, a platform helping USMLE students prepare for their exams. The interesting thing? The problem wasn’t the product The students who used it loved it The real problem was distribution So before touching marketing, we spoke to users…
we’re building a SaaS with a mix of subscriptions and one-time purchases, and while stripe seems to be the default recommendation, I’m curious what alternatives people are actually happy with.…