reddit is gold for finding real problems... but turning that into actual signals is exhausting.spent another late night drowning in comments again.if you're tired of the same struggle, get early access here: https://t.co/Ae0zmgEeIi pressure.
reddit is brutally honest about user problems... but making sense of it all is pure pain.spent another night lost in threads watching the same cycle. if you're tired of the chaos, get early access here: https://t.co/Ae0zmgEeIi pressure.
reddit is still one of the most honest places to understand real user pain... if you can actually make sense of it.been digging through threads again tonight and it's the same chaos. if you're tired of that mess, get early access here: https://t.co/SLaKdVtiuk
stayed up late digging through reddit again. saw founders venting the exact validation headaches i can’t stop thinking about — then the thread just dies. feels pointless some nights. #Startups#FounderLife#IdeaValidation
another hour in reddit comments. people venting the exact problems i’m fixated on... then the thread dies and everyone vanishes. just collecting ghosts at this point. validation is brutal.
One of the biggest mistakes I see devs make: Over-engineering simple features. Simple code that ships today > perfect code that never launches. What’s one habit that improved your coding speed the most? #IndieHackers#SaaS#BuildInPublic
Solo founder life: Built ProfitPlate in weeks. Marketing it? Still the hardest part. Distribution beats perfect code. What’s your biggest struggle right now — building or getting users? Drop your #1 challenge #IndieHackers#SaaS#BuildInPublic
The best investment I made as a developer: Learning to sell, not just code. Most devs stay broke because they ignore marketing. What skill outside coding has helped you the most? #IndieHackers#SaaS#BuildInPublic
Building SaaS in India: Solve real pain, ship fast, still struggle with users. The game changer? Posting daily. What’s your biggest hurdle right now? #IndieHackers#SaaS
Pro tip for indie devs: Start every SaaS project with a brutally simple MVP. I wasted weeks building fancy features no one asked for. Now I launch in < 2 weeks with just 3 core screens. What’s your go-to rule for shipping fast? Share below #IndieHackers#SaaS#BuildInPublic
@bigfandotpro it helps them track their food cost , track if they are pricing the dishes properly on their menu , currently most of the restaurant owners use spreadsheets to track all this but with profitplate they can just scan it and it automatically extracts and updates everything
Solo founder truth: I can build the product in weeks, but marketing it? That’s the real grind. Tried everything. Most days it feels like shouting into the void. What’s working for you right now to get your first 100 users as an indie hacker? Share your best tactic (no fluff)