2 years in niche-site SEO taught me this:
A payout is not the finish line. It's one receipt on a much longer loop.
Now I'm turning that depth into tools.
For early discounts follow me
@SeriousBloggers That loop only works if publishing feeds learning, not just the other way around.
Otherwise you end up creating more, but not getting sharper.
@HoussamDesigner Get 10 people with the problem you solve, send each one a short note offering to fix one specific pain point for free, and turn the 1st clear yes into the 1st client.
@AKirtesh Zero users is the one that usually compounds everything else.
Burnout, slow growth, low revenue, they all feel louder when there is no pull from users yet.
@alex_lrz_nmv Appreciate it, Alex.
Product Hunt is one of those places where the first few boosts can change the whole day, so I’ll keep you in mind if I launch there.
@alex_lrz_nmv I built chrome extensions for X replies and Medium engagement.
Then I built a system for topical maps and high-quality articles.
I’ve only used it internally so far.
Public launch is the next move.
@Mr_HadiH How does the whiteboard change execution, though?
For me it only helps if the tasks are small enough to do in one sitting, otherwise it becomes wall art.
@HsanC_ 55 videos in 2 months is a serious volume.
3.2K views on SaaS content is a good early signal, but the 90.2 hours tells the real story, you already have attention, now it's about tightening what gets it.
@CiprianiRanieri What does killing bad ideas fast look like in practice, pre build, after the first users, or only once support starts repeating the same thing?
That cutoff is usually the whole game.
@MikeHoffmann The real change is the start cost dropped, not the skill ceiling.
Now the bottleneck is choosing what to ship and getting anyone to notice it.
@Rakshaweb3 How do you turn that into a repeatable system, though, not just a one off insight?
The hard part is finding the 2am pain from real signals, not guessing it from vibe.
@stijnnoorman How do you keep the asset emails from training people to wait for the next free thing instead of the offer?
In practice, does the lift come from higher click intent, or just from not hammering the same CTA every week?
Flat monthly pricing on an AI product is a slow margin leak.
Your heaviest users quietly become your least profitable accounts.
When your cost of goods is token usage, a flat plan means cost climbs with usage while revenue stays fixed.
The power users you're proud of are the ones eating your margin.
Usage-based or credit pricing keeps cost aligned with revenue.
Charge for what costs you money.
Flat pricing made sense when compute was basically free. It isn't anymore.