Launched this week

welaunch.sh
Get your first 100 customers
83 followers
Get your first 100 customers
83 followers
Paste your URL. We find the exact subreddits, directories and conversations your buyers are in, write the ready-to-post copy for each, and hand you one-click posting, all in priority order.



@welaunch.sh - This looks like a very promising tool for leads, and for that you have my vote. However as I solo indie founder, bootstrapping my own start-up with very limited funds, before even signing up, I want to understand the cost model, to see if it meets my pocket. What is the price, is it pay as you go, subscription etc? It's not clear from the landing page at the moment, unless I totally missed something. Best of luck with the launch.
@codeandsea Thanks a lot for commeting. It is 29$ per launch and we have 50% discount to Product Hunters (PH50OFF discount code)!
the one-click posting part is what gives me pause more than the copy quality. a lot of subreddits already have zero patience for anything that smells like automated self-promo, and posting to 13 different channels off one paste is exactly the pattern mods and spam filters look for. does it space the posts out and vary timing per subreddit, or is it genuinely one click that fires everything close together? feels like the fastest way to get a founder's account flagged across several communities at once instead of just one
the "pile of open tabs and a vague feeling I should do marketing" line hit way too close to home. the part I'm actually curious about is the ranking, how does it decide priority order across 13 different channels, is it based on your product category and what's converged well for similar products before, or more of a generic playbook applied to whatever URL you paste in?
Wow. Nice idea. I'm impressed by the agent team. Btw I would found it more easy if have login with gg, as well as when I put my simplified product link (i***o.tech), not with the "https" it's said that is not a proper link. Great launching to the team
How do you handle the variability in subreddit rules and posting guidelines, and do you provide any guidance on how to tailor the ready-to-post copy to avoid getting flagged as spam?
One thing that would help a lot: let me save a draft of the generated copy for each subreddit before posting, so I can tweak the tone to match how I usually write. Right now it feels like a take it or leave it situation, and having a quick edit step would make me way more confident hitting post.