Triviat is an AI-powered chatbot & voice assistant that helps businesses automate customer support, sales, and bookings across chat, calls, WhatsApp, email & more.
Why we built it:
Too many businesses lose time (and customers) answering repetitive questions. Triviat makes support faster, multilingual, and 24/7, while still allowing seamless handoff to humans when needed.
Today s a big milestone for us - we just launched Homezze Beta Hub
Our goal is simple: build a trust-driven marketplace where homeowners and service pros can finally work together without the stress, confusion, and risk that usually comes with home projects.
Being an engineer myself, I see that many people are outputting more code than ever. Some of it being generated vs. written, the volume of code being outputted has definitely risen. There seems to be a shift from "is this something we can build?" to "should we build this and ship it?" For people who have been recruiting or looking to recruit recently, what roles are you hiring for?
Role title (I've seen a rise in PM's and Designers personally)
What exactly can they do that AI can't (yet)
Specific signal that you look for when hiring
Are you moving headcount from one type of role to another? Would be interested to hear from other growing teams!
Thanks, Hunters. When we opened public access to our prototype, we finished on high side of the ranking and added 30+ new followers to our Product Hunt page. More importantly, a bunch of you jumped in, tested it, and gave us real, actionable feedback.
What people tested
Product Discovery describe a need get 2 3 real matches with a simple why this.
Product Comparison side-by-side differences that actually matter.
For the prototype we re spotlighting Product Discovery, Recommendation, Comparison, and Context Awareness. Tell it what you need in plain English and it returns 2 3 real matches with a clear why this (specs, stock, price, short review snippet). No cart actions, just faster decisions.
How to request a demo (20 30 min):
Comment demo below (I ll DM you today), or
Use the request form: Request a Demo
We ll prioritize PH folks. I ll reply to every comment today hit me with edge cases you want to see in the walkthrough!
Launch is tomorrow (Sep 19). For day one we re spotlighting Product Discovery only.
What it does: you describe what you need (size/fit, budget, style/season). It brings back 2 3 real matches and explains why using specs, stock, price, and a short review snippet. No cart actions just help deciding.
I d love your quick take on three things:
Inputs: what would you share up front vs. later?
Proof: what seals trust side-by-side compare, why this bullets, review snippet, shipping/returns shown up front?
Please share one real story. What broke, how did you spot it, how much did it cost, and what did you change so it can t happen again? Keep it simple and honest. I ll read every reply today and post a short checklist of fixes tomorrow.
I'll say it bluntly that running a business is not as easy as it is presented on the Internet. You have to come up with a good and useful idea, and even then, you don't win.
You can only see the results after a long time. Not everyone can do it for a long time. To do it, you need to have a strong motive. For some people, it may be a family tradition, for some, money.
I've recently been recommended various new tools like Warp (terminal) and Zed (IDE). They are both quite intriguing, as I expect both could help speed up my development workflow. However, actually switching to them seems to be a huge lift. I've downloaded and explored the two apps, but the thought of figuring out which current habits can be replicated vs. which ones I should completely relearn with the new app's tools is quite daunting. As a result, I haven't re-opened them... I think the ProductHunt community would lean on the side of more experimental and motivated to try new things. How many new products do you try? How many end up sticking? Do you also feel the obstacles I've mentioned above and what ends up pushing you over that activation energy?
We ve all been there, tweaking landing page designs, wiring up forms, trying to make everything work together. It can take hours (sometimes days) when all you really need is a clean, simple way to capture interest fast.
Curious to hear from the PH community:
What s the #1 feature you wish every waitlist tool had, or how can I upgrade Custom Waitlist?
Thinking about future-proofing my skills and I'm curious to hear from the pros in this community. We all have our core skills, but what's one skill that wasn't a big deal a few years ago but you now see as essential for your role in late 2025?
For Marketers: Is it data storytelling? AI prompt engineering?
For Designers: Is it prototyping with real data? Designing for AI?