The Leaderboard
Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterday’s top ten launches. That’s it.
Pinterest's "copy and paste" competitor
Leonardo da Vinci predicted the future pretty accurately by saying “He who can copy can do.”
Cutouts wants to be the Pinterest board for your clipboard.
With this free extension, you can save images, text, and videos with a click. ML will do the sorting and organizing for you and even generate color palettes and mood boards. No signup needed to try it out.
We couldn’t go a day without our beloved copy+paste function. But with great power comes great responsibility.
Ever sent a funny GIF instead of the final report link to your boss?
We feel you. 🤦♂️
There’s a better way to keep your favorites websites separate from cute cat pics or funny GIFs. Here are some of our favorite clipboard managers launched earlier:
Pasta is a clipboard time machine with a beautiful interface.
Copy Space synchronizes clipboards from Windows to all your devices.
Paste is a smart cloud clipboard history and snippets manager for Mac.
Control V lets you copy and paste over the internet.
CopyLess can store up to 1000 recent clippings.
Maccy is a lightweight and minimal open-source clipboard manager for macOS.
If you’re looking to expand your productivity horizons, have a look at these powerful and programmable text expanders: TextExpander, Alfred, aText, Keyboard Maestro, and canSnippet.
Cutouts wants to be the Pinterest board for your clipboard.
With this free extension, you can save images, text, and videos with a click. ML will do the sorting and organizing for you and even generate color palettes and mood boards. No signup needed to try it out.
We couldn’t go a day without our beloved copy+paste function. But with great power comes great responsibility.
Ever sent a funny GIF instead of the final report link to your boss?
We feel you. 🤦♂️
There’s a better way to keep your favorites websites separate from cute cat pics or funny GIFs. Here are some of our favorite clipboard managers launched earlier:
Pasta is a clipboard time machine with a beautiful interface.
Copy Space synchronizes clipboards from Windows to all your devices.
Paste is a smart cloud clipboard history and snippets manager for Mac.
Control V lets you copy and paste over the internet.
CopyLess can store up to 1000 recent clippings.
Maccy is a lightweight and minimal open-source clipboard manager for macOS.
If you’re looking to expand your productivity horizons, have a look at these powerful and programmable text expanders: TextExpander, Alfred, aText, Keyboard Maestro, and canSnippet.
Communities are having a moment
Humans are social by nature.
Just like back in the 90s, online communities are having a moment right now. AIM, MSN Messenger, IRC, anyone?
In this socially-distant time, people desperately need to close that gap and connect with like-minded peers.
“Community is the new moat,” claims First Round in their 2019 State of Startups report.
Of course communities don’t appear out of nowhere. It takes thoughtful, intentional effort.
Why create a community?
Community is such a buzzword nowadays. And while it can be very impactful when done right, not every project or business needs a community strategy.
But those who build a strong community tend to benefit in a number of ways: Increased WOM, greater loyalty, and a stronger relationship with users of the product. More importantly, users benefit most when there’s a strong sense of belonging and mutual understanding.
Some of this translates into more active contributions from the community itself. Facebook famously activated community volunteers to translate the site to over 100 languages.
How do you build a community?
This is a long conversation that we won’t fully cover in today’s digest, but below are a few tips.
First, start small and focus on a specific audience. The more defined the community, the easier it is to build for their needs and expectations.
Next, involve the community in the process. In the early days of Product Hunt we “built in public”, sharing mockups and our roadmap to gather the community’s feedback well before writing code. Not only does this lead to better product decisions, but it engenders more trust and buy-in with the people that care most about what you’re building.
“Communities feel magical, but they don't appear out of nowhere. Just as when you’re building a fire, there are certain ingredients you need to assemble and an order of operations you need to follow to generate a spark, fan the flames, and keep it going,” says Bailey Richardson, early Instagram community manager and author of Get Together.
What do you use to build a community?
Although tools won’t build a community, there are plenty of useful options to bring your community together.
Here are some tools to consider:
Circle is the recently launched modern creator-focused community platform to help you bring together your discussions, memberships, and content, all under your own brand.
Disciple lets you gather, engage, and monetize your network with your own community platform.
PeerBoard is a modern community platform designed to live as an organic part of your existing website or product. You can even embed it into any website.
Mighty Networks is a new kind of website builder that enables you to bring your community, online courses, and memberships together in one place.
Discourse positions its open-source platform as a civilized discussion board for your community.
Spectrum fills in a void between Github and Slack, as described by the community member and allows you to join, start, and build online communities.
Comradery is a fully customizable online community platform that provides both threaded discussions and real-time chat.
If you’re serious about starting a community, check out Community Canvas, a framework to build meaningful communities, and The CMX Guide to Building Community Platforms.
Just like back in the 90s, online communities are having a moment right now. AIM, MSN Messenger, IRC, anyone?
In this socially-distant time, people desperately need to close that gap and connect with like-minded peers.
“Community is the new moat,” claims First Round in their 2019 State of Startups report.
Of course communities don’t appear out of nowhere. It takes thoughtful, intentional effort.
Why create a community?
Community is such a buzzword nowadays. And while it can be very impactful when done right, not every project or business needs a community strategy.
But those who build a strong community tend to benefit in a number of ways: Increased WOM, greater loyalty, and a stronger relationship with users of the product. More importantly, users benefit most when there’s a strong sense of belonging and mutual understanding.
Some of this translates into more active contributions from the community itself. Facebook famously activated community volunteers to translate the site to over 100 languages.
How do you build a community?
This is a long conversation that we won’t fully cover in today’s digest, but below are a few tips.
First, start small and focus on a specific audience. The more defined the community, the easier it is to build for their needs and expectations.
Next, involve the community in the process. In the early days of Product Hunt we “built in public”, sharing mockups and our roadmap to gather the community’s feedback well before writing code. Not only does this lead to better product decisions, but it engenders more trust and buy-in with the people that care most about what you’re building.
“Communities feel magical, but they don't appear out of nowhere. Just as when you’re building a fire, there are certain ingredients you need to assemble and an order of operations you need to follow to generate a spark, fan the flames, and keep it going,” says Bailey Richardson, early Instagram community manager and author of Get Together.
What do you use to build a community?
Although tools won’t build a community, there are plenty of useful options to bring your community together.
Here are some tools to consider:
Circle is the recently launched modern creator-focused community platform to help you bring together your discussions, memberships, and content, all under your own brand.
Disciple lets you gather, engage, and monetize your network with your own community platform.
PeerBoard is a modern community platform designed to live as an organic part of your existing website or product. You can even embed it into any website.
Mighty Networks is a new kind of website builder that enables you to bring your community, online courses, and memberships together in one place.
Discourse positions its open-source platform as a civilized discussion board for your community.
Spectrum fills in a void between Github and Slack, as described by the community member and allows you to join, start, and build online communities.
Comradery is a fully customizable online community platform that provides both threaded discussions and real-time chat.
If you’re serious about starting a community, check out Community Canvas, a framework to build meaningful communities, and The CMX Guide to Building Community Platforms.
Trending in tech: 🌎✨
Conscious consumerism has become bigger than a short-lived fad.
In the pre-pandemic times, brands started to notice more people questioning their lifestyle choices and pushing for a change (thanks Greta!). Responsibility has been used as a Gen-Z marketing tool increasingly appealing to other demographics as well.
One such app is YAYZY, an eco-lifestyle tracking app that shows the carbon footprint of your purchases in real-time.
The makers of the app built it inspired by the belief that action begins with information. Their app raises awareness of sustainable lifestyle alternatives to travel, fashion, food, and more.
Now, with all the surprises that 2020 brought us, people are cutting back on excessive shopping and considering other lifestyle choices, cooking bread at home, anyone?
Consumers are not alone. Makers are increasingly more interested in combating climate change by combining Fintech and Cleantech.
There is no shortage of environment-protecting initiatives that popped up in the last couple of years. Here are some simple and some creative ways to become a more conscious consumer:
Website Carbon Calculator shows how much CO2 your website emits.
Kuri suggests low-carbon recipes and adapts to what's in season around you.
Wren offsets your carbon footprint by saving rainforests.
Capture wants to be the Fitbit for your carbon footprint by tracking your mobility and food choices.
Sliced finds opportunities that have a direct impact on reversing climate change.
Climatebase curates climate-positive jobs, organizations, and events.
Climatescape is an open directory of organizations creating solutions to climate change.
Collective.Energy is a community for crowdsourcing and launching climate solutions.
Enviro.Work is a job board for environmentally positive work that benefits the environment.
Carbonly is an online carbon footprint tracker that plants a tree for every new install.
Carbon Trim is an app for discovering carbon footprints of daily actions.
Vera for Business makes it simple for your business to stop ocean plastic.
Tripit shows your flight’s carbon emissions and provides ideas on how to reduce it.
Joro is the “Fitbit of carbon emissions”.
In the pre-pandemic times, brands started to notice more people questioning their lifestyle choices and pushing for a change (thanks Greta!). Responsibility has been used as a Gen-Z marketing tool increasingly appealing to other demographics as well.
One such app is YAYZY, an eco-lifestyle tracking app that shows the carbon footprint of your purchases in real-time.
The makers of the app built it inspired by the belief that action begins with information. Their app raises awareness of sustainable lifestyle alternatives to travel, fashion, food, and more.
Now, with all the surprises that 2020 brought us, people are cutting back on excessive shopping and considering other lifestyle choices, cooking bread at home, anyone?
Consumers are not alone. Makers are increasingly more interested in combating climate change by combining Fintech and Cleantech.
There is no shortage of environment-protecting initiatives that popped up in the last couple of years. Here are some simple and some creative ways to become a more conscious consumer:
Website Carbon Calculator shows how much CO2 your website emits.
Kuri suggests low-carbon recipes and adapts to what's in season around you.
Wren offsets your carbon footprint by saving rainforests.
Capture wants to be the Fitbit for your carbon footprint by tracking your mobility and food choices.
Sliced finds opportunities that have a direct impact on reversing climate change.
Climatebase curates climate-positive jobs, organizations, and events.
Climatescape is an open directory of organizations creating solutions to climate change.
Collective.Energy is a community for crowdsourcing and launching climate solutions.
Enviro.Work is a job board for environmentally positive work that benefits the environment.
Carbonly is an online carbon footprint tracker that plants a tree for every new install.
Carbon Trim is an app for discovering carbon footprints of daily actions.
Vera for Business makes it simple for your business to stop ocean plastic.
Tripit shows your flight’s carbon emissions and provides ideas on how to reduce it.
Joro is the “Fitbit of carbon emissions”.
This app summarizes your emails using GPT-3
Last month, college student Liam Porr tricked everyone and went viral on Hacker News with a GPT-3 generated fake blog post. In his own words, “it was super easy, actually, which was the scary part.”
We’ve seen a ton of GPT-3 powered projects since it was introduced by OpenAI in July. Yesterday, scientist and maker, Samanyou Garg launched another one: Magic Email, an app that summarizes and generates emails using AI.
The creator of previously well-received TLDR This extension returned with a GPT-3 powered email assistant that summarizes and generates professional emails from one-liners. It’s currently in beta, join now to get early access.
Whether it’s fake news or smart algorithms, AI is taking over communication. With tools like GPT-3, there will be even more innovation and viral stunts.
From email summaries, narrated podcasts, copywriting to networking, AI is capable of replacing boring time-sucking communication habits.
Here are some other promising AI-powered products from the community:
Say Less works inside Gmail so you can write shorter emails with AI.
Kriya AI finds relevant professionals and writes smart email intros.
VWO Humans vs AI is a competition to test GPT-3 generated web copy against humans.
Kafkai is a fully AI-powered unique content generator.
Podcastle converts to natural human speech podcasts using machine learning.
GPT-3 Job Description Rewriter does exactly what it says using OpenAI's GPT-3 model.
LALAL.AI uses AI to split any song into vocal and instrumental tracks.
Shortly is an AI creative writing assistant generating new creative plots and story developments.
We’ve seen a ton of GPT-3 powered projects since it was introduced by OpenAI in July. Yesterday, scientist and maker, Samanyou Garg launched another one: Magic Email, an app that summarizes and generates emails using AI.
The creator of previously well-received TLDR This extension returned with a GPT-3 powered email assistant that summarizes and generates professional emails from one-liners. It’s currently in beta, join now to get early access.
Whether it’s fake news or smart algorithms, AI is taking over communication. With tools like GPT-3, there will be even more innovation and viral stunts.
From email summaries, narrated podcasts, copywriting to networking, AI is capable of replacing boring time-sucking communication habits.
Here are some other promising AI-powered products from the community:
Say Less works inside Gmail so you can write shorter emails with AI.
Kriya AI finds relevant professionals and writes smart email intros.
VWO Humans vs AI is a competition to test GPT-3 generated web copy against humans.
Kafkai is a fully AI-powered unique content generator.
Podcastle converts to natural human speech podcasts using machine learning.
GPT-3 Job Description Rewriter does exactly what it says using OpenAI's GPT-3 model.
LALAL.AI uses AI to split any song into vocal and instrumental tracks.
Shortly is an AI creative writing assistant generating new creative plots and story developments.
This is fine
Zoom hosts 300 million meetings daily. 🤯
While most meetings are intended to be productive, you can still have some fun with Zoom custom backgrounds.
We’re seeing a rise in the number of projects aimed to make Zoom more self-expressive (and hide the mess behind your desk chair). Transport yourself to the Simpsons’ living room or recreate your pre-COVID office space.
Here are a few projects you might want to check out before your next meeting:
3D Rooms Project makes illustrated iconic rooms available as free Zoom backgrounds.
Actionable is a way to personalize your Zoom with QR codes and interactive backgrounds.
Zoom Exotic is pretty self-explanatory bringing you 100+ exotic video backgrounds.
VirtualOffice brings branded virtual offices for your remote team's Zoom meetings.
Canva has a free Zoom background creator with over 100 templates and customization options.
HiHello lets you add your name, title, company, and logo to your virtual background.
HavePride.in is a custom virtual Zoom background generator supporting LGBTQ+ Pride.
Zoom Background curates 1000+ free crowdsourced backgrounds for your next meeting.
While most meetings are intended to be productive, you can still have some fun with Zoom custom backgrounds.
We’re seeing a rise in the number of projects aimed to make Zoom more self-expressive (and hide the mess behind your desk chair). Transport yourself to the Simpsons’ living room or recreate your pre-COVID office space.
Here are a few projects you might want to check out before your next meeting:
3D Rooms Project makes illustrated iconic rooms available as free Zoom backgrounds.
Actionable is a way to personalize your Zoom with QR codes and interactive backgrounds.
Zoom Exotic is pretty self-explanatory bringing you 100+ exotic video backgrounds.
VirtualOffice brings branded virtual offices for your remote team's Zoom meetings.
Canva has a free Zoom background creator with over 100 templates and customization options.
HiHello lets you add your name, title, company, and logo to your virtual background.
HavePride.in is a custom virtual Zoom background generator supporting LGBTQ+ Pride.
Zoom Background curates 1000+ free crowdsourced backgrounds for your next meeting.
An app for your psychedelic trip ✨
Self-awareness is going mainstream. People are seeking answers within fueling the rise of meditation and a curious self-discovery trend.
Yesterday, Ronan Levy, self-proclaimed metaphysical outlaw, and Kori Harrison launched Trip, an app for your psychedelic trips.
It’s an app to accompany you through meditation, breathwork, and, well, tripping. Use it for intention setting, mood tracking, personalized music, and guided journaling.
While not openly mentioned, psychedelics have been around for years and many people you probably have heard of such as Steve Jobs, Aldous Huxley, Bill Gates, and The Beatles, mention their experience as life-changing.
Outside of Silicon Valley and Burning Man circles, psychedelics are still surrounded by many taboos and laws. But science is advancing rapidly and people are more open to alternative treatments.
Head of Product, Kori Harrison explained their evidence-based and responsible approach while designing Trip. “We spoke with experienced and new trippers, guides, psychologists, medical doctors, and combined those insights with the research from Mendel Kaelen, Stanislav Grof, MAPS, Roland Griffiths, Robin Carhart-Harris and others.”
Ronan Levy is the co-founder of Field Trip, a sort of spa for your mind. The company behind the app offers legal psychedelic-enhanced therapy, mindfulness, and self-care with a series of sessions with trained psychotherapists.
Field Trip is open for business in New York, Toronto, and LA opening soon. The company plans to open 75 clinics in North America by 2024, Wired reports.
It would be naïve to assume that people don’t experiment (we know what you did there). While the app is useful for any kind of mood-tracking and journaling, it’s been built specifically for people self-medicating, even more now while stuck at home.
If you’re curious to learn more, check out Field Tripping, a new podcast about psychedelics, and people.
Yesterday, Ronan Levy, self-proclaimed metaphysical outlaw, and Kori Harrison launched Trip, an app for your psychedelic trips.
It’s an app to accompany you through meditation, breathwork, and, well, tripping. Use it for intention setting, mood tracking, personalized music, and guided journaling.
While not openly mentioned, psychedelics have been around for years and many people you probably have heard of such as Steve Jobs, Aldous Huxley, Bill Gates, and The Beatles, mention their experience as life-changing.
Outside of Silicon Valley and Burning Man circles, psychedelics are still surrounded by many taboos and laws. But science is advancing rapidly and people are more open to alternative treatments.
Head of Product, Kori Harrison explained their evidence-based and responsible approach while designing Trip. “We spoke with experienced and new trippers, guides, psychologists, medical doctors, and combined those insights with the research from Mendel Kaelen, Stanislav Grof, MAPS, Roland Griffiths, Robin Carhart-Harris and others.”
Ronan Levy is the co-founder of Field Trip, a sort of spa for your mind. The company behind the app offers legal psychedelic-enhanced therapy, mindfulness, and self-care with a series of sessions with trained psychotherapists.
Field Trip is open for business in New York, Toronto, and LA opening soon. The company plans to open 75 clinics in North America by 2024, Wired reports.
It would be naïve to assume that people don’t experiment (we know what you did there). While the app is useful for any kind of mood-tracking and journaling, it’s been built specifically for people self-medicating, even more now while stuck at home.
If you’re curious to learn more, check out Field Tripping, a new podcast about psychedelics, and people.
“Zero fees is a game changer”
Today’s newsletter was crafted by us and sponsored by our friends at Brex.
Brex Cash first appeared on our scene last year, hunted while in public beta by long-time community member Chris Messina. The launch was one of the most upvoted of the day and received promising early feedback from the community:
“Zero fees is a game changer” – Ellen
“Brex is taking over! Appreciate the rewards still + some yield…” – Caelan
“I really like the way Brex implemented the integration of Cash with the card... they make it as simple as possible” – Dalton
Brex has since publicly launched Brex Cash—you can now sign up in minutes (and from home). Customers immediately get access to $0 ACH and wire transfers (including internationally), with no limits on how many you can send.
Combined with a high-limit Brex Card (up to 10-20x higher limits with no personal guarantee), spend management features, and integrations like QuickBooks and Netsuite, Brex Cash lets businesses run from a single dashboard, saving you time so you can focus on scaling your business instead of worrying about housekeeping. (They’re reporting up to 10 hours a week on time saved per customer). The built-in receipt matching is a nice touch, too. Nobody enjoys submitting expenses (but if you do, can you submit ours? 😉).
In addition, Brex offers multipliers like 7x on rideshare, 4x on travel, 3x on restaurants, and 2x on software, and for those more tailored to remote teams, it’s offering 7x on collaboration tools like Slack, and Zoom, and 3x on food delivery services like Caviar and Doordash.
From cash management and credit cards to spend controls, Brex allows complete finance management all in one place. You can apply here.
NB: Businesses need to be US based in order to sign up for Brex. For important disclosures and more information, click here.
Terms subject to change. Brex Inc. provides a corporate card. The Brex Mastercard® Corporate Credit Card is issued by Emigrant Bank, Member FDIC.
Brex Treasury LLC is an affiliated SEC-registered broker-dealer and member of FINRA and SIPC that provides Brex Cash, a program that allows customers to elect to sweep uninvested cash balances into certain money market mutual funds or FDIC-insured bank accounts at program banks. Investing in securities products involves risk, including possible loss of principal. Brex Treasury is not a bank and your Brex Cash account is not a bank account. Please see brex.com/cash for important legal disclosures. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.
Brex Cash first appeared on our scene last year, hunted while in public beta by long-time community member Chris Messina. The launch was one of the most upvoted of the day and received promising early feedback from the community:
“Zero fees is a game changer” – Ellen
“Brex is taking over! Appreciate the rewards still + some yield…” – Caelan
“I really like the way Brex implemented the integration of Cash with the card... they make it as simple as possible” – Dalton
Brex has since publicly launched Brex Cash—you can now sign up in minutes (and from home). Customers immediately get access to $0 ACH and wire transfers (including internationally), with no limits on how many you can send.
Combined with a high-limit Brex Card (up to 10-20x higher limits with no personal guarantee), spend management features, and integrations like QuickBooks and Netsuite, Brex Cash lets businesses run from a single dashboard, saving you time so you can focus on scaling your business instead of worrying about housekeeping. (They’re reporting up to 10 hours a week on time saved per customer). The built-in receipt matching is a nice touch, too. Nobody enjoys submitting expenses (but if you do, can you submit ours? 😉).
In addition, Brex offers multipliers like 7x on rideshare, 4x on travel, 3x on restaurants, and 2x on software, and for those more tailored to remote teams, it’s offering 7x on collaboration tools like Slack, and Zoom, and 3x on food delivery services like Caviar and Doordash.
From cash management and credit cards to spend controls, Brex allows complete finance management all in one place. You can apply here.
NB: Businesses need to be US based in order to sign up for Brex. For important disclosures and more information, click here.
Terms subject to change. Brex Inc. provides a corporate card. The Brex Mastercard® Corporate Credit Card is issued by Emigrant Bank, Member FDIC.
Brex Treasury LLC is an affiliated SEC-registered broker-dealer and member of FINRA and SIPC that provides Brex Cash, a program that allows customers to elect to sweep uninvested cash balances into certain money market mutual funds or FDIC-insured bank accounts at program banks. Investing in securities products involves risk, including possible loss of principal. Brex Treasury is not a bank and your Brex Cash account is not a bank account. Please see brex.com/cash for important legal disclosures. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.
The end of unpaid invoices
Late payments cost small businesses $3 trillion per year, Sage reports.
Whaaat?
Yesterday, Colin Gunnell and Adam Farah introduced Penny, an instant invoice payment platform.
Inspired by the freelance struggles and unexpected business expenses (dropped MacBook, anyone?), Penny makes it easier to get paid.
Getting paid is a real struggle as highlighted by the community members:
“This is a sweet idea. Before moving into building podcast SaaS I began my career as a freelancer and suffered at the hands of people simply paying late because they were bigger businesses and simply could.” – Mark Asquith
“This sounds amazing! As an influencer I am forever waiting for brands to pay my invoices (longest I've waited is 3 months!) so defo gonna have a look at this. Is it any hassle to the client?” – Helena Lester-Card
The gig economy was growing pre-COVID but now it’s been accelerating as more people are exploring alternative career options. In recent years, we’ve seen tons of innovation that makes capital more accessible to people who need it the most.
Here are some of the tools available from setting up your company, to getting paid to global health insurance:
Stripe Atlas is a service to handle everything involved in establishing an internet business.
Cushion helps freelancers forecast, schedule, and track invoices.
75 Ways to Get New Clients lists actionable ideas to secure your next client.
Betterlance is an automated CRM built with freelancers in mind.
Williams & Harricks send real, physical demand letters to get your invoice paid.
Upflow is a SaaS tool integrated with your accounting software.
Lean Hire makes the talent hiring process easier and faster.
Deel simplifies compliance and payments at scale for companies working with contractors.
Remote Health provides insurance (pandemics included) for remote teams and individuals.
Whaaat?
Yesterday, Colin Gunnell and Adam Farah introduced Penny, an instant invoice payment platform.
Inspired by the freelance struggles and unexpected business expenses (dropped MacBook, anyone?), Penny makes it easier to get paid.
Getting paid is a real struggle as highlighted by the community members:
“This is a sweet idea. Before moving into building podcast SaaS I began my career as a freelancer and suffered at the hands of people simply paying late because they were bigger businesses and simply could.” – Mark Asquith
“This sounds amazing! As an influencer I am forever waiting for brands to pay my invoices (longest I've waited is 3 months!) so defo gonna have a look at this. Is it any hassle to the client?” – Helena Lester-Card
The gig economy was growing pre-COVID but now it’s been accelerating as more people are exploring alternative career options. In recent years, we’ve seen tons of innovation that makes capital more accessible to people who need it the most.
Here are some of the tools available from setting up your company, to getting paid to global health insurance:
Stripe Atlas is a service to handle everything involved in establishing an internet business.
Cushion helps freelancers forecast, schedule, and track invoices.
75 Ways to Get New Clients lists actionable ideas to secure your next client.
Betterlance is an automated CRM built with freelancers in mind.
Williams & Harricks send real, physical demand letters to get your invoice paid.
Upflow is a SaaS tool integrated with your accounting software.
Lean Hire makes the talent hiring process easier and faster.
Deel simplifies compliance and payments at scale for companies working with contractors.
Remote Health provides insurance (pandemics included) for remote teams and individuals.
Clippy for every website 📎
M-Files survey shows that 83% of employees recreate existing work documents because they can’t find them in their company network.
Conclusion? Documentation sucks.
Yesterday, Joaquin Roca launched Minerva a dynamic way to share processes online. It’s the modern day Clippy, but with less eyebrows.
With this Chrome extension, you can easily capture and share clickable instructions for anything on the internet. No screenshots, red arrows, or screencap videos needed.
Documenting processes, SOPs (standard operating procedures), and internal workflows can be a pain to write, but are crucial precautions for well-functioning orgs.
Having recently secured a $1.1M seed round, Minerva aims to simplify documentation for customers, colleagues, and trainees.
The launch was well received by the Product Hunt community:
“It’s great to watch someone’s face light up after about the third minute of a product demo. Minerva has truly solved a very annoying problem.” – Brian Cohen
“Minerva is a dream come true! No more lengthy documentation and lost or unscalable process knowledge!” – Tania Luna
“I am a fan of this product because of how easy it makes it for anyone to create, share and follow directions. Some processes online take SO many clicks, hovers, drop-downs and new windows that open, which can be confusing.” – Amy Chen
Here are some more products to help you with interactive onboarding, documentation, and online training:
Scribe watches you work your magic and automatically turns what you do into a PDF guide.
Helppier integrates with Canva designs so you can create popups, banners, and tours.
UserGuiding is an easy way to show how your product works.
Landbot is the no-code conversational app builder.
Donut makes it easy to customize and automate onboarding journeys, right in Slack.
OnboardFlow makes sense of your trials and shows how to convert more of them.
Page Flows is a library of user flow videos and screenshots from popular products.
flowmapp is a simple tool for creating user flow diagrams.
Personably creates amazing on-boarding experiences for new hires.
But if you want to add Clippy to your site for every visitor, use this.
Conclusion? Documentation sucks.
Yesterday, Joaquin Roca launched Minerva a dynamic way to share processes online. It’s the modern day Clippy, but with less eyebrows.
With this Chrome extension, you can easily capture and share clickable instructions for anything on the internet. No screenshots, red arrows, or screencap videos needed.
Documenting processes, SOPs (standard operating procedures), and internal workflows can be a pain to write, but are crucial precautions for well-functioning orgs.
Having recently secured a $1.1M seed round, Minerva aims to simplify documentation for customers, colleagues, and trainees.
The launch was well received by the Product Hunt community:
“It’s great to watch someone’s face light up after about the third minute of a product demo. Minerva has truly solved a very annoying problem.” – Brian Cohen
“Minerva is a dream come true! No more lengthy documentation and lost or unscalable process knowledge!” – Tania Luna
“I am a fan of this product because of how easy it makes it for anyone to create, share and follow directions. Some processes online take SO many clicks, hovers, drop-downs and new windows that open, which can be confusing.” – Amy Chen
Here are some more products to help you with interactive onboarding, documentation, and online training:
Scribe watches you work your magic and automatically turns what you do into a PDF guide.
Helppier integrates with Canva designs so you can create popups, banners, and tours.
UserGuiding is an easy way to show how your product works.
Landbot is the no-code conversational app builder.
Donut makes it easy to customize and automate onboarding journeys, right in Slack.
OnboardFlow makes sense of your trials and shows how to convert more of them.
Page Flows is a library of user flow videos and screenshots from popular products.
flowmapp is a simple tool for creating user flow diagrams.
Personably creates amazing on-boarding experiences for new hires.
But if you want to add Clippy to your site for every visitor, use this.
Launch like Dropbox
Dropbox’s referral program is one of the most famous cases of referral marketing. Thanks to incentivized invitations Dropbox has more than 600 million users today.
Yesterday, Bani Singh introduced WaitlistAPI, an easy, lightweight, and free tool to quickly set up a waitlist on your next project.
Inspired by her friend, Bani built WaitlistAPI to be a free tool suitable for a small side-project that can be implemented in 5 minutes.
Here are some of the early reactions from the community:
“I absolutely love simple and effective solutions like this one. Thanks for making this and congrats on the launch, Bani!” – Gleb Sabirzyanov
“Awesome! Can’t believe it took this long for this. Great work.” – Drew Wandzilak
“Congrats! Definitely a much needed service. I was planning to search if there is such a service. Glad to see it on PH. I found it now.” – Wilson Bright
Make Something People Want is the motto of Y Combinator and a guiding star for many makers.
If you want to launch a well-received product, consider taking a community-first approach. In simple words, pick a community and build something for them and not vice versa.
Some benefits of building an audience first:
1. They will be more likely to buy when you launch.
2. You’ll better understand exactly what they want.
3. You’ll build trust and brand awareness.
Here are some of the things you can do before you even start building:
1. Join or start a discussion.
2. Build in public by sharing progress on Twitter.
3. Create a pre-launch page.
4. Read and understand negative reviews of your competitors.
Luckily, there are tons of resources to help you build your audience. Here are some of our favorites:
Ship is a toolkit to generate demand, build an email list, communicate, and ship products.
Uplaunch is a ready-to-use landing page solution with eye-catching coming soon pages.
Luupro is the platform for you to get social about the projects you're working on.
GrowSurf is a customizable platform to create custom refer-a-friend programs built for startups.
ReferralMagic turns your users and customers into referral magnets.
Productboard is great for collecting customer feedback and sourcing new ideas.
Should I Make This? is a site to get feedback on your idea.
Faraday is a free no-code tool to build interactive flows and engage customers.
Yesterday, Bani Singh introduced WaitlistAPI, an easy, lightweight, and free tool to quickly set up a waitlist on your next project.
Inspired by her friend, Bani built WaitlistAPI to be a free tool suitable for a small side-project that can be implemented in 5 minutes.
Here are some of the early reactions from the community:
“I absolutely love simple and effective solutions like this one. Thanks for making this and congrats on the launch, Bani!” – Gleb Sabirzyanov
“Awesome! Can’t believe it took this long for this. Great work.” – Drew Wandzilak
“Congrats! Definitely a much needed service. I was planning to search if there is such a service. Glad to see it on PH. I found it now.” – Wilson Bright
Make Something People Want is the motto of Y Combinator and a guiding star for many makers.
If you want to launch a well-received product, consider taking a community-first approach. In simple words, pick a community and build something for them and not vice versa.
Some benefits of building an audience first:
1. They will be more likely to buy when you launch.
2. You’ll better understand exactly what they want.
3. You’ll build trust and brand awareness.
Here are some of the things you can do before you even start building:
1. Join or start a discussion.
2. Build in public by sharing progress on Twitter.
3. Create a pre-launch page.
4. Read and understand negative reviews of your competitors.
Luckily, there are tons of resources to help you build your audience. Here are some of our favorites:
Ship is a toolkit to generate demand, build an email list, communicate, and ship products.
Uplaunch is a ready-to-use landing page solution with eye-catching coming soon pages.
Luupro is the platform for you to get social about the projects you're working on.
GrowSurf is a customizable platform to create custom refer-a-friend programs built for startups.
ReferralMagic turns your users and customers into referral magnets.
Productboard is great for collecting customer feedback and sourcing new ideas.
Should I Make This? is a site to get feedback on your idea.
Faraday is a free no-code tool to build interactive flows and engage customers.











