Resenix
Paste a Google Maps URL. Get a 30-second action plan.
17 followers
Paste a Google Maps URL. Get a 30-second action plan.
17 followers
Drop a Google Maps URL → 100 reviews imported in seconds → a 0–10 score, recurring issues and 3 prioritized fixes ready to act on. Weekly email comparing you vs your competitors. Built for restaurants, clinics, hotels and local shops.







Bluor AI
@svitalesponce software that actually helps the high street is rare. usually 'AI for local business' is just a gimmick, but turning reviews into a literal weekly to-do list is actually useful.
Bluor AI
@vikramp7470 Thanks! The "weekly to-do list" framing is exactly the bet. Most review tools dump a dashboard on owners who already don't have time. The job isn't "here's your sentiment trend," it's "here are the three things to fix on Monday."
High street software is hard because the user isn't sitting at a desk. If it takes more than 2 minutes to act on, it doesn't get used.
does the maps import handle non-english reviews? we get a lot of tourists and translating them manually is a nightmare. if claude handles the translation + sentiment in one go, i’m sold. congrats on the v1! @svitalesponce
Bluor AI
@priya_kushwaha1 Yes, that was actually a core design choice. Claude reads the reviews in whatever language they were written (Italian, German, Japanese, doesn't matter) and gives you the summary, topics, sentiment, NPS and recommended actions back in your dashboard language in a single pass. No manual translation step.
One thing to be upfront about: the verbatim quotes we surface stay in the original language on purpose, so you can see exactly what the customer wrote without putting words in their mouth. Everything else (the analysis itself) is translated. If you've got a mostly-tourist mix, the Pro plan's Google Maps import + monthly auto-pull is probably what you want.
Thanks for the kind words 🙏
Bluor AI
Quick update for anyone who checked out Resenix on Tuesday — shipped v1.2 today.
Had a conversation on LinkedIn yesterday that completely reframed how I was thinking about path to value. Two over-engineered things they called out:
Starter was packed trying to "justify €9" — which kills the upgrade pull to Pro.
I was putting a password form in front of a product whose hero moment is "paste a URL, get an answer in 30 seconds".
Stopped what I was doing and rebuilt pricing + signup around that.
What's new:
Google sign-in. One click. No more "ugh, another password" before they've even seen the product.
Free is now monthly, not lifetime. 3 analyses every month, automatic reset. The old "3 forever" felt like a trial in disguise — the new framing actually invites repeat use.
Google Maps URL import drops to Starter (€9), not gated behind Pro. Paste your business URL, get an action plan in 30 seconds — that's the hero moment, and it shouldn't sit behind a €49 paywall.
Lesson learned this week: the best product feedback rarely comes from the people who tell you "great launch" — it comes from the one person who says "have you considered this is the wrong frame entirely?"
If anyone here runs or works with local businesses — restaurants, hotels, clinics, salons, anything customer-facing — the one thing I'd love to know: does the "paste URL, get answer in 30 seconds" framing actually land, or does it sound too good to be true?