and these $12-24k are net dollars so the parents needs more like $20-40k of gross income to pay for it, but now they can have a small job or small business that nets them even as low as $15k and still come out ahead
Would like to learn more, I tried the same recently using existing tools (clay, CRM, make/zapier, instantly) but the cost of the GTM stack was not sustainable
I have several breathing apps on my phone and watch and find each of them to be strong at one thing but weak at others (e.g. on has nice visuals but no way to customize the length of the exercises, another has good suggested patterns but a gimmicky UI, some don't have dark mode, etc.) so I decided to try to scratch my own itch.
A social advocacy platform for small and medium sized B2B businesses.
LinkedIn is more or less the only social platform for B2B social selling and smaller firms could benefit from their posts getting a bit more augmented and coordinated engagement. So we’re building a solution for a marketing manager to request advocates (employees, partners, others) to engage or reshare (tweaked in their own voice if they want) their content.
Not world altering but shockingly underserved market. With few players who raised money and therefore have to price expensively, whereas as a bootstrapped side-hustle we can offer it in a flat-fee way that doesn’t “penalize” growth by charging per-user or for inactive users.
Yah this is what I was afraid of. The UI is kinda rough. I need to go back to the drawing board with building trust in that regard.
I guess technically you could put a spending limit on it, but from your perspective that's a really long onboarding flow.
See the " ...why install? " link.
The PWA really is only useful when it's installed. It makes it really easy to send a recipe from the browser directly into the pwa. Bypassing having to scroll through any ads.
The invites market has been such a weird spot, with tons of small apps and sites and such low appetite from users to pay for this that this feels like a perfect opportunity. it's the kind of thing that should be a feature of iOS or Google Calendar but doesn't deserve to be it's own product market.
I think the appeal can also be that suddenly a weekend in Paris/Rome/(choose your destination) is as feasible (time-wise, if not budget-wise) and logistically light as a trip to Cancun. I for one don't usually go to Europe unless I can spend at least 4-5 days there, just to make the lengthy journey 'worthwhile', but I'm done cross-US weekend trips numerous times.
reply