What’s the one tool in your tech stack that saves you hours every week?
by•
We all have that one tool - the unsung hero quietly doing its job and saving you hours every single week.
For me (no surprise 😄), it’s @Clueso
We built it to turn product workflows into help docs and videos in minutes - and I still get amazed by how fast it is compared to the old “record → edit → voiceover → host → pray someone watches” workflow.
But beyond Clueso, I’m always on the hunt for tools that actually make a difference in day-to-day work.
So I’m asking the Product Hunt braintrust:
🔍 What’s the tool you’d fight to keep in your stack - and why?
No shame in shouting out the obvious ones (Notion, Linear, Figma), but I’m really curious about underrated picks too.
Drop your faves 👇
I’m bookmarking everything!
723 views

Replies
Dokably
For me that is @Dokably
minimalist phone: creating folders
Probably @ChatGPT by OpenAI but @Grammarly also saves me a lot of time – I used to it so much that it is natural to me that it corrects my grammar. Without that, i would probably pick up every single word from the dictionary.
Totally relatable, @busmark_w_nika 🙌
A few months back, I discovered the ChatGPT Mac app - it changed the whole game of how I use ChatGPT day-to-day. Can’t imagine working without it now.
And yes, Grammarly has been a quiet timesaver as well, especially when I need to set the right tone in emails and messages.
@busmark_w_nika Totally agree! ChatGPT has become my go-to for work and study
For me def. @Cursor
@federico_zuluaga_knorr, Cursor stealing every show!
@federico_zuluaga_knorr this. Cursor is great.
SECONDSENSE
@Cursor i don’t think I can write a hello world without anymore. Total dependence.
PS: I have been coding for 25+ years
@emad_ibrahim Crazy! You've seen it all evolving. Would love to see some of your work you built using Cursor or anything you'd like to show.
@emad_ibrahim - thanks for sharing!
Handit.ai
For me is @Handit.ai , we use it as the backbone for all of our agents, so they are actually reliable, it allows us to have them audit themselves and literally improve their prompts and datasets automatically. TBH is a game changer for our teams and our AI.
@jramr7 - Interesting. Would recommend it to some of my friends. Thanks for sharing.
For me is @Cursor, i used it to speed up my prototype and even see if the idea is feasible. And for the nerds out there, my workflow on how i used cursor is as follows (Just mini version):
1. Go to chatGPT to create a PRD and feed it to cursor
2. Choose Agent mode (Claude/gemni) to bring just the Frontend to live. No db just use localStorage if necessary and No auth.
3. The fascinating part is, i ask the agent to create db schema based on the data flow..boom! and then, later on i will be in a better place to understanding my database and backend implementation.
4. Once i figured the project is feasible, i would get back to normal software developer flow to be able in control and understand the codebase better.
I hope this make sense or does it? Anyways, cursor is the GOAT when prototyping.
@mr_vibecoder - Great stuff! Thanks for sharing. I'm sure this workflow would be useful to everybody building with cursor.
For me, the tool that consistently saves hours each week on the marketing side is @Clerk + @PostHog . Clerk handles authentication and user identities, while PostHog gives me real-time analytics, session replays, and funnel insights.
Thanks for sharing,@iamrajanrk!
SECONDSENSE
Cal ID
I'm just baffled to see how Cursor is stealing every show. Had this discussion on a Slack community as well, where it turns out that developers with years of coding experience are getting stuck on basic logical problems because of their over-dependency (and they admitted it, not positively).
It's surely getting a little scary at this point.
@sanskarix - Totally hear you. It is a little scary.
Tools, apps, and workflows are evolving faster than ever… and honestly, just trying to keep up feels like a full-time job sometimes. 😅
But I guess that’s also what makes it exciting - always something new to learn, try, and adapt to.
To help AI coding agents with context, I like to refer to official documentation a lot. A few ways to do this, but my fav is to created a unified doc from the official web site using a free tool @MarkdownMate (free in the Chrome store) Check out this item on the Chrome Web Store https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/kgeoehjdciibpbdabmkkooghgffehcli?utm_source=item-share-cp
This saves me hours when creating context docs. Hope that's useful!
@charlie_reagan1 - thanks for sharing.
I’ve been using @Stravix (our tool) to turn rough ideas into actual content. It saves me a ton of time jumping between formats.
It still surprises me how fast it gets from “random thought” to something ready to post.
@ashtalksai - thanks for sharing. Would love to see some of your work created with Stravix!