I used to design icons myself in Figma, but honestly my design skills are pretty average. It made the whole process time-consuming with mediocre results. That frustration led me to build Iconfast.
Iconfast is a free, browser-based app icon generator designed for fast-moving teams who want to ship quickly without getting stuck on visual details. Whether you're building for Android, iOS, desktop, or the web, Iconfast helps you create high-quality, production-ready app icons in just a few clicks—no design experience required.
With a library of 200k+ free icons and 2k+ fonts, Iconfast gives designers, developers, and indie builders the flexibility to experiment and iterate rapidly.
Guys, if you've created a product based on a problem from ProblemHunt and got your first users, you can tell about your product in our community and on the website for free. I can't promise huge traffic: the site has gotten 25k+ visitors in the last 1.5 months, but maybe this will help someone attract some additional traffic. For that, just write me the product name, a brief description, the target audience, and a link here: gostroverhovb@gmail.com
December is the month that officially closes the launch chapter of the year, so you still have a last chance to come up with something that will get attention.
Such December classics are definitely products with these narratives:
Wrap-ups
Advent Calendars
Most searched topics
Prognosis for the coming year
Productivity and health apps (ready for New Year's resolutions)
I noticed this question in one of my discussions and thought it would make sense to share my approach if I were to get in touch with more active users of this platform.
Here s how I would find them and connect with them (via X, LinkedIn or other channel) You can find them :
Check people who log in daily (Streaks).
Look at users who actively comment under discussions and launches.
Connect with active hunters.
You can try reaching out to the internal Product Hunt team.
Explore WA, Telegram, and Signal PH groups where people are active and reach out to them.
Check users who launch a few days before you they re likely to put effort into the platform too, so they still have that "launching vibe".
Every launch comes with new learnings. The platform is changing over time, but many things don t depend on the platform itself they depend on how you approach the launch: your pricing, customisation, or how early you show up, and more.
What did you learn from your launch, and what will you adjust for next time?
There are tons of stories about founders launching SaaS products without an existing audience. No Twitter following, no newsletter, no community, nothing. Yet some still manage to get early traction and even hit real MRR.
If you have started from zero, I would love to hear:
How you got your first users
What channels brought the earliest traction
Whether cold outreach works or not
If content played a role or if you focused mainly on building
What you would do differently if you had to start again
I keep hearing wildly different answers from teams at different stages. Some say a day. Others say two weeks because design, copy, approvals, and dev cycles stack up. I am trying to understand the real bottlenecks teams face when shipping something as simple as a landing page. Curious to hear how things actually work inside your team.
I've noticed that more and more founders are building their personal brand and prioritising it over building their company's brand (the company account then just reposts the founder's thoughts).
Hello everyone! I'm currently focused on SEO and keyword targeting to drive initial traffic for my AI product. It's a slow burn, as anyone who has wrestled with Google knows. I'm hitting a cold start wall and would love to hear from the community: What were your most successful and non-obvious cold start strategies for your AI product? Any advice, especially about communities, early adopter channels, or unique marketing hacks, would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance for sharing your wisdom!
Many brands have their long-standing mascots (McDonald's, Mr Clean, Michelin), etc. But with the development of AI, physical forms are moving online, and AI avatars look promising in this.
On one hand, it feels less human (authentic), on the other hand, AI influencers are a "cheaper" solution.
Two months ago, I'd never heard of Product Hunt. When I told people we were launching @AI Context Flow here, they told me to keep my expectations in check.
Fast forward to today: #1 Product of the Day and #1 Productivity Tool of the Week.
The journey was chaotic, humbling, and honestly surreal. If you'd told me this would happen, I wouldn't have believed you.
To everyone who upvoted, commented, and cheered us on: Thank you. Your support means everything and keeps us building. If you need any tips on how we pulled this off as complete first-timers, ask your specific questions below
I have been using Duolingo for almost 3 years to learn a language, but I don't know anything at all.
Of course, I have some basic vocabulary from the vocabulary words, but it's not conversational level. I'm currently considering buying textbooks and workbooks.
AI dev tools are evolving crazy fast , every few weeks there s a new must-try for vibe coders.
Some people are building full products with @ChatGPT by OpenAI and @Replit , others swear by @Cursor and @Claude by Anthropic , and a few are mixing @Lovable + @v0 by Vercel + @bolt.new to ship apps in record time.
I ve been refining my own vibe stack lately, trying to find that sweet spot between speed, control, and creativity. It made me wonder ,what does your setup look like right now?