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For those who’ve made their first sale selling services or product to someone through outreaching, what was the experience like for you?
And also how many rejections you first faced before making a sale
Starting something new
I’m beginning my journey of selling websites and automation services to local businesses.
I’ll be sharing my full progress here wins, rejections, lessons, everything.
Goal:
• Improve my sales skills
• Work with real clients
• Build real-world experience
• Turn this into a solid income stream
No overthinking. Just action.
Let’s see where this goes
Just upgraded FindClient with AI-assisted scraping.
It doesn’t just collect Reddit posts anymore
it helps you:
• Discover high-intent leads
• Filter by pain signals
• Score opportunities
• Suggest subreddits & keywords
Reddit → qualified leads in minutes.
Working on my next SaaS project
Building an Onboarding Autopilot for teams.
Managers add a new hire → the system automatically delivers training steps, follows up if someone is stuck, and escalates when needed. No more chasing emails.
Launching the MVP soon.
Built for small/Medium teams who want onboarding to run itself.
Just shipped a tiny feature that makes finding Reddit clients way faster
Post:
Just shipped a small but high-impact update to my tool FindClient
🔍 Keyword search in the dashboard
– Filter leads by title or intent keywords
– Works across High Score / Newest / Saved tabs
– Instant results, no clutter
What FindClient does:
It scans Reddit in real-time to surface high-intent posts like:
“Looking for a dev”
“Need help with X”
“Struggling with Y”
Then it scores and ranks them so you see the best opportunities first before they get crowded.
This tool I made is actually saving me a lot of time on market research on Reddit and I added new categories for different market research and its working amazingly.
I am improving it daily based on the problems I face while researching with it
One thing I’ve learned from building SaaS products is this: if your landing page doesn’t clearly explain what problem you solve and why someone should care within seconds, your product is already set up to fail.
Big update on a personal tool I’ve been building to find potential clients on Reddit.
What started as a simple script is now a full lead-generation dashboard I actually use daily.
Recent upgrades
• Fixed timezone bugs so post age is always accurate
• Smart fallback mode (never shows a blank screen)
• Exact keyword attribution for every lead
• Scan summaries showing total posts + keyword hits
• Dual timestamps (post age vs when I found it)
• Contact tracking, deduplication, and lead cleanup
• Anti-bot safeguards to stay within Reddit limits
Built this tool mainly for myself to find potential clients on Reddit without endless scrolling.
It scans for real problem posts, filters low competition, and helps me reach people earlier.
I wasn’t planning to make it public, but if others find this useful, I might open it up.
Building in public has been surprisingly motivating.
I built a small tool just for myself to find potential clients on Reddit and it’s already saving me hours.
Instead of doom-scrolling, it:
• Scans subreddits
• Finds posts based on real problem keywords
• Filters low-competition + fresh posts
• Surfaces people who actually need help
What I didn’t expect was how much the workflow matters.
Current features I’m using:
🔎 Sniper scraping (fresh <8h, <1 comment, real pain)
📊 Smart scoring (rewards “how do I”, penalizes validation posts)
🕒 Clear post age vs scrape time
🧠 Keyword-level matching (tells me why it flagged a post)
🚫 Hide contacted leads so I don’t double-pitch
📋 One-click copy for a non-salesy first reply
Not a SaaS.
Not automated outreach.
Just a tool that helps me talk to the right people faster.
Building tools for yourself hits different.
Shipped some solid improvements to my personal Reddit lead-finder today.
• Cleaner UI
• Better filters (high score / newest / hide contacted)
• Clear “why this is a lead” signals
• Faster scan → act loop
Still just a tool I’m building for myself, but it’s getting dangerously useful.