@bob_remeika Don't vibe code it --> Workably exists for exactly this. Built for founders who hate bloated CRMs and $5k bills. https://t.co/XKoRdR6dYU
@BenyaminHolley Built Workably because of posts exactly like this. Simple CRM that doesn't make you want to rage-quit. Would love your thoughts if you're open to it —> https://t.co/XKoRdR6dYU
@cinamarina Building https://t.co/0ACZZFg3iB , a CRM focused on helping small businesses manage leads, customers and sales without the feature bloat that often hurts adoption.
@SchenckNick@hunvreus That's exactly why I built Workably. No bloat, no features you'll never touch. Just the 20% that actually matters. Contacts, pipeline, and visibility into your business. Free to try, no credit card. Would love your honest feedback → https://t.co/XKoRdR5G9m
@myriemsl@wittverse Nice to meet fellow builders. At https://t.co/0ACZZFfvt3 we're focused on making CRM adoption easier for small businesses. Looking forward to following your journey with Wittverse
@rustamovppl Building https://t.co/0ACZZFfvt3 a CRM designed to help small businesses stay on top of leads, customers and sales without the usual complexity. What are you building?
@GloriaUwan25332 Interesting that all the requirements focus on tracking.
I'd also look at how easy it is for the team to actually use the CRM every day.
A perfect CRM that nobody updates is still a spreadsheet with extra steps.
@SchenckNick@hunvreus Curious - what's the main thing you haven't liked?
Too much complexity, too many features, or just not fitting the way you actually work?
Most small businesses don't have a sales problem.
They have a system problem.
Leads fall through the cracks not because you're bad at sales but because you're running your business from memory and spreadsheets.
That's exactly why we built Workably.
@galileowilson As a founder, I've found that most breakthroughs don't come from thinking harder. They come from stepping away long enough to see the problem differently.
@noelcetaSEO The interaction history field is underrated. People remember conversations, not databases.A good CRM helps you continue the relationship where you left off.
@ivanjurashere Exactly this. And the second problem is almost always the easier fix. Most small businesses don't need more leads. They need to stop losing the ones they already have.
For most small businesses it really is that simple. The "50 tools" lists are written by people who've never run a small business. Daily reality for most owners: somewhere to track clients, something to send invoices, something to take payments. That's it. The CRM part is where people overcomplicate it most, spreadsheet works until it doesn't, then they end up in HubSpot wondering why they need a consultant to set it up.