Curious how long others typically spend building their MVPs before pushing it out into the world. Some say ship in a weekend, others say take a month to get it right. We ve been building SmarDial fast focusing on solving one core problem for one type of user. But like most teams, we re always tempted to add just one more thing before launch. If you ve built and launched before, what was your MVP timeframe like? Did you ever wish you shipped earlier or later? Would love to learn from your experience.
We re in early beta and debating whether keeping it 100% free is helping us learn or slowing us down.
Would love to hear how others handled this:
Did you charge early users? Offer lifetime deals? Or stay free until you nailed the product? Curious what worked (or backfired) for you.
SmartDial is here to help you get early traction the hard way made easier. We built SmartDial for sales teams and scrappy founders doing outbound the old-school way dialing, following up, logging notes but wanted it to actually feel smooth, fast, and integrated. If you re using Zoom Phone and tired of clunky dialers or juggling spreadsheets, we ve got you. We re live in beta on Product Hunt building fast and listening closely. Your feedback could shape what s next.
Aesty is a Fashion OS an AI-powered interface that helps you build outfits from what you already own, try on trends virtually, and shop only what actually fits your style.
If you ve ever looked at a full closet and thought I have nothing to wear Aesty is for you.
Been checking out Cursor, an AI code editor that deeply integrates AI into your workflow. Think natural language coding, smart predictions, and asking your codebase questions.
It's trying to push AI further than, say, VS Code (even with Copilot).
I'm curious:
How has Cursor's AI experience been for you compared to your current setup?
Rayrank AI helps your brand rank first in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and other Al answers and it is fully automated.
It generates and publishes optimized content (like blog posts, Reddit threads, GitHub readmes) where Al models look, boosting your visibility without manual SEO or outreach.
Currently taking submissions for early access users for the beta version that will be launching soon.
Kehinde here from Insight7 We just launched a new AI tool to help teams evaluate calls faster and more accurately, no templates, no prompt engineering, no analysts needed. It s built for CX, support, sales, and research teams who need to turn conversations into actual insights, not just transcripts.
When we launched, social didn t really drive much traction at least not right away. Still showing up and staying consistent, but curious: Did social media make a real difference for your launch? Or did your momentum come from somewhere else?
I'm currently a team of 1, and some days it can be hard (and lonely) to just keep grinding. Curious to hear from other solo builders here how you stay motivated and consistent over the long run?
Things helping me a lot right now:
Private community to share progress
Lots of small releases
Reaching out to current users to get more feedback and direct work
Reminding myself that it sometimes just takes time
After struggling with clunky dialers and messy outbound workflows, we built SmartDial: a focused, fast dialer that works directly with Zoom Phone for sales teams who live on calls.
We didn t plan to build a product we just needed something better for our own outbound project. But once teammates and others started asking to use it, we realized the pain was bigger than just us.
We re in beta, shipping fast, and listening closely to early users.
Hello Product Hunt community! Today, we are launching our Zen Agents by @Zencoder on Product Hunt - enabling you to build your own, custom AI agents helping you with your dev workflow. Our launch is now live here, and we'd love and appreciate your support: https://www.producthunt.com/prod...
For those of you who ve been following along first off, thank you. I ve been building Probado, a platform that helps early-stage founders get structured, paid feedback on their MVPs from vetted testers. It s affordable, customizable, and enhanced with AI that helps summarize insights and recommend improvements.
We ve got now 100+ vetted testers onboarded, and the MVP is just about done.
But now I m facing the part that honestly feels the hardest so far: marketing.
We launched a tool in the outbound sales space and curious how founders actually feel about cold calling in 2025.
As a SaaS founder: Did cold outreach help you land early users? Is it still part of your GTM playbook? Or has it been replaced by content, communities, or ads?
No theory just trying to learn what s working for real founders right now.
We launched a tool for elite outbound teams and we re talking to early users right now.
Curious if you ve done cold outreach or managed a calling process:
What s the part of outbound you hate the most but just deal with?
Would love to hear what s slowing you or your team down.