Honestly if you ever feel like everyone’s ahead of you… go outside and touch some grass.
Sit in a coffee shop. People watch. Make small talk with strangers. Go visit a small town.
Real life is so much quieter and simpler than the internet.
We've helped 1,000+ people avoid unnecessary meetings. Then we looked at our own name. Gloomin. There it was. An #M. Sitting right there. In the logo of a product built to kill meetings.
We couldn't keep it. So we didn't. 💜
Glooin. No #M. No meetings. No apologies.
→ https://t.co/MQRxrhyhdh
#Glooin #Rebrand #BuildingInPublic #AsyncWork #NoMeetings #1000Users
🚨ALERT: We removed a letter. "M"🚨
Glooin used to be Gloomin. The M stood for meetings.
We removed it. On purpose.
Because that's exactly what we want you to do. You don't need another meeting. You need a recording - one that exists, is shareable, and doesn't require everyone to be free at the same time.
So we took the M out of the name.
And we're taking it out of your calendar too.
Record once. Share everywhere. No meetings required.
https://t.co/bwKBjRPqoi
#Buildinpublic #saas #async #office #productivity #workplace
Looking for UGC creators who make content around productivity, SaaS, or no-code tools 🎬
We're building something cool at https://t.co/ozguHwiuKS - a free async screen recording tool - and want real people showing real workflows.
Long-term paid collab possible.
Location: USA, Canada, Europe
Fill the form ⬇️
https://t.co/VjVb6sAR3O
#UGCopportunity #ugccreators #UGCneeded #ugccommunity #ugccreatorneeded #ContentCreator #contentcreation #influencers #InfluencerTop #influencers #CreatorContent #ugc
Today we're at 846 users. 🥳 🎊 🎉
A tiny product. No viral moment I can point to.
Just people telling other people. "Hey, try this."
3 weeks ago I posted about 130 users. I was so proud. So genuinely, embarrassingly proud. I took a screenshot. I showed my co-founder. I think I stared at it for longer than I should have.
I'm not writing this to celebrate a number.
I'm writing this because 3 weeks ago I was happy at 130 and I want to remember that feeling. I want to remember that every single one of those 846 people was once just one person who took a chance on something we made.
I want to stay the kind of founder who screenshots every tiny milestone and feels like they won the world.
Because in that moment - we did.
Thank you. Genuinely, deeply, thank you.
We're just getting started. 💜
https://t.co/wFg7gcMTY9 - come be part of it.
Indian law firms run on MS Word, WhatsApp, and memory. AI hasn't touched them. Yet.
India has 1.5 million registered advocates.
Most of them run their practice out of a single room, a shared chamber, or a small 3-person office.
Ask any lawyer in Tis Hazari, City Civil Court Mumbai, or a district court in Patna if they use AI in their practice.
Most will say yes. They mean they asked ChatGPT to summarize a judgment
once. Or wrote some mails with gemini.
That is not automation. That is not a workflow. That changes nothing about how
the practice actually runs.
Real AI deployment, the kind where a client intake form auto-populates a case file, where hearing dates trigger automatic reminders, where a standard contract gets drafted in 3 minutes not 3 hours, that is essentially at zero in Indian law firms below 20 people.
Not 7%. Not 2%. Essentially zero.
Why this is the biggest untapped market in Indian legal right now:
India's large law firms are moving fast. Trilegal, AZB, Cyril Amarchand. AI for contract review, due diligence, legal research. They have technology budgets.
They have AI teams.
Their smaller counterparts? Still on Word templates from 2014. Still maintaining case diaries in physical notebooks. Still calling clients manually to remind them of hearing dates.
The gap between large firm and small firm on AI is not a technology problem.
It is a deployment problem.
The tools exist. Contract drafting with Claude. Case management with AI-integrated tools. Client communication via WhatsApp automation. Document review with GPT-4. Most under Rs 5,000 a month.
What doesn't exist is a person who walks into the law firm, understands the workflows, and builds it.
That person is the Legal AI Workflow Architect.
What this person actually does:
Real example.
A litigation lawyer in Saket District Court handles 150 active matters. Each matter needs:
- Hearing date tracked and reminded to client
- Case documents organized and retrievable
- Client billing updated after each appearance
- Drafts prepared for next hearing
- Court fee calculations done
Currently: one overworked clerk. Dates missed. Clients calling constantly. Bills sent late or not at all.
A Legal AI Workflow Architect builds this in 4 weeks:
- WhatsApp bot that sends hearing reminders automatically
- Document folder structure auto-created on new matter intake
- Billing tracker updated after each court date
- Standard draft templates pre-filled from case details
- Court fee calculator integrated into the intake form
Cost to the lawyer: Rs 15-20,000 one-time. Rs 2,000 per month to maintain.
Value to the lawyer: 2 hours saved per day. One less clerk needed. Zero missed dates. Clients who feel looked after.
This is not complicated. It is not being done because nobody is walking in to do it.
The junior lawyer crisis and the small firm gap are the same story.
Entry-level hiring at top law firms: collapsing. AI is doing the contract review, the legal research, the painful due diligence, the first draft. The work that used to go to a fresh LLB graduate.
712 lawyers have already been sanctioned globally for AI hallucinations in court filings. The ones who used AI carelessly. Not the ones who deployed it properly.
Large firms are cutting junior headcount. The work isn't disappearing. It is being done differently.
But 1.4 million small practitioners have no automation at all. They are drowning in admin. They are losing clients to better-organized competitors. They are billing less than they should because they cannot track their own time.
The same disruption that shrinks the large firm associate pool creates the legal AI deployment market. These are not separate events. They are the same event, viewed from different angles.
The skill set is learnable. In months, not years.
You do not need to be a technologist. You need to understand legal workflows and know how to connect tools.
Legal process mapping: if you have worked in any law firm, you already know this
- One automation platform like n8n or Make: 3-4 weeks
- Prompt engineering for legal drafting: 2 weeks
- API basics, connecting tools: 3-4 weeks
Three months of focused learning. Then you walk into one solo practitioner or small firm with a painful manual process and you fix it.
India has 1.5 million lawyers. The ones who learn to deploy AI into legal workflows will not just survive what is coming. They will own the future.
If you are struggling to get a good job or internship in law, just learn how to do it. Your legal career will be unstoppable.
537 of you found us. You made 1,200+ recordings and screenshots.
And every single one of those recording means everything to us.
When we launched Gloomin, I wasn't sure anyone would care.
It felt like a small idea. Record a video. Share it. Skip the meeting. That's it.
We're nowhere near done. But we're so glad you're here.
💜 https://t.co/yzttVJNVtC