Install Huzzler App

Install our app for a better experience and quick access to Huzzler.

Back
Top New Old
#general
Sanket Kogekar
@sanket-kogekar
3 months ago
These dirty mistakes silently kill business growth:

(i've literally seen it across all founders that i worked with)

- lack of product demand. being first to market is often a wrong idea; targeting a non-existent niche is a critical mistake.  

- building features without speaking with customers.  

- not enough focus on sales. sales should begin from the day the mvp is ready.

- not building good relationships with employees. leading by fear alienates talented employees who have options.  

- promising equity but not putting it on paper makes employees hesitant to stay.  

- building with an exit strategy in mind, especially revolving around a single big business acquisition, is risky.  

- hiring interns rarely makes sense for ambitious startups.  

- following the hype instead of focusing on monetization.

- raising capital too fast, often before achieving traction or product-market fit (pmf).  

- focusing on unnecessary work at an early stage, such as adding analytics or excessive features.  

- not being fast enough: long meetings, unnecessary travel, excessive days off, inefficient capital allocation, wrong hires, etc.

- founder-market fit isn’t mandatory but accelerates progress significantly when present.  

- using buzzwords in startup features instead of providing clear value.  

- not iterating enough based on user feedback.  

- not discussing numbers (user retention rate, churn rate, revenue, profits, capital allocation, etc.) regularly

- failing to track essential kpis like ltv (lifetime value) and cac (customer acquisition cost).  

- not being transparent about pricing on the landing page; making customers click ‘request demo’ can deter them.  

- burning capital too quickly without considering the runway.

- overspending on marketing, product development, or hiring without a clear roi plan.  

PS. not sure what to build next or how to grow it? I can help you get there without burning time or cash via ZeroToCustomers .com - find all kinds of help you need over there as a founder.

Harvansh Chaudhary
@harvansh 🇮🇳
6 months ago
Stop Building in Silence: My Threddr Story & Why Marketing Matters More Than You Think

About a month ago, I built Threddr. The idea was simple, help indie founders find their first users by, get this, just hanging out on Reddit.

See, people there constantly ask for tool recommendations like, "Is there a tool that does X?" But those posts usually just get lost or drowned in spam.

These questions were goldmines for builders. My idea? A tool to find them, so you could genuinely help people and get your first users without begging.

so i built Threddr. It'd watch Reddit, spot posts matching your product, and even help you draft a natural, non-spammy reply.

launched it super quietly, and then... waited.

Where I Messed Up Big Time

My biggest blunder? I made it totally free. I thought it'd get people in, help me collect feedback, and I'd figure out money later.

Instead, users signed up, fiddled a bit, and disappeared. No messages, no feedback, just silence.

Point to be noted "Free users aren't invested, so they won't tell you why they leave. I had no clue if Threddr worked."

That silence killed my motivation. I stopped building, stopped talking, and jumped to a new idea. I also thought it'd go viral by itself. Wrong. No one knew about it because I didn't make any noise. A good idea stays good for no one if it's kept quiet.

What I Learned From All This

  • Free users are a bad sign. It's not that they're bad people, but they're just not committed. If something doesn't work for them, they won't tell you. They'll just ghost.
  • Feedback isn't automatic. You have to make it so people actually care enough to tell you what's up. That usually means they need to be paying you, or they seriously need what you built.
  • Marketing is the real grind. I still hate admitting it, but it's true. Talking about what you're building, over and over, is just as important as the building itself. Probably more.
  • Motivation is super fragile when it depends on others. If your energy comes from likes, messages, or numbers, you'll burn out fast. The only way to keep going is to find a reason to show up even when no one's cheering.

If I Could Do It Again

  • I'd charge from day one. Even if it's just a tiny one-time fee or a cheap monthly plan. Something.
  • I'd talk about it while building, not just after. Show examples, share results, ask for opinions. Even if it feels like yelling into an empty room.
  • And I'd just keep showing up. Even when it's dead quiet.

Because now I know...

Silence isn't just bad feedback. It's the thing that kills most products.

Vincent
@vincent 🇧🇪
1 month ago
Promoted #showcases
After watching 2400+ founders struggle to get customers, I built something

Hey Huzzlers, Vincent here 👋 (founder of Huzzler).

Working on Huzzler for the last 6 months (2400+ founders, 1400+ products), I've started seeing a pattern: incredible products with 0 customers. It's truly saddening. So much potential, but people don't even know these products exist.

Most founders try to post on Huzzler, Product Hunt, X, Reddit , try ads.. but no results.

So I started wondering, what exactly is the problem? not enough information? bad products? Badly configured ads? ... No influence?

None of that. What worked for me (to grow Huzzler) was creating a system that forced me to:

  • Define ONE narrow ICP (stop selling to everyone)
  • Update messaging to resonate with that ICP
  • Follow a daily routine of tasks
  • Build a permanent Knowledge Base

This is why I'm building the Customer Engine: it's a system specifically Built for B2B SaaS founders who need their first paying customers. It works for any kind of B2B SaaS. You can see all features on the website

Why $499 one-time instead of a subscription?

The goal was to create an asset (the Customer Engine) you buy once and profit from forever. No monthly fees eating away at your profits.

E.g. If Customer Engine helps you land just 2 customers at $45/month, it pays for itself in 3 months. After 12 months, that's a $5,000+ ROI.

And that's for only ONE product. You get unlimited projects with lifetime access, so you can use it for every SaaS you build. The ROI compounds. Plus you get all future updates.

customerengine.co

(Affiliates coming soon)

/
Image 1
Image 2
Image 3
Image 4
Image 5
/
Sanket Kogekar
@sanket-kogekar
6 months ago
Why most mvps suck & how to save 3+ months of work (and pain):

- most people treat their mvp like a product. it's not. it's a test.  

- if you're building before validating demand, you're guessing. and guessing adds 3-6 months of wasted time minimum  

- mvp doesn't mean "code something fast" - it means "test an offer with real users fast"

Here's what actually works in 2025 if you're a solo founder:

- skip landing pages unless you already have traffic. instead, use a pinned tweet or a google form. quicker. easier to iterate.

- don't touch no-code tools until you've had at least 20 convos or email replies from people saying "i want this now"

- use reddit search + search operators like: site:reddit .com "looking for [your solution]" - that's free customer research

- steal phrases from reddit comments or amazon reviews and use them in your offer copy. it converts better than anything you’ll write

- build your waitlist manually. dm everyone who liked your idea post. not with "buy now" spam - ask what problem they actually have

- treat x (twitter) like a search engine. post your mvp concept + what you’re testing. people will tell you what’s broken in minutes

- post daily. not to go viral. but to gather signal. what hits? what flops? you're not building a product, you're refining a problem.

bonus tip: search your mvp idea on tiktok comments. tons of people explain exactly what they want in plain language. steal that.

Raw truth: no one cares what you're building. they care if it solves something that already bothers them.

validate the problem. validate the willingness to pay. then build.

PS. I give honest feedback about your product/idea so you don’t waste time, money, or effort - get any kind of help you need at ZeroToCustomers .com

/
Image 1
/
wonkyu
@God
9 months ago
I swear ProductHunt is just a circlejerk

Not to mention the amount of bot-like comments. Even the human comments feel inorganic now.

I remember people used to actually ask real questions a few years ago. Asking things about roadmap, research done, funding, pricing, etc. Now it's just 20 comments that all say "Love this!" or "Grats on the launch (thumbsup)"

Hoken Tech
@hoken-tech 🇮🇹
Stripe $91/mo
3 months ago
Web3 Anti‑Scam Guide: OSINT, Tokenomics & Smart Contracts

Spot Web3 scams via OSINT, tokenomics and contract checks. Practical checklist + real examples and safe‑reply template.

https://www.hokentech.tech/web3-antiscam-guide-osint-tokenomics--smart-contracts

/
Image 1
/
Sanket Kogekar
@sanket-kogekar
6 months ago
My $0 outreach strategy that’s still bringing in leads after 60 days

- i picked one problem i could solve well. no fancy niche, just something real. i made a landing page that looked clean and answered 3 things fast: what it is, who it’s for, and why it’s different.

- posted a plain text breakdown of it on linkedin + twitter. not "here’s my startup", but "here’s the problem, here’s what i built, here’s what i learned". no links in the post. just told the story. link in first comment.

- reused that same story but tweaked it for indie hackers, a relevant subreddit, and a few slack groups. didn’t copy-paste. rewrote it like i was talking directly to each group.

- picked 5 active discussions every week in places my users hang out. didn’t pitch. just dropped value, shared parts of what i learned while building, then naturally linked to it if it made sense. built trust first.

- every new lead that signed up? i checked where they came from and what pages they looked at. if 10 people came from a reddit post, i doubled down on that subreddit and posted again 2 weeks later with an update. same energy.

- made a searchable faq-style public doc with answers to questions users asked me over dm or email. google indexed it. now random long-tail queries are sending organic traffic.

- seo note: i didn’t chase big keywords. i targeted weirdly specific phrases people actually google when they’re desperate. example: “how to sell a chrome extension without a website”. that kind of stuff.

- this all takes consistency, not money. i spent 30 min a day max. some posts flopped. some blew up. but it stacks up. and 2 months later, leads still trickle in daily.

no secrets. just showing up in the right places with something useful and not sounding like a tool.

PS. founders waste months chasing irrelevant metrics. I help focus on what truly matters at ZeroToCustomers.com

/
Image 1
/
Vincent
@vincent 🇧🇪
9 months ago
Promoted #showcases
7,458 Startup Founders Will See Your Product This Week | Advertise on Huzzler

Reach thousands of active founders looking for tools to solve their problems. Our Featured Product placement guarantees premium visibility with 7,458 weekly impressions for post ads (like you are reading right now).

Get direct access to your perfect target audience - people actively building, launching, and growing startups who are ready to invest in solutions like yours. Limited weekly slots available.

Reserve yours now at huzzler.so/advertise

/
Image 1
Image 2
/
Vincent
@vincent 🇧🇪
8 months ago
Tool Tuesday: What are your favorite tools to build, manage or grow your business?

Hey everyone! I'm introducing "Tool Tuesday" 😁 This is our dedicated weekly thread to share, discover, and discuss the amazing tools, apps, and services that can help us build, manage, and grow our ventures.

To get the ball rolling:

  • What's one tool you've recently discovered that you're excited about?
  • What's your "can't live without" tool?
  • Are you looking for a tool to solve a specific problem? Ask the community for recommendations!
/
Image 1
/
Carol
@SyrupMaker
8 months ago
Best Alternative to Stripe

I'll start by saying this isn't a promo post. I'm not affiliated with this startup in any way.

There comes a time in the life of a founder when they must charge users. The staple service used for this is Stripe.

But what happens when Stripe isn't supported in your region? You look for alternatives!

I spent the better part of the last four weeks, checking out Stripe alternatives, some of which were great, and some, not so much.

After much deliberation, I've come to announce the best ever Stripe alternative (IMO); Dodo Payments.

It's easy to use, has great UI/UX, and you can set it up in less than 3 days, with zero to minimum hassles.

It's honestly been a breeze.

Carol
@SyrupMaker
8 months ago
IDE Recommendations???

Hi,

I just got accepted into an accelerator where I have to build a mobile app in 45 days for a school project.

Recommend any app, webapp, IDE that I can use to get a crazy good MVP in a very short period of time (I also plan to put in not less than 20 hrs a week into this project).

So, lay your recs in the comments, thank youuuuuuuu.

LeaksAPi
@LeaksAPI
Stripe $3.4k/mo
4 months ago
From 0$->3k+ MRR + 400 users - LeaksAPI Dark Web Leak Checker

Hello Huzzler, nice to meet you all! 

I’m the CEO and co-founder of TTP.TODAY, a cyber threat intelligence provider based in the UK.  We are a self-funded operation, rejecting investor interest as we are very passionate about growing the service and company ourselves,

Collectively, our team has over 15 years of experience across cybersecurity fields, including malware research, attack analysis, OSCP-certified penetration testing, and darknet intelligence operations.

We also run a live darknet leak checker at https://leak-check.net, where you can freely see what data sources are available - or sign up for full domain and data access.  

Eight months ago, we launched LeaksAPI, a darknet data checker that provides easy access to a wealth of data (over 1,300 leaked databases and 400 million malware logs) sourced from darknet data brokers and private intelligence networks.  

Today, we support 400+ users and handle over 1 million requests per day, served through geographically distributed AWS load-balancing.  

I’m excited to connect with other founders here. I also wanted to share my top two lessons from the past eight months for anyone on the same journey:  

--- 

1. Verify your value proposition with real users  

Believe in yourself, but be patient - real value sells itself, even if slowly.  

KEEP COSTS LOW UNTIL PEOPLE PAY REAL $. KEEP. COSTS. LOW.

Find a real user to demo their need, even if it’s free. Too many people spend months building an app nobody wants. It should be the opposite: start with the need.  

Our first and only huge client fell through while we were waiting for the invoice to be paid - they had a security breach and froze all new supplier onboarding.

It was disappointing and scary.

After three months of work, bills had to be paid and we were excited to cross the finish line before it all fell through, but we realized they weren’t the only fish in the sea.

We found new traffic sources and clients over time.

Their feedback was still extremely valuable in helping us understand real-world requirements.  Their loss didn't change a thing.

--- 

2. 10% of users will cause 90% of the problems/work - respect yourself and your boundaries  

This includes people begging for discounts, extra features, or credits. Don’t be afraid to set minimum price points and turn down business where appropriate.  

Early on, we had a client sending malformed API requests that ruined our 100% error score.

They ignored three contact attempts across multiple methods, so we blocked their access for the sake of service quality.

This risked losing a $99/month customer, but it was worth it for our long-term reputation. After blocking, they finally reached out and we resolved their issue and saved our reputation score.  

--- 

Thanks if you made it this far!

If you’d like a free trial of the API, drop a comment below and we’ll set it up.  

/
Image 1
/
Sanket Kogekar
@sanket-kogekar
8 months ago
i listed the most underrated high potential ai business ideas for 2025:

i listed the most underrated high potential ai business ideas for 2025:

1. ai-powered digital twins - saas platforms that create digital replicas of physical assets for simulation, monitoring, and optimization purposes.

2. ai automation for large enterprises - solutions that help big businesses implement ai to streamline processes, improve efficiency, and reduce headcount, starting from niche applications.

3. ai shopping assistant - tools that personalize online shopping experiences by analyzing user behavior, preferences, and trends to increase engagement and sales for retailers.

4. fintech innovation for the next decade - research and develop ai-driven fintech solutions to capitalize on emerging trends and opportunities in financial technology.

5. ai-based financial forecasting for startups - tools using machine learning to provide accurate financial forecasts and scenario planning for early-stage startups.

6. ai-assisted worker job board - a platform connecting businesses in wealthy nations with ai-assisted workers in emerging markets, enabling cost-effective outsourcing.

7. ai-assisted employee board - a job board matching employers with candidates based on genuine skills, interests, and contributions for optimal hiring.

8. ai co-founders/business advisors - ai-driven virtual advisors tailored for specific needs such as business strategy, marketing, seo, and financial management.

9. ai as a friend/companion - ai-powered applications designed to address loneliness by acting as virtual friends, girlfriends, teachers, or companions.

10. ai-powered dating apps - platforms where users, especially women, can specify exactly what they’re looking for and initiate conversations with selected matches.

11. ai-driven market research - platforms that utilize ai to gather, analyze, and interpret market data for strategic business decisions.

12. subscription-based market research reports - provide in-depth market research reports and industry analyses on a subscription basis for businesses and investors.

13. high-stakes forecasting platform - saas leveraging ai and simulations for demand forecasting in industries like energy, agriculture, and logistics, reducing operational risks and costs.

14. ai-driven content creation and management - a saas tool that generates, curates, and manages digital content, aiding marketers, publishers, and creators in producing high-quality material efficiently.

15. ai for entertainment - platforms that curate high-quality social media content based on user preferences, enhancing entertainment experiences.

16. ai-driven sales platforms - tools using ai to optimize sales processes, lead scoring, and customer relationship management (crm).

17. ai-driven marketing optimization - a saas platform leveraging ai to autonomously manage and optimize all aspects of digital marketing campaigns, including content creation, real-time performance monitoring, predictive targeting, budget optimization, and multichannel campaign management.

18. traction channel testing app - an ai-powered app that helps businesses test and identify the most effective marketing and growth channels for their products or services.

19. personalized marketing platforms - ai-driven platforms that create individualized marketing strategies based on customer behavior, preferences, and trends.

20. precision marketing for b2b - saas using ai to create highly targeted campaigns for b2b companies based on behavioral data, enabling personalization at scale.

21. ai-driven content personalization for creators - tools that suggest content ideas to creators (videos, blogs, social media) based on audience preferences and behavior to enhance engagement.

22. ai authentic personal brand creator - platforms that help individuals create authentic brands, providing them with tailored content ideas and strategies to build their personal brand.

/
Image 1
/
Vanshika KHetan
@vanshika812
9 months ago
trying to build a SaaS using free/no-code tools – looking to learn from others

Hi all,

I’m a college student trying to build my first SaaS product. I don’t have a technical background, and I can’t afford to hire developers, so I’m exploring free and low-code/no-code tools (what some people call “vibe coding”?).

Right now, I’m in the learning and planning stage. I don’t have a finished idea yet, just a strong interest in creating something real and figuring things out as I go. I’d love to hear from anyone who’s:

1. Built a SaaS without a tech background

2. Used free tools or no-code platforms to get started

3. Is currently working on a similar project

Any tips, recommended tools, lessons learned, or just general advice would mean a lot. I’m not trying to promote anything – just here to learn and connect.

Thanks in advance!

Carol
@SyrupMaker
7 months ago
Tools to generate Keywords

What are the best tools to generate app keywords for Google Playstore?

Looking forward to your suggestions!!

Vincent
@vincent 🇧🇪
1 month ago
Promoted #showcases
After watching 2400+ founders struggle to get customers, I built something

Hey Huzzlers, Vincent here 👋 (founder of Huzzler).

Working on Huzzler for the last 6 months (2400+ founders, 1400+ products), I've started seeing a pattern: incredible products with 0 customers. It's truly saddening. So much potential, but people don't even know these products exist.

Most founders try to post on Huzzler, Product Hunt, X, Reddit , try ads.. but no results.

So I started wondering, what exactly is the problem? not enough information? bad products? Badly configured ads? ... No influence?

None of that. What worked for me (to grow Huzzler) was creating a system that forced me to:

  • Define ONE narrow ICP (stop selling to everyone)
  • Update messaging to resonate with that ICP
  • Follow a daily routine of tasks
  • Build a permanent Knowledge Base

This is why I'm building the Customer Engine: it's a system specifically Built for B2B SaaS founders who need their first paying customers. It works for any kind of B2B SaaS. You can see all features on the website

Why $499 one-time instead of a subscription?

The goal was to create an asset (the Customer Engine) you buy once and profit from forever. No monthly fees eating away at your profits.

E.g. If Customer Engine helps you land just 2 customers at $45/month, it pays for itself in 3 months. After 12 months, that's a $5,000+ ROI.

And that's for only ONE product. You get unlimited projects with lifetime access, so you can use it for every SaaS you build. The ROI compounds. Plus you get all future updates.

customerengine.co

(Affiliates coming soon)

/
Image 1
Image 2
Image 3
Image 4
Image 5
/
Abhishek
@Quickmvps
9 months ago
How to ship an MVP in 4 weeks:

Week 1:

-Schedule client meeting to understand requirements.

-Create a detailed Product Requirements Document (PRD).

-Analyze and prioritize features for Phase 1.

-Be transparent about what can realistically be shipped in the first phase.

Week:2

-Finalize and confirm requirements with the client.

-Plan UI/UX, map out all pages and features.

-Start coding prep (set up tech stack, environments, etc.).

Week 3:

-Complete UI development.

-Start backend development and integrate APIs.

-Work on additional features as per priority.

Week 4:

-Focus on debugging and fixing errors.

-Refine the product (UI/UX, performance, etc.).

-Deploy the application and prepare for launch.

Pro Tip:

-Update clients weekly on progress.

-Share challenges openly and seek feedback.

-Stay transparent and collaborative until delivery

Mattias
@Hammar
6 months ago
New To Coding

Im quite new to coding and are soon going to launch my website that I vibe coded into something amazing.

  1. Where to host and how does it work?
  2. How does it work if I need to post articles or run scripts in the code?
Anton
@Anton
8 months ago
How many projects have you launched before one actually worked?

Hello all👋

I’m curious how many projects it took before you finally launched one that worked? And what was the difference with the previous projects?

Drop it below 👇

Jefry
@canvasowl 🇺🇸
8 months ago
What tools do you use to record a video for your app?

Looking for a video recording tool that I can use to record a video showing my web app being used.

I've seen videos of screencasts where the video would zoom in when the user clicks or types on an form.

Any suggestion would be appreciated. Preferably a free tool but happy to consider paid ones as well

zaid
@zaid
9 months ago
Dark mode

Is there a dark mode for huzz? And if so, where do i find it?

Sanket Kogekar
@sanket-kogekar
8 months ago
brutal truths for saas founders:

- nobody cares that your product uses ai.

everyone uses ai now. it's not a differentiator. it's table stakes.

- your biggest risk is building something nobody wants.

ai makes building easier, but customer validation is still hard. skipping it kills startups.

- most ai saas tools are features, not products.

you need a solution to a real problem, not just a cool demo.

- if you can't sell, you're screwed.

the best product almost never wins. the best distribution does.

- building is 20%. getting users is 80%.

coders love building. but saas success is in growth, marketing, and retention.

- churn will silently kill you.

you can get signups, even sales. but if users don’t stick, you’re toast.

- you probably overestimate how much people care about your product.

customers don’t want to “explore” tools. they want solutions that save time or make money now.

- no one wants another dashboard.

users are overwhelmed. if you're building a tool, embed it in their workflow or make it invisible.

- your first 10 customers matter more than your first 1,000 signups.

vanity metrics kill focus. chase feedback and dollars, not upvotes.

- vcs aren’t stupid.

if you’re pitching “ai for x” without data, defensibility, or distribution, they’ve seen 10 of you this week.

- launching on product hunt doesn’t mean shit.

it’s a traffic spike, not traction. it won’t fix a weak product or zero pmf.

- there is no passive saas.

even with ai and automation, you’ll be fighting fires, updating features, and supporting customers.

- your idea is not special.

execution, timing, positioning, and speed matter 100x more.

- your tech stack doesn’t matter to customers.

they care if it works, solves their problem, and is easy to use. that’s it.

- you will underestimate how hard it is to grow.

especially past $10k mrr. every growth stage is a new slog.

- bootstrapping is slower than you think.

it’s also more real. but expect years, not months, to see serious returns.

- copying other successful saas won't work.

what worked 2 years ago doesn’t work now. context has changed.

- you must know your customer better than they know themselves.

if you can’t articulate their pain better than they can, you won’t convert them.

- ai alone doesn’t create lasting value. workflow integration does.

a gpt wrapper is easy. getting it to actually do something useful daily is hard.

- you will want to quit at least once. probably more.

especially when sales are slow, churn is high, or you hit a feature wall. that’s normal. doesn’t mean stop. means fix something.

good luck.

/
Image 1
/
Vincent
@vincent 🇧🇪
9 months ago
Promoted #showcases
7,458 Startup Founders Will See Your Product This Week | Advertise on Huzzler

Reach thousands of active founders looking for tools to solve their problems. Our Featured Product placement guarantees premium visibility with 7,458 weekly impressions for post ads (like you are reading right now).

Get direct access to your perfect target audience - people actively building, launching, and growing startups who are ready to invest in solutions like yours. Limited weekly slots available.

Reserve yours now at huzzler.so/advertise

/
Image 1
Image 2
/
Carol
@SyrupMaker
9 months ago
Need Advice

What are the best tools to integrate pay walls for your Saas?

Adomas
@apranevicius
8 months ago
B2B or B2C products?

What do you prefer? B2B or B2C digital products? Why? Share your opinion!

Jonathan
@J_Phroneos 🇧🇪
3 months ago
Which payment providers do you use?

Hey folks,

I’m currently building out revenue attribution in my analytics tool. Right now I’m starting with Stripe, since that’s the most common one.

What other payment providers do you use to run your online business?

Any you wish had better integrations for analytics / attribution?

Would love to make sure I’m covering the main ones people actually rely on.

/
Image 1
/
Roberto DAmico
@robie0123
8 months ago
Sidehustle where gamers earn by hosting games, helping gamehosts find players, or building a game dev or gaming community

Here is a good sidehustle. You Hostnplay games with your friends or followers. Earn money whether your gamehost, player for hire, or player.

Gamehost: get paid for hosting games

Player for hire: gamehosts pay you to help find them players.

Players: build a community forum, where gamers can post their gameplay, games and anything related to gaming.

With the community forum if you are building a game, you can also build a community based on that game. You can build a subscription based community to help you financially so you focus building your game.

/
Image 1
/
Nitesh Sapkota
@nitesh-sapkota
6 months ago
Loved Huzzler

Huzzler's UI is awesome. Just trying it out. I just hate this 50 Character limitttttttt

Athos Mina
@RoseSkullIXIV 🇨🇾
7 months ago
Thinking about pivoting to Data engineering

A little backstory about me I'm a full stack engineer, but I've always leaned more toward backend. During university, my thesis focused on Big Data exploring Hadoop, data lakes, and data meshes. That project sparked a lasting interest in data engineering, which I'm now seriously considering pursuing.

As we all know, building a personal brand is important for standing out and building credibility. I started doing that on X, originally for a different purpose. But after just 3 weeks, I began to see the power of building in public. (If you're on the fence about it, I highly recommend giving it a shot.)

Now I’m thinking of shifting the focus of my “brand” from promoting my tool (which may turn out to be a failed project) to documenting and sharing my data engineering journey instead.

What do you think about this pivot?

Zack Ho
@zack-ho
2 months ago
Building My First Extension with WXT

Recently got into learning how to build a browser extension and came across WXT, a modern framework that a few creators recommended. I’ve been playing around with it for the past few days and it’s looking pretty solid so far.

What really stood out to me is how smooth the developer experience is. It’s built on top of Vite, supports TypeScript out of the box, and even hot-reloads your background and content scripts while you’re developing. The documentation is clear and well-structured, which made it easy to get something running quickly.

I’ll be shipping something interesting with it in the coming week. If you’re curious, check it out here (🙌highly recommended): https://wxt.dev/

/
Image 1
/
Vincent
@vincent 🇧🇪
1 month ago
Promoted #showcases
After watching 2400+ founders struggle to get customers, I built something

Hey Huzzlers, Vincent here 👋 (founder of Huzzler).

Working on Huzzler for the last 6 months (2400+ founders, 1400+ products), I've started seeing a pattern: incredible products with 0 customers. It's truly saddening. So much potential, but people don't even know these products exist.

Most founders try to post on Huzzler, Product Hunt, X, Reddit , try ads.. but no results.

So I started wondering, what exactly is the problem? not enough information? bad products? Badly configured ads? ... No influence?

None of that. What worked for me (to grow Huzzler) was creating a system that forced me to:

  • Define ONE narrow ICP (stop selling to everyone)
  • Update messaging to resonate with that ICP
  • Follow a daily routine of tasks
  • Build a permanent Knowledge Base

This is why I'm building the Customer Engine: it's a system specifically Built for B2B SaaS founders who need their first paying customers. It works for any kind of B2B SaaS. You can see all features on the website

Why $499 one-time instead of a subscription?

The goal was to create an asset (the Customer Engine) you buy once and profit from forever. No monthly fees eating away at your profits.

E.g. If Customer Engine helps you land just 2 customers at $45/month, it pays for itself in 3 months. After 12 months, that's a $5,000+ ROI.

And that's for only ONE product. You get unlimited projects with lifetime access, so you can use it for every SaaS you build. The ROI compounds. Plus you get all future updates.

customerengine.co

(Affiliates coming soon)

/
Image 1
Image 2
Image 3
Image 4
Image 5
/
Sanket Kogekar
@sanket-kogekar
6 months ago
How to track seo results without wasting time (solo founder edition)

- Don’t track everything. just track these 3: 

 - how many indexed pages you’ve got (google search console → pages → filter by “indexed”)

 - clicks & impressions from ai answers (google search console → performance → filter “search appearance” for ai overviews)

 - which urls get traffic from non-branded keywords (click performance → filter out your brand name)

- use gsc console bulk export (go to settings → turn on bigquery export)

 - now you get daily data without clicking 20 tabs like a robot

- Want ai results? use raw text. no fluff, no fancy visuals

 - ai overviews in search pull clean, direct answers

 - they don’t care about pretty formatting, just the info

 - if you write, write like you're explaining something in discord. clear and blunt.

- use a site:yourdomain .com search every 2 weeks

 - google hides your pages when it wants. this tells you what’s actually showing up

- Want distribution without blog posts or video? post short value drops on reddit, twitter, hacker news

 - link to your tool, landing, or how-to page

 - this still gets indexed + picked up by ai overviews

 - avoid self-promo vibe. just be helpful and blunt

- hot trick: set alerts using visualping dot io for ai answers on your main keywords

 - it checks if your site is showing up in ai overview boxes

 - not 100% reliable but better than sitting around guessing

- If you're using a static site (like with framer, webflow, or custom build), check log files

 - look for googlebot visits on new urls

 - if no visit in 7 days, something’s wrong with your internal linking

- don’t waste time on rank tracking tools. they lie half the time. use real traffic and query data.

- remember: AI seo isn't about ranking #1 anymore. it’s about getting cited in ai answers. that’s the game now.

do less. measure what matters. keep the loop small.

PS. want your site to rank on llms like perplexity, chatgpt, and grok? grab a free ai seo report at LM-SEO.com

/
Image 1
/