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Hi everyone, I’ve got some good news! I recently sold my site getelectricaljobs.com, a small job board I built in just a few days, working a few hours each day.
It’s not life-changing, but for me it feels like a huge milestone especially considering that just six months ago I didn’t even know how to use GitHub and had zero coding experience. It’s a reminder that even small wins can really add up and open doors.
For anyone just starting out: keep building, experimenting, learning, and most importantly be patient. That’s the key!


This week marks a big step for me — I launched Ray3 AI, my first HDR AI video platform.
Ray3 AI started with a simple goal: help creators produce professional-quality videos without weeks of editing or expensive tools. After months of late nights testing prompts, debugging, and refining the workflow, I finally reached a version that delivers both speed and cinematic quality.
The biggest lesson along the way? User experience and technical performance must grow together. I learned that speed and quality don’t need to be trade-offs if the workflow is designed thoughtfully.
For me, Ray3 AI is more than just a launch — it’s proof that even the most ambitious projects can move forward step by step.
I’d love to hear from you: what’s the most recent “small but meaningful” win you’ve celebrated in your own work?


Hey Huzzler community!
After watching 1000+ of you launch here, I've started noticing a common pattern among SaaS launches:
Month 1-6: Build incredible product ✅
Month 7: Launch on Huzzler and get great feedback
Month 8: "No customers.. Maybe I need more features?" 🤔
Month 12: Still struggling with real customers... 😰
Here's the thing, almost everyone in this community can build. You're all incredibly talented.
We try posting on Product Hunt, tweeting, building in public... but our acutal customers are not browsing these sites. They're busy doing their jobs at companies.
That's why I'm building Customer Engine: a systematic approach to getting customers where you get exact daily tasks to get your first B2B customers.
Instead of: "What should I do today to get customers?"
You get: "Send 8 LinkedIn requests to marketing managers using template #3"
And you can actually see what's actually working for other founders (with real numbers).
Question for you guys: What's your biggest problem after launching your product? Is it getting the first real customers (who are not founders themselves)?
Would love your thoughts!
Waitlist: customerengine.co


Finally hit 1,000 products launched for Huzzler!
What I learned most is that small, consistent habits, even on tough days, lead to results.
Big thanks to all early members.


LaunchDirectories.com got a shoutout in the 'Product Hunt is Dead' post, and my traffic absolutely spiked at 4 AM.
Seriously appreciate that mention! It's incredible what a single post can do.


This week I hit a milestone I’m really proud of — I officially launched Wan Animate, an AI-powered tool that turns static images or videos into fluid character animations.
The journey wasn’t easy. I had to learn how to balance ease of use with professional results, and there were plenty of technical challenges (like making sure characters stayed consistent across different motions). But seeing the first smooth animation come to life felt like a real breakthrough.|
What I learned along the way:
- Start simple: focusing on just two core features (image-to-motion and video recasting) made the product more reliable.
- Talk to users early: feedback from creators and marketers helped me refine the workflow.
- Small wins matter: each working prototype built my confidence to push forward.
I’m excited about the future of Wan Animate and how it might help creators save time and explore new storytelling possibilities.
👉 What about you? Have you ever had a “small project” suddenly feel like a big win? I’d love to hear your stories.


Backlinks in 4 weeks.
List your tiny startup on every solid directory you can find. Not just for the clicks-those links build your domain rating, boost SEO, and make your product discoverable for LLMs.
The lazy way to level up visibility.


LaunchDirectories has been getting so much traffic lately that I just maxed out my DataFast plan :)


Crabclear just 5 days after listing on launch directories


Hey Huzzler community!
After watching 1000+ of you launch here, I've started noticing a common pattern among SaaS launches:
Month 1-6: Build incredible product ✅
Month 7: Launch on Huzzler and get great feedback
Month 8: "No customers.. Maybe I need more features?" 🤔
Month 12: Still struggling with real customers... 😰
Here's the thing, almost everyone in this community can build. You're all incredibly talented.
We try posting on Product Hunt, tweeting, building in public... but our acutal customers are not browsing these sites. They're busy doing their jobs at companies.
That's why I'm building Customer Engine: a systematic approach to getting customers where you get exact daily tasks to get your first B2B customers.
Instead of: "What should I do today to get customers?"
You get: "Send 8 LinkedIn requests to marketing managers using template #3"
And you can actually see what's actually working for other founders (with real numbers).
Question for you guys: What's your biggest problem after launching your product? Is it getting the first real customers (who are not founders themselves)?
Would love your thoughts!
Waitlist: customerengine.co


I wanted to see if the analytics I developed work or not, so I created a sample link https://apppa.ge/try and posted it on Reddit.
Now, I can see clicks from all across the world.
feels good :)




I've worked in open offices, coworking spaces, even coffee shops, and there's one universal truth: people constantly interrupt you when you're trying to focus.
Colleagues dropping by for "quick questions" coworkers starting random conversations, people assuming you're available just because you're at your desk.
Whether it's an open office environment, shared coworking space, or even working from home, the struggle is real.
I used to try everything. Noise-canceling headphones? People still tapped my shoulder. "Do not disturb" signs? Completely ignored. Even putting up barriers around my desk just made people more curious.
Then I noticed something weird. On days when I had actual video calls, nobody bothered me. Not once. Even my usually chatty coworkers would see my screen and quietly back away.
That's when it clicked: people don't just avoid interrupting YOU, they avoid interrupting what looks like a group of professionals who might see them through your webcam. It's like social anxiety on steroids, but in the best possible way.
So I started leaving old Zoom recordings playing on my screen during deep work sessions. Worked like magic, but felt sketchy and the audio was distracting.
This got me thinking - what if I could create something better? I started working on https://meetingsimulator.com, and here's where it gets interesting.
During development, I was constantly testing different versions on my screen. Early prototypes with stock video watermarks, people not even looking directly at the camera, super obvious placeholder content - basically anything that remotely resembled a video conference grid.
The results blew my mind. Colleagues would approach my desk, see these clearly fake, watermarked test videos on my screen, and immediately back away without saying a word. They weren't analyzing whether the people looked realistic or if the lighting was perfect. Their brain just registered "meeting = don't interrupt" and that was it.
Even when I was using completely random stock footage that obviously wasn't a real meeting, people would whisper "sorry, didn't know you were in a call" and leave me alone. The pattern recognition is so strong that the mere visual suggestion of a video conference triggers the avoidance behavior.
It's like having an invisible force field of social pressure protecting your focus time. When someone walks by and sees what looks like a professional video conference on your screen, their brain immediately triggers two things:
- "I shouldn't interrupt this person's meeting"
- "Those people on screen might see me interrupting"
I've been using the finished version at meetingsimulator.com for months now and my deep work sessions have gone from 20-minute fragments to solid 2-3 hour blocks. The difference in my output quality is honestly night and day.
Yeah, it might seem like a weird "fake it till you make it" approach, but if it gives me the uninterrupted focus I need to actually get stuff done, I'm not complaining. Sometimes the best productivity hacks are the ones that work with human psychology instead of fighting against it.
Anyone else struggle with this? How do you handle interruptions during focus time?


Hello, recently I just ran the promo with free PRO version of my app, after the promo ends few people just purchased PRO version, also the organic visibility looks to be better than in previous days before the promo. Im really happy since I transitioned from subscription based model to one time purchase. Im curious how the next days will looks like (cant wait to see stats for 4th Aug). I just posted on reddit and after 48h I just got over 18k views.
Also my TTS App named SonicScript is also now for free until tomorrow.



July is my 3rd straight month of making Gumroad revenue using a workflow automation tool called n8n. If you are unfamiliar with it check the following article.
In July, I detailed how to use n8n to make a small, but growing source, of passive income. This has largely been driven by my consistent marketing presence on YouTube and Medium.
How I did it
YouTube is one of the ways I educate people on the intersection of AI and information technology, in simple terms, which is the niche I am carving out — there are way more non-technical people than technical people, so I am better off targeting them former.
Whether, it’s about practical automations, such as
- generating schema markup to appear on ChatGPT
- creating an intelligent customer service representative for your site
or experimental use cases, such as
- making generative video using Google’s Veo3
- animating pictures using models served on HuggingFace
There is a plethora of content I use as a funnel to my brand.
I wrote more about it here.



As some of you know, I have a small side hustle selling n8n automations.
A resident of Japan bought one of my Reddit Lead Generation workflows.
It's a simple workflow that sends Reddit threads that contain the relevant keywords.
You can find the more detailed workflow description here.
Here's a tutorial.


Hey everyone,
I wanted to share a small win 🎉 and the story behind it — how my site grew to about 5.8k monthly views in less than 2 months.
50 days ago, I launched launchdirectories.com — a simple, searchable database of places where you can submit and promote your new product or startup.
Why did I build it? Because every time I launched something, I’d spend hours googling “SaaS directories” or hunting through outdated blog posts, trying to figure out where to submit my product. It was frustrating and inefficient.
So I put together a spreadsheet with 52 launch directories and shared it on Reddit. It got over 400 upvotes, which was amazing, but people wanted more data like domain ratings, traffic stats, SEO info, and whether the links are dofollow or not.
I realized this was a real need, so overnight I built LaunchDirectories.com (initially spent just 5 hours on it) — now it features over 80 curated launch directories, sortable by Domain Rating and other useful metrics.
No signups, no paywalls, no bullshi* — just a website to save you time and help you get more visibility for your projects.
According to SimpleAnalytics, the site is already getting 5.8k+ monthly views, and I’ve heard from people saying it’s actually saved them hours and helped them gain traction.
I know it’s not some massive success story, but honestly, this number of monthly views still blows me away.


45 days ago, I signed up for a crazy accelerator where I had to develop a fully functional mobile app in 45 days.
I usually work on web apps, so I thought it would be the same thing.
Whoo boy! Was I wrong? Mobile app dev is a different ball game altogether! At first, I tried to make it all alone (+ Cursor), and it was tough and grueling, learning as I went.
Then, my school decided to move up my examinations, and I had to bring in a friend. Together, we built this app; Aesculai from scratch.
Aesculai is a medical learning app that offers AI-assisted medical simulation and learning for Pros & Students, helping streamline medical practice and learning.
The app is finally out on the playstore, and it would mean the world to me if you all checked it out and offered your honest review and feedback.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.aesculai.app
Thank you.




Hey Huzzler community!
After watching 1000+ of you launch here, I've started noticing a common pattern among SaaS launches:
Month 1-6: Build incredible product ✅
Month 7: Launch on Huzzler and get great feedback
Month 8: "No customers.. Maybe I need more features?" 🤔
Month 12: Still struggling with real customers... 😰
Here's the thing, almost everyone in this community can build. You're all incredibly talented.
We try posting on Product Hunt, tweeting, building in public... but our acutal customers are not browsing these sites. They're busy doing their jobs at companies.
That's why I'm building Customer Engine: a systematic approach to getting customers where you get exact daily tasks to get your first B2B customers.
Instead of: "What should I do today to get customers?"
You get: "Send 8 LinkedIn requests to marketing managers using template #3"
And you can actually see what's actually working for other founders (with real numbers).
Question for you guys: What's your biggest problem after launching your product? Is it getting the first real customers (who are not founders themselves)?
Would love your thoughts!
Waitlist: customerengine.co


Greetings everyone,
I have a few different sidestreams and I am currently using n8n at the core of my work from YouTube, Gumroad, to client work.
I find June's revenue to be a validation once again, especially for those interested in appearing in AI Search ($84 out of $110)
It helped me quite a lot that I my YouTube channel has grown. I added 83 subs. The video that helped me out the most was my n8n automation for creating Veo3 videos.
Keep making.



Hey everyone! Over the past months I have been silently working on a Huzzler 2.0 launch and today, it's time to launch it! 🎉
I've been interviewing founders and listening to your feedback.
These were your biggest complaints on other platforms (X, Reddit,..)
- AI generated content
- Fake gurus with fake MRR claims (course sellers, boilerplate sellers..)
- Your posts get "lost in the noise"
- Bots (+ AI reply bots)
I've been working on a few ways to mitigate these complaints and my goal is to make Huzzler a platform where you can actually learn from other successful founders. No gurus. No fakes. No AI generated content.
New features in Huzzler 2.0
Say goodbye to fake gurus 👏
On platforms like X or Reddit, we often see posts like this:
Made it to $12,000 MRR selling AI customer support agents
A lot of times, these posts and MRR charts are fake and the person is just selling a boilerplate or course.
With Huzzler 2.0, every revenue claim has to be verified. You can verify revenue by connecting your payment provider (for example, Stripe). When you create a post with a revenue claim, our AI moderation will detect it and remove if you don't have the verified revenue.
A strict no-AI space 🤖
A complaint I've been seeing more and more on X and Reddit is the AI-generated content and bots. It's often generic and you can't really learn from it, as the best knowledge comes from someone's personal experience.
Starting from today, AI generated content is forbidden. Our moderators have actively banned people who create full posts with AI.
Beautiful, personalized user profiles 🌍
I've improved the layout and visuals of user profiles. You can now add a country, location and banner to make your profile stand out.
You can also view a revenue chart per product. Meaning you quickly check out how much someones earning and if they are telling the truth.
Phone verification (coming soon)
While we now don't have a problem with bots, we working on adding phone verification for creating posts or commenting. This will introduce some friction, but honestly, I don't mind it. We value quality over quantity.
That's all guys. Let me know if you'd like to see other features on Huzzler and I'll add them to the t-do list


Guys… I just made my first $199 sale on http://launchdirectories.com! 😭💥 Built it in about 8 hours and launched just 8 days ago. (Everything’s transparent on my X.)
Someone saw value in what I created and decided to support me. That’s the real win. Feeling grateful, motivated, and ready for what’s next!
June: $240
May: $20
April: $0
March: $0
February: $0 — I just started coding.


it’s a simple wedding timeline – my client runs weddings and wanted to show the schedule on a tv so guests know what’s next
the app is in polish 🇵🇱 but i ran it through google translate so you can understand what it does 😅
not a huge deal, but 4 months ago i didn’t know how to code


I don't know if it's luck, but since last week. I've had way more motivation and money is actually starting to flow in! About 3-4 months ago I built dubaidiscoverer.com in Lovable - took me forever to figure out that Lovable doesn't have SSR and will never get indexed by Google properly. I wrote a Reddit post about it that blew up and even Lovable's CEO replied to it.
Spent several days migrating from Vite to Next.js to boost my Google rankings - but honestly, all that effort was for nothing. Google results are still dead, and I was basically ready to abandon the whole thing since I have other projects going on.
Then out of nowhere today I get a notification that someone bought Dubai attraction tickets through my affiliate link and I made $10.50. No clue how it happened but someone actually bought something even though I'd already written the project off as a loss.
It's still pennies and doesn't even cover the domain cost - but maybe it'll motivate some of you. Sometimes things work out even when you think they're completely dead.
Honestly, I'd probably sell this project for pocket change at this point because I have zero ideas left for it. It's just directories about Dubai and Abu Dhabi attractions - nothing fancy.
I know it would sound better if I said my dead project made $1000 passively, but I hope this was at least an interesting read for you guys.


Day 5/180 of “Locked in till '25
Grind: 7/24 hrs 💪
Had some personal work today, couldn’t go all in
- Reached 200 followers 🤯
- Studied 2 hrs for upcoming exam
- Worked on launchmedaddy .com
- 1 hr workout (hit 80kg bench for the first time – 2 reps 💪)
Not my best day but even slow days count. Just don’t stop.


Hoping this story resonates with beginners out there.
In the last 2+ years, I have been freelancing in full-stack design and development.
Having earned ~$8k in that time span, I’d be lying if I said “no money no problems”.
May of 2025 though brought a change in perspective.
I turned to automation out of necessity — working on an intelligent social media listening tool, which demanded a lot backend development.
So, I decided to learn n8n and create YouTube tutorials along the way.
Creating a brand is a marketing goal for 2025.
(Marketing is harder than coding, right?)
Results?
- $114 in Gumroad revenue with a 4.4% conversion in May
- YT Channel subs went from 42 -> 94
Market validation? Is this marketing channel sustainable ?
Absolutely and here’s why.
- I get market feedback on what people want.
Save time in lead generation. SEO — specifically Schema Markups (for rich snippets in Google or AI searches).
• Note that the cost of running an agent can be anywhere between $0.007 to $1.5 per run depending on the complexity.
Outreach is more expensive because of NLP tasks, whereas SEO tends to be cheaper.
- My network and credibility are growing.
As a thank-you to the community, I’m sharing a beginner oriented tutorial on YouTube channel SEO.
It updates the keywords and description to your YouTube channel — to help boost discoverability.
Here’s the flow for the visual folks.
YouTube Channel SEO Workflow


Hey Huzzler community!
After watching 1000+ of you launch here, I've started noticing a common pattern among SaaS launches:
Month 1-6: Build incredible product ✅
Month 7: Launch on Huzzler and get great feedback
Month 8: "No customers.. Maybe I need more features?" 🤔
Month 12: Still struggling with real customers... 😰
Here's the thing, almost everyone in this community can build. You're all incredibly talented.
We try posting on Product Hunt, tweeting, building in public... but our acutal customers are not browsing these sites. They're busy doing their jobs at companies.
That's why I'm building Customer Engine: a systematic approach to getting customers where you get exact daily tasks to get your first B2B customers.
Instead of: "What should I do today to get customers?"
You get: "Send 8 LinkedIn requests to marketing managers using template #3"
And you can actually see what's actually working for other founders (with real numbers).
Question for you guys: What's your biggest problem after launching your product? Is it getting the first real customers (who are not founders themselves)?
Would love your thoughts!
Waitlist: customerengine.co


$19 from http://willtheyconvert.com 💸
Funny thing… the sale came 2 days after I posted “#5 on TinyStartups but 0 sales” 😅
What’s wild is that I started with zero programming knowledge about 3 months ago I didn’t even know how to use GitHub


I recently launched willtheyconvert.com, a tool to validate startup ideas before you invest time or money building the actual product.
It just hit #5 on tinystartups.com and I wanted to say thanks to everyone who's checked it out or voted 🙌
Here’s how it works in a nutshell:
It lets you build a features that looks completely real - pricing tables, buy buttons, waitlists, even a fake checkout. But it’s all just a test to see how people REALLY react.
You can simulate:
- Subscriptions & pricing pages
- Pre-orders & early access offers
- Referral programs
- Newsletter signups
- Promo or discount pages
- Full signup flows (no backend needed)
Once live, you share the page, and the tool tracks real engagement — clicks, conversions, drop-offs — in a clean dashboard so you can see if there’s demand.
If people click “Buy” or drop an email? That’s your green light.
If not… you just saved yourself weeks (or months) of building something no one wanted 😄
Would love your feedback or feel free to ask me anything!


Now?
People are smashing 12k+ karma, driving real traffic, and ranking by results.
Yeah, the board looks cool, but what’s cooler is seeing folks actually winning on Reddit.
Built something that works. That’s the real flex.
Huge shoutout to the Reddit marketers making this board go viral.


• Made $473 from MediaFast
• 978 visitors on the Website
• 3 trainings done
• Book started
• Ate clean all week
• New SaaS in progress, big one (2–3 weeks)
Quietly stacking small wins. Big moves loading.

0 ads. 0 outreach.
Just showed up.
Consistently.
With value.
When your audience knows you → they trust you.
And when they trust you → they buy from you.


Can i say that my SaaS paid for this ? Last month it paid my rent lmao.
P.s Tom Yam is amazing but super spicy...


Hey everyone! Today, OpenAI released their new images API. I couldn't find any good tools to generate Studio Ghibli style images so I've added it to Huzzler. Each member on Huzzler has been grated 2 free credits to generate images.
We use the highest-quality setting to generate the best possible images with OpenAI and the results are amazing.
Check it out: Huzzler Image AI 😁


Hey Huzzler community!
After watching 1000+ of you launch here, I've started noticing a common pattern among SaaS launches:
Month 1-6: Build incredible product ✅
Month 7: Launch on Huzzler and get great feedback
Month 8: "No customers.. Maybe I need more features?" 🤔
Month 12: Still struggling with real customers... 😰
Here's the thing, almost everyone in this community can build. You're all incredibly talented.
We try posting on Product Hunt, tweeting, building in public... but our acutal customers are not browsing these sites. They're busy doing their jobs at companies.
That's why I'm building Customer Engine: a systematic approach to getting customers where you get exact daily tasks to get your first B2B customers.
Instead of: "What should I do today to get customers?"
You get: "Send 8 LinkedIn requests to marketing managers using template #3"
And you can actually see what's actually working for other founders (with real numbers).
Question for you guys: What's your biggest problem after launching your product? Is it getting the first real customers (who are not founders themselves)?
Would love your thoughts!
Waitlist: customerengine.co


Hey! I’ve got a story that might just change the way you approach building your next big idea, and trust me, you don’t want to miss this one. But before I dive into the details, let me rewind and take you back to my first project: BoomHabits.
About month ago, when I first started working on BoomHabits, I had zero experience with coding. Like, absolutely none. But within 24 hours, I managed to build a simple yet powerful habit tracker to help people stay productive and crush their goals. 😅 No fancy code, no convoluted processes—just a lot of trial and error, learning as I went, and utilizing NoCode tools that empowered me to turn my ideas into something real, without needing a tech background.
Fast forward to today, and I’m back at it again with my second project: WillTheyConvert.com. This one’s even smarter, designed to help you bring your ideas to life faster, without the risk of wasting time or resources.
Here’s the deal: WillTheyConvert is an app that lets you validate your product concepts instantly. It simulates payments and account sign-ups—meaning you don’t have to build your entire product first. You can test your assumptions within minutes and get real data that can save you tons of time and money.
This method is known as Fake Door Testing, and it’s been used by some of the most successful companies out there like Airbnb, Dropbox, Groupon, and even Product Hunt. These companies tested their ideas this way before diving into full product builds, and it worked for them. If it worked for the pros, I’m pretty sure it can work for all of us too. 😎
I really hope this post not only inspires you to give my app a try, but also motivates you to experiment with AI tools. They’re seriously awesome, and if I can do it, I’m confident you can too!




