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#feedback
Alexander S
@textwizhub
8 hours ago
Built 30+ privacy-first text tools — would love honest feedback

Hey everyone,

I’ve been working on a small project called TextWizHub — it’s a collection of 30+ text tools for things like formatting, cleaning, and transforming text.

The main idea was to make something fast and privacy-friendly, so everything runs directly in the browser (no uploads, no accounts).

I built it mainly because I kept needing simple text utilities and most sites felt bloated or sketchy with data.

I’d really appreciate honest feedback on:

  • Does the value make sense quickly?
  • Are the tools actually useful?
  • Anything confusing or missing?

Here’s the link: https://www.textwizhub.com/

Happy to check out your projects too!

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Jim Tom
@jim-tom 🇺🇸
12 hours ago
Do we actually need better discovery for WhatsApp/Telegram communities?

Hey everyone, Jim here 👋

I’ve been experimenting with a small project around a problem I kept noticing: discovering relevant, active WhatsApp and Telegram communities is surprisingly fragmented and noisy.

Most groups are either hard to find, inactive, or full of spam. Existing directories don’t really solve for quality or trust.

So I built a simple prototype that tries to organize public communities by category, tags, and activity signals. The goal isn’t just discovery, but eventually helping people find high-signal groups instead of random links.

It’s still very early, and I’m trying to validate whether this problem is worth going deeper on. Check out https://tapjoin.live/

Would really appreciate your thoughts on a few things:

  • Do you personally struggle with discovering high-quality communities, or is this a non-problem?
  • What signals would make you trust a community listing (activity, moderation, reviews, etc.)?
  • If you’ve used Telegram/WhatsApp directories before, what frustrated you the most?
  • Is this better approached as a niche (e.g., startups, AI, local communities) rather than a broad directory?

Happy to review your projects in return. Appreciate any honest feedback 🙏

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Muhammad Ibrahim
@muhammad-ibrahim
1 week ago
I built a name combiner for couples and parents!!

I built a name combiner for couples and parents to combine two or more names into one unique. Check it out and give feedback.

https://namecombiner.us/

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Raf Vantongerloo
@R4FKEN 🇧🇪
Stripe $2/mo
2 weeks ago
Landing page feedback wanted

Hi,

For a recently launched product, I have an enormous bounce rate and nearly zero conversions from the main landing page. I'm fairly new at this, so any feedback would be highly appreciated. OpenGraph image attached, for what it's worth.

The link: https://chromegoldmine.com (I recently added the "Live demo" button, and it's getting some clicks, but still, not many conversions...)

Thanks in advance!

Raf

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Bio One
@bio-one
2 weeks ago
Building a tool for AI search visibility - would love your input

Hey everyone! I've been working on a project that helps brands understand how they appear in AI search engines like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini.

The idea came from a simple frustration: there are tons of SEO tools out there, but almost nothing that tells you whether AI assistants actually mention your brand - or what they say about it when they do.

So I built a free site checker that scores your website across 13 dimensions (entity presence, structured data, llms.txt, bot access, etc.) and gives you a prioritized list of things to fix.

What I'd love feedback on:

- Does the value proposition make sense right away when you land on the page?

- Is the free checker useful enough to make you want to explore further?

- What's missing that would make this more actionable for you?

Happy to return the favor and check out your projects too. Thanks in advance!

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Abhay Gandotra
@abhay-gandotra
2 weeks ago
I recently launched my first SaaS and looking for honest feedback

Hello everyone,

I recently launched my first SaaS called BuildfromPain.

The platform focuses on discovering real user frustrations from discussions online and turning them into structured problem statements and PRDs that can guide product development.

Users can also submit frustrations they experience so others can explore and potentially build solutions around them.

It’s still early and I’m mainly looking for honest feedback from builders here.

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Ari Nakos
@ari
Stripe $500/mo
1 month ago
A dictation tool from Mac OS.

This entire message was dictated, meaning typed on my behalf by the computer, using a tool I made called Privisay.

Check out the demo for the automated post I created for LinkedIn.

Looking for people to try it out.

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Prashastha Jain
@prashastha-jain
1 month ago
Feedback Request: I ditched "Generic Scores" for strict "JD Context"

Hey fellow builders,

I’m looking for some honest feedback/roasting on the core UX of my project, cvcomp.

The Hypothesis I started building this because I felt that standard resume scanners were optimising for vanity metrics. They give users a "95/100" score based on formatting, even if the content is totally irrelevant to the job they are applying for.

I decided to build a tool that forces Context. It compares the resume strictly against a specific Job Description (JD). If the resume is well-written but misses the specific semantic requirements of the JD, the score drops.

The UX Challenge (Where I need help) The biggest friction point in this space is the "Edit Loop." Usually: User scans resume -> Finds gaps -> Opens Word/Canva -> Edits -> Exports PDF -> Re-uploads.

To fix this, I built a Live Editor directly in the browser. You can click "Accept" on AI suggestions or double-click to manual edit, then download the PDF immediately.

What I’d love feedback on:

The On-boarding: Does the requirement to upload a JD immediately feel like too much friction, or does it make sense given the value prop?

The Live Editor: Does the "Accept/Decline" flow feel intuitive, or does it feel like you lack control?

The Tone: Does the "Gap Analysis" feel helpful, or is it too discouraging compared to standard scanners?

I’m trying to validate if this "tough love" approach is better than the "feel good" approach of competitors.

Here is the link: cvcomp.com

Don't hold back, if the UI is confusing or the logic seems off, I want to hear it.

Thanks,

Prashatha Jain

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Galgaldas
@galgaldas
2 months ago
How to gather feedback?

Hey everyone! First time posting here, I have created side project as made it open source.

I wanted a simple self hosted disposable email solution for privacy and control, but I could not find one that fit my needs. So I built TempFastMail. It lets you quickly spin up temporary inboxes on your own server, receive emails without giving away your real address, and keep everything fully under your control.

Code and details are here: https://github.com/kasteckis/TempFastMail

I wanted to ask for ideas and feedback, maybe do you see what's missing and what could you add or suggest?

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Souhail
@souhail_dev 🇲🇦
3 months ago
I created this tool that generates colors for design systems

Color palette generator for design systems

Create palette, export to primitive and semantic tokens

Would love to get some feedback

kolors.dev

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Arkhet
@arkhet 🇨🇦
4 months ago
New launch website LF feedback: www.arkhet.com

Just updated our website, Arkhet. We're an AI prototyping tool for product teams. Would love to get any feedback on this new landing page 🔥

www.arkhet.com

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Anna Galtseva
@anna-galtseva 🇦🇪
4 months ago
First Launch!

Hey there guys!

Hope you enjoy your week. And we just only start too. We launch next week. And I was wondering, do you believe that AI can help with mental health?

Jefry
@canvasowl 🇺🇸
4 months ago
Soft launch - would like some feedback!

Recently launched my new app Opensmith.io

Opensmith allows you to easily compose product updates/ release notes based on your projects GitHub activity.

It already has some initial users. But I wanted to share it with this community and see if any of you have some feedback.

Any feedback would go a long way!

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Rares Serban
@rares-serban 🇷🇴
6 months ago
How much time do you spend explaining things that are already in your docs?

Hello everyone,

While building my first SaaS I realized that I may have to spend time daily answering questions about API usage, billing, features etc. However I am also going to have a documentation, but it probably won't be read by actual users as much as I'd like...

How do you guys deal with this? Is this an actual problem you are facing as well?

I'm researching solutions and would love 2 minutes of your insights:

https://aicofounder.com/research/bpFw8fS

Thanks!

Singh
@Singh 🇬🇧
6 months ago
Feedback On Our New Portfolio Site

Hi everyone, I am launching a new web design and development service, specifically targeting founders and startups to help them validate their ideas. Will also be sharing our own "startup experiments" too.

To showcase our work and share our services, I have put together a portfolio site using Framer. Would really appreciate any feedback or if you could spot any bugs!

https://artalabs.framer.website/

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Rodrigo Reis Ferreira
@rodrigo-reis-ferreira
6 months ago
Created a simple SaaS in 2 weeks based on a personal need

For the past two weeks, I've been working on a personal project to create a web app called Spendflow(https://spendflow.me).

The goal was to help me control my personal bill payments. I've always

managed this using a Google Drive Sheet, where I'd mark what I needed to

pay by the end of the month on a horizontal timeline, and update the

status. The reason for the horizontal timeline is that it gives me a

clear sense of what's coming up and a sense of continuity, so I don't

pay things out of order.

I'm a developer who loves to build things, but I'm terrible at

design and marketing. My problem has always been that I never share the

ideas I have. So, I decided to use AI to boost my productivity and

launch things faster. Here are the steps I've taken so far:

  • I used Bolt.new to create the first version of the app.
  • After my free credits ran out, I subscribed to Bolt to improve the design.
  • I transferred everything to my GitHub and subscribed to Copilot (with VSCode).
  • I integrated the backend with Supabase
  • I enabled Magic Link and Google Auth via Supabase.
  • I set up auth emails with Resend
  • I created a Stripe account for the first time to handle payments.
  • I used a new SaaS called BoostToad to get some feedback.
  • I added Google Analytics for traffic analysis.
  • I deployed the app on Vercel
  • Now for the most important part: finding customers!

I've replaced my spreadsheet with the app and am using it myself. I

know there are improvements to be made, but I've decided not to invest

more time until I work on the marketing and figure out if other people

have a similar need.

I've seen many finance apps out there, but I have no intention of

evolving this into something that deals with investments, savings goals,

or similar features. I also don't know if anyone needs something this

simple, even though it's been useful for me.

I've learned a great deal in just two weeks. I've read plenty of Reddit

posts about not wasting time building something nobody will use, and I

Get that. But considering I had never used 90% of the technologies on

this list, I feel much more prepared to find a new idea and create my

next product.

Thanks for taking the time to read about my project. Any feedback

is welcome—feel free to reach out with a DM. I'd love to hear what you

think

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Javier Bonilla
@Javi
7 months ago
Built Tasklyst - An offline-first, cross-platform productivity tool. Is there room for a PRO version?

Hey folks,

I’ve been working on a side project called Tasklyst, a simple productivity app that runs on Windows and Linux (macOS will come later once I can justify the Apple developer fee).

I started it because I got tired of bloated to-do apps that need an account, live entirely in the cloud, or feel slow on desktop. I just wanted something fast, native-feeling, and not tied to a subscription.

Right now it’s:

  • Cross-platform
  • Works completely offline, no login required
  • Minimal interface with light/dark themes
  • Customizable task table (columns, sorting, etc.)
  • Launches at boot and sits in the system tray

You can download it here (free, no sign-up): https://tasklyst.app

I’m thinking about keeping a free forever version, but also offering a PRO upgrade to help fund development. Some ideas for PRO features:

  • Optional sync + mobile apps
  • Shared lists for teams
  • Reminders and notifications
  • Local AI task entry
  • Voice to text

What I’m trying to figure out:

  1. Is there actually space for a paid desktop-first productivity tool like this?
  2. Which features would make you consider paying?
  3. Does offline-first make it more appealing, or is the market just too cloud-oriented now?
  4. Am I already too late to the party because the space is saturated?

Would appreciate any honest feedback, even if it’s “don’t waste your time.” 😂

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Krzysztof
@Krzysztof
8 months ago
How I turned sharing other people’s articles into a way to grow my own list and traffic

Hey, random share from me today.

I’m the kind of person who’s always finding cool stuff online — articles, news, interesting blog posts and I love sharing them in FB groups, Reddit threads, or group chats.

But here’s what started bugging me: every time I drop a link, I’m basically sending people straight to someone else’s site. It’s great for sharing value, but I started thinking… is there a way I could also benefit a bit from all these clicks, without having to write my own blog or make my own content?

So here’s what I tried:

I built this little tool that takes any link I want to share and wraps it in a new link. When people click it, they still see the original page (the article, news piece, or blog post), but there’s a small popup or a banner with my own CTA — like “Check out my website” or “Subscribe to my newsletter.”

Basically, it lets me keep sharing cool content as usual, but also gently invite people to visit my own page, drop their email, or do whatever I want them to do.

And it’s not just about email popups. For example, my friend sells solar panels, and he recently shared a news article about rising electricity prices — but he used my tool to add a CTA leading people to his solar business website. So it’s super flexible.

Sometimes you don’t have the time (or the desire) to create your own articles or blog posts, but you still want to share valuable stuff and get some visibility in return. This kind of solves that.

Here’s a random example I made with a Wikipedia page about Elon Musk:👉 https://poplink.to/l/2s3fj3

I dropped that into some Facebook groups, and within an hour, people were not only reading the page but also checking out my own link. That felt like a small win because I didn’t have to create any original content, yet I still got extra eyeballs on my stuff.

It’s definitely not perfect yet. It’s totally free right now because it’s still in beta. Some sites block it, and I’m working on ways around that (I’ve got some ideas but need time to implement them). But overall, it’s been surprisingly fun to play with.

Anyway, just wanted to share in case anyone else here has ever felt like they’re sending free traffic to other people’s sites all the time — maybe this is a way to get something back from it. Curious if anyone else has tried similar hacks or tools?

https://poplink.to/

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Mohd Anas
@mdanassaif 🇮🇳
8 months ago
BruhGrow tools Journey and asking for feedbacks

I’m Mohd Anas, and I’m working on BruhGrow Tools, a set of super useful web tools that stick to the basics—no weird, confusing stuff here!

We’re keeping BruhGrow simple, clean, and easy to use, so you can jump in and get what you need without any hassle. The tools are designed to give you quick, spot-on results based on what you put in.

Right now, we’ve got 24+ awesome web tools ready to help you out.Most Used tools as Developer : Token Price Checker, Post Enhancer, Open Graph, PDF Into N Pages, SVG Icons, QR Code Generator, Password Generator, Flowchart Generator, Image Processor and Vectorizer, SVG Editor, Qolor Palettes, Sorter Extension

Youtube Based tools : Hashtag Generator, Description Generator, Thumbnail Generator, Transcript Getter, Keyword Title Generator, Title Rewriter

Learning Based Helping tools : Code Review, Daily Challenges, Project Ideas, Roadmap, Resources

Thanks for taking the time to read and check out BruhGrow Tools. The goal of this post is to gather feedback from experts and experienced folks like you: )

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Jonathan
@J_Phroneos 🇧🇪
8 months ago
Looking for test users for our new web analytics tool

Hey everyone!

My co-founder and I just opened up early access to Trackthemetric, a lightweight, privacy-friendly alternative to Google Analytics. It gives you useful insights without the complexity or creepy tracking. 

We're building this as a tiny team of two and looking for early users to help us test it, share feedback, and shape what it becomes. The most important website analytics are ready but we're constantly moving and are currently adding AI-powered data analysis and payment provider integrations.

If you're running a site or a project and want to know how people are using your website, we’d love to hear what you think and if there is anything missing. No pressure to be nice, honest feedback helps us most!

You can start your free trial here: https://app.trackthemetric.com/sign-up

Happy to answer any questions or thoughts below too!

Thanks 🙏

Jonathan

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Abhinav Jangid
@anshu-jangid 🇮🇳
9 months ago
Is offering free premium to initial users a good idea?

So i recently made my first app Spenlys.com a ai powered personal finance app. But as you know ai is pretty expensive and getting initial users also kinda hard. So I made this approach - I lock some features behind a paywall (fake) when the users clicks the upgrade to premium, They get pro for free as a way of thanking for trying the app early and then I ask the user - "You got the premium for free would you have paid for it? " So I know if users are willing to pay for the features (validation) . I don't have enough data currently so I can't share it. I just want feedback if it's a good validation approach if you have already built the feature. What do you think?

jose pedro giraz
@jpgb83
9 months ago
Pactando.com - AI-Powered Financial Analysis Platform for Startups

Hey Huzzler community! 👋

I'm thrilled to finally introduce Pactando.com, financial analysis platform built specifically for startups, entrepreneurs, and lean teams (1-10 people).

Here's how Pactando can empower your financial decisions:

  • Quick and easy ROI calculations
  • Clear, actionable startup valuation
  • Bankruptcy risk assessments (because it's better to know early!)
  • Straightforward financial health checkups
  • Ready-to-use business plan templates
  • Simple yet insightful market research & competitor analyses

Who'll benefit most (ICP)?

  • Early-stage founders (1-3 people) working on validating their ideas.
  • Growing teams (5-8 people) aiming to attract investment.
  • Scale-ups (up to 10 people) striving for optimal growth.
  • Solo entrepreneurs who need real financial insights but don’t have a finance team.

Why did I build this?

As an entrepreneur myself, I’ve faced the frustration of tools either being overly complex and pricey or disappointingly basic. Pactando is my effort to bridge that gap—practical, intuitive financial tools without the hassle or cost of enterprise solutions. I would like to highlight that is an MVP.

Why Pactando stands out:

  • Instantly get actionable insights powered by friendly AI.
  • Designed specifically for busy teams without a financial background.
  • Combines multiple essential financial tools into one simple platform.
  • Easy-to-understand results without the jargon.

I’d genuinely love your candid thoughts:

  • Does this resonate with your experiences and needs?
  • How intuitive do you find the design and user experience?
  • Are the pricing plans accessible and fair for smaller teams?
  • Any features you'd love to see, or perhaps those we might reconsider?
  • Would you actually use Pactando, and recommend it?

Dive in, give it a spin, and let me know what you think! Your honest feedback, especially as fellow founders, means a lot.

Thanks a ton for checking it out!

Here’s the link: pactando.com

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Odeh Ahwal
@odehahwal 🇬🇧
9 months ago
Building the #1 Online Side Hustle Directory 👊

Hey Huzzlers..

I created a directory that serves as an online side hustles index where you can browse 370+ side hustle ideas, work-from-home opportunities, and easy ways to make money fast.

This is a totally free directory, updated monthly - No sign-ups required, no strings attached. ✨

It won Product of the day on MicroLaunch the other day.

Now if you're feeling supportive, I’m asking you to check it out and share your "Roast" feedback on ML.

👉 https://microlaunch.net/p/esidehustles

Happy to support back with your future launches.

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Odeh Ahwal
@odehahwal 🇬🇧
9 months ago
I Built Shazam For Food Meals 🤯

Hey Huzzlers..

I built an AI food detector that guesses what you're eating

It won Product of the day on MicroLaunch 

Now if you're feeling supportive, I’m asking you to try it and share your "Roast" feedback on ML.

👉 https://microlaunch.net/p/whatthefood

Let me have it. Brutally. No mercy.

Happy to support back with your future launches.

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Vincent
@vincent 🇧🇪
9 months ago
📣 Need your feedback to make Huzzler great again

Hi everyone 👋 I'm soon starting the next development cycle for Huzzler and urgently need your opinions 😁

I'm a solo developer working on Huzzler, and I'm struggling to decide what to focus on. Your feedback would really help here.

Option 1: focus on the founder feed. Add daily interesting articles about tech, success stories, case studies. This will drastically reduce my time available to work on Huzzler and there are already some sites out there with daily news content (eg indie-hackers). However, these success stories could provide a lot of value.

Option 2: Focus on improving the community. Hide the founder feed from the homepage or add fewer articles and focus on making this community better. I'd like to add

  • verifiable MRR with stripe (MRR badge on profile)
  • KYC required + strict no AI policy. You'll have to verify with passport / drivers license using an external service. Everyday, people are getting more and more tired of the AI bots on platforms like X. On Huzzler anyone posting or commenting using an AI bot will be banned (3 warnings). It will be a very strict no-AI platform. It may seem overkill but will may sure you get to see real valuable posts instead of generic AI generated ones.
  • MRR chart on profile + cooler profile pages 😎
  • Project Milestones: new kind of structured post where post about the goal you achieved, how you did it and what you learned (this will be useful for learning from each other).
  • Resource Hub: Hand picked resources and sites so you can use just one platform (Huzzler 😉) to find the best: launch platforms, indie hacker blogs, directories, marketplaces, newsletters, free coding courses.

What do you think would be best for Huzzler? I'm personally leaning towards option 2. Any other ideas are welcome (especially regarding the founder feed and placement, maybe we should show news articles the same way as posts? but with distinct styling?)

Thanks so much for everyone who is still a part of Huzzler. With your help, we'll make Huzzler great again 😁I really want to make this the best place to connect with other founders and learn from each other.

LBF
@LaunchedByFriday
9 months ago
Would entrepreneurs pay for an AI-powered MVP retreat? Seeking honest feedback

I'm exploring a concept for a week-long retreat where entrepreneurs can build an MVP using AI coding tools in just 7 days. Before investing more time, I'd love some honest feedback.

Here is the landing page I just created that explains the idea in more detail: http://launchedbyfriday.com/

You can find a quick google form to give feedback in there! (or right here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdjTRA0W5iJtW_N07ZztMD0VL0tyTe8YXnjPAbGdnuax-v6-Q/viewform?usp=header)

I'm not selling anything - just trying to validate if this concept resonates before developing it further. All feedback welcome, especially critical perspectives.

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Harrison Telyan
@harrisontelyan
10 months ago
don't hold back

Hey y'all, my co-founder and I just released an alpha version of our software. Eager to hear everyones opinion on the product, the site, and SDK.

Some specific questions we had:

- Is it clear what we do from the messaging? Would be helpful to hear in your own words what you think it is we do

- Are the SDK docs legible or are they missing something?

- Any other feedback is appreciated!

We want to make it really easy for this new wave of builders to get billing stood up quickly so they can focus on product (more on this outlook in an paper I wrote). We REALLY welcome candid, constructive feedback and appreciate any thoughts in general. below is more structured info

___________

What the heck is Flowglad?

Flowglad is a drop-in billing system that adapts to any pricing model, letting you set up and manage billing in seconds. Unlike traditional solutions, Flowglad is built for developersintegrates seamlessly with your stack, and removes the need for maintaining a second copy of your billing data.

  • 100% Open Source – Full transparency and flexibility, with a GitHub repo you can explore and contribute to: GitHub.
  • Set Up in Seconds – AI-powered integration removes the need to sift through endless documentation.
  • Full-Stack SDK – React hooks and backend functions designed for real-world usage.
  • Zero Webhooks – No more brittle event triggers; Flowglad fetches real-time data on demand.
  • Styled Embedded UIs – Drop-in, customizable billing components (coming soon!).
  • Single Source of Truth – Access billing data scoped to your auth layer instantly.
  • Built on Stripe's Rails – Seamlessly integrates with your existing Stripe account while fixing its billing shortcomings.

Why choose Flowglad?

Billing isn’t just about payments; it’s about accuracy, reliability, and control. Stripe revolutionized payments, but billing remains a structural nightmare—a silent tax on engineers who end up becoming part-time accountants, debugging sync issues, and reconciling revenue discrepancies.

Dev First

We believe billing should be:

  1. API-First & Modular – No more monolithic systems; plug-and-play components adapt to any pricing model.
  2. Real-Time & Transparent – Billing should be a source of truth, not a black box.
  3. Built for Experimentation – Most startups aren’t iterating on pricing enough due to technical friction. Flowglad removes that friction
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Denise Hoedl
@denisehoedl
10 months ago
Would These Free Branding Tools Help You as a Founder?

Hi everyone,


I'm a co-founder of a design studio, and we're working on two free offers for early-stage founders to kickstart their brand:


Founder Toolbox


A compact guide on essentials like logo tips, free fonts, color schemes, and pitch deck tips.


Preview here →


Founder Feedback


Personalized feedback via Loom video on a key asset (e.g., landing page or pitch deck).

Preview here →


Would this be helpful for you? 
We’d love your thoughts — is there a need for this? What would be most valuable? Anything missing?

Best

Denise

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Rodrigo
@acesnof
10 months ago
Grow Organically on Reddit with Keyword Tracking

I'm finishing up a feature that captures posts and comments based on keywords. I really think it's perfect if you're looking to grow organically on Reddit, by the way.

  1. You can use strict or non-strict keywords. (Strict means the keyword is matched as a whole word. Non-strict matches even inside other words, for example, "ai" would match "pain" This is useful for catching different verb forms like tracktrackingtracked, etc.)
  2. Set keywords per subreddit, which makes sense because you might want to search differently in different communities.
  3. There are several filters available too, like: starred, trashed, ascending, descending, etc.
  4. Comment directly on posts or comments.
  5. Add users directly. (Why would you want that? Because the main goal here is lead generation, right? You’ll want to learn more about those users. This feature shows not just their most active and engaging subreddits, but also their pain points, wishes, seeking alternatives, bag of words, and more. You can even group them by tags).

Soon, I’ll also be adding charts that show things like common subreddits and pain points for each group you define.

I genuinely believe (not trying to sell you anything btw) that it’s super useful if you want personalized feeds for posts and comments, whether it’s to grow your product or just stay updated on topics you care about.

It’s also a great tool for tracking both your own product and your competitors.

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Vincent
@vincent 🇧🇪
10 months ago
Feedback on the founder feed

Hey everyone, as you may have seen we have recently added the Huzzler founder feed. It allows you to keep up to date with the most recent news (AI, tech, coding) and we will also post case studies and founder stories.

Newsletter is launching later this week.

I'm wondering what you guys think about the founder feed 😁

  • Do you like it?
  • Would you want a way to hide it on the homepage?
  • What articles are you interested in?

Any feedback is appreciated!