Elitza Vasileva

A more creative link-in-bio for creators and founders

Hey Product Hunt đź‘‹

I’m Elitza, founder of own.page. I started building it because social media profiles feel too restrictive, and most link-in-bio tools feel too generic.

own.page helps creators and founders build a beautiful link-in-bio that feels more like a personal website than just a list of links. You can customize it, add widgets and integrations, understand your visitors, and grow your audience from one place.

Today is my first Product Hunt launch, and I’d genuinely appreciate your feedback, comments, and support.

What would you like to see in a tool like this?

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Alicia

Just signed up it is easy to do and the design is absolutely stunning easy to use and most definitely a plus for founders it is great 👍

Elitza Vasileva

@alicia20 Thank you so much, Alicia! I am happy to hear you had a great experience with it!

Olivier Jury
@elitza_vasileva If you want to test its response under pressure. The idea is cool, but what exactly differentiates own.page from Carrd or Beacons? Because if it's just "prettier," people won't migrate. Do you have a unique technical or product angle?
Elitza Vasileva

@olivier_jury Great question - and no, the goal is definitely not just to be “prettier.”

That said, UI/UX is still a real differentiator, especially for designers, artists, makers, and other professionals where presentation directly affects trust.

But own.page is also about more than the visual layer: custom domains, built-in analytics, email collection, and flexible widgets for embedding content from social platforms and other tools. With something like Carrd, for example, you often need to connect external analytics tools yourself.

Some features naturally overlap with other platforms, but the direction for own.page is broader: not just a static link page, but a place where creators can present their work, understand their audience, collect leads, and eventually grow a community around what they do.

Olivier Jury
@elitza_vasileva Totally agree on the UI/UX point Elitza. But the real blocker with Carrd/Beacons is multi-account management. Once you hit 5+ client accounts, attribution breaks and tracking gets messy. We built Supaboard to keep accounts isolated + track conversions per client, while keeping the bio link clean. Do you see demand for that from your users?
Jim Jeffers

The migration question is the right one. For creators/founders, I think the wedge has to be more than “better looking links”; it should help them decide what story the page is telling.

A few useful differentiators I’d look for: featured proof instead of just featured links, context for why each tile matters, and a way to swap the page’s emphasis based on intent — investor intro, podcast guest, newsletter signup, hiring, launch day, etc.

Most link-in-bio pages become a junk drawer over time. If own.page can help people keep a sharp “what should this visitor understand about me in 20 seconds?” narrative, that feels meaningfully different from a prettier list.

Elitza Vasileva

@jim_jeffers This is a really good point, and I agree. A link page shouldn’t just become a nicer-looking junk drawer.

The long-term direction for own.page is exactly closer to that: helping creators and founders shape a clearer narrative, not just add more links. Things like highlighting proof, giving context to tiles, and adapting the page depending on the visitor’s intent are very much aligned with where I want to take it.

Annika Ljaš

Elitza is badass!!! I saw her work on this in the Hacker Residency in Da Nang. Well done, girl!! I sent some of my Estonian friends to check out the product and upvote, too.

Elitza Vasileva

@annika_ljash Thank you so much, Annika! Appreciate your kind words and support!

Jim Jeffers

Building on the narrative direction: I’d be tempted to make that layer very practical. Pick a visitor intent, then show a suggested tile order and one sentence of context for each proof point. A founder probably does not need another blank canvas as much as a quick “for this audience, lead with traction/proof/story, hide the rest” helper. The nice part is it still preserves creative control, but prevents the page from drifting back into a link dump.