On launch day, you only get one shot to capture attention. Your landing page is where curiosity turns into clicks and clicks into sign-ups. If it s unclear, slow, or uninspiring, even the best product will slip through the cracks.
A great landing page on Product Hunt should:
Grab attention with a crystal-clear value proposition in the first few seconds.
Show social proof or credibility to build trust fast.
I'm struggling with marketing prioritization in a large SaaS environment. We have to orchestrate 10+ channels and 20+ active projects, making it incredibly difficult to stay focused on the metrics that matter.
For a long time, we've used the ICE (Impact, Confidence, Ease) scoring framework. However, with attribution data becoming less reliable and AI constantly shifting the strategic landscape, ICE feels too reactive and simplistic.
Let's take a step back first and look at why so many products in the past could "lose money" and still take off.
If we look at the evolution of the internet, we've actually gone through two really clear tech booms, and these two booms basically gave rise to most of the tech giants we see today.
The first big boom was: personal tech going from zero to widespread adoption, like the spread of PCs and smartphones. The second big boom was: internet connectivity evolving from dial-up to 5G, bringing massive connectivity and shifts in content consumption.
Me and a small team have been We ve been quietly building Cubent.dev, an AI coding assistant for VS Code that s fast, clean, and doesn t hide the basics behind a paywall.
After trying nearly every dev tool out there, we kept running into the same issues, bloated UIs, slow response times, and pricing models that felt off. So we decided to build our own.
The other day I saw a poll on LinkedIn which said one of the biggest ongoing struggles of startups and small businesses is reliable, scalable lead generation especially beyond the usual tools like Apollo, ZoomInfo, Clearbit, etc.
Product Hunt often features some fresh and creative approaches to data. I have seen some around company enrichment, contact intelligence, trigger signals or even outreach automation. But often PH launches get forgotten after their launch day.
What are some lesser-known or recent data tools you ve come across on Product Hunt that help with lead gen, enrichment, or prospecting?
I'm a big fan of voice dictation apps. In fact, I'm using one right now to write this very post (you'll have to wait till the end to see which one I'm using )
The two main products I've used in this space are @Aqua Voice and @Wispr Flow. From talking to others, these are the two that I typically hear people mention using. In general, I hear a lot more people talk about using Wispr Flow.
I'm a big fan of voice dictation apps. In fact, I'm using one right now to write this very post (you'll have to wait till the end to see which one I'm using )
The two main products I've used in this space are @Aqua Voice and @Wispr Flow. From talking to others, these are the two that I typically hear people mention using. In general, I hear a lot more people talk about using Wispr Flow.
I'm a big fan of voice dictation apps. In fact, I'm using one right now to write this very post (you'll have to wait till the end to see which one I'm using )
The two main products I've used in this space are @Aqua Voice and @Wispr Flow. From talking to others, these are the two that I typically hear people mention using. In general, I hear a lot more people talk about using Wispr Flow.
Product Hunt is great for discovery , but sometimes there are concerns about authenticity and trust when products are submitted by people not affiliated with them.
Would verifying domain ownership (e.g., via email or DNS) help ensure that only legitimate makers or teams can submit a product? Or would it add too much friction to the launch process?
With improved generative models now being widely available, we re reaching a point where we can get full front-end code and simple functioning code for apps from a single prompt. What are the factors that determine whether development roles can be replaced by models? What s our added value as humans?
AI coding is pretty mindblowing but sometimes it's a headache built on a mountain of bugs. Usually that comes down to issues with how you prompt. So, with that in mind, I'm starting a crowdsourcing discussion so we can all improve our prompts and in turn our apps.
Share the exact prompts that turn blank AI requests into real world code. Show us how you go from generate a REST API to a deployable service in just a few steps.
AI coding is pretty mindblowing but sometimes it's a headache built on a mountain of bugs. Usually that comes down to issues with how you prompt. So, with that in mind, I'm starting a crowdsourcing discussion so we can all improve our prompts and in turn our apps.
Share the exact prompts that turn blank AI requests into real world code. Show us how you go from generate a REST API to a deployable service in just a few steps.
Hello!! What are your recommendations on top acquisition channels at an early stage? Curious to learn from other Makers what other acquisition channels worked for you at an early stage were investment is scarce.
With improved generative models now being widely available, we re reaching a point where we can get full front-end code and simple functioning code for apps from a single prompt. What are the factors that determine whether development roles can be replaced by models? What s our added value as humans?