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9 December 2025

  • 16:4116:41, 9 December 2025 Micro-SaaS Pricing in the AI Era (hist | edit) [10,817 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Learn how to price AI micro-SaaS in 2025. Freemium vs free trials vs usage caps, with real examples, simple architecture sketches, and a practical decision playbook. The uncomfortable truth about AI pricing If you’re building a micro-SaaS on top of AI, your pricing probably keeps you up at night. Traditional SaaS was “pay once a month, cost is mostly fixed.”
AI SaaS is “pay as users think,” and thoughts...")
  • 16:3916:39, 9 December 2025 Testing Your SaaS Prototype in The Real World (hist | edit) [7,209 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Where We Left Off Last time I wrote, we were preparing to test our product in the real world. We designed ClientHero to solve specific, real problems and we have access to a business that encounters said problems. The business itself is a well-known medical clinic in the city where we’re located. I’m writing this midway through week 2 of testing, and I couldn’t wait to share what’s happened so far. The Plan Since...")
  • 16:3716:37, 9 December 2025 3 AI Tools That Got Me 100 New SaaS Users in Under 30 Days (hist | edit) [6,212 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "You’re “building in public.” You’re posting 10x a day on X. You’re sharing your “journey.” You’re “engaging” in the comments. You’re doing “all the things” the gurus told you to do. You refresh your Stripe dashboard. Two new users. It’s been a week. You are a busy founder. You are not a productive founder. You’re “marketing.” You’re just not acquiring. You’re stuck in “Content Hell,” shouting into a void and praying for a...")
  • 16:3516:35, 9 December 2025 Featured This Reddit Rant is a Masterclass in Finding SaaS Ideas (hist | edit) [7,975 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "“My literal job description has evolved into ‘professional nagger’…” 650px I stumbled on this raw, unfiltered rant from a project manager who is just… done. It comes from the r/projectmanagement subreddit, a place filled with professionals trying to keep the trains running on time. Here’s a piece of it: “My literal job description has evolved into ‘professional nagger’ because apparently clicking ‘complete’ is too comp...")
  • 16:3216:32, 9 December 2025 42 Free AI & SaaS Templates You Can Launch With Today (hist | edit) [13,993 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Launching a new AI or SaaS product is exciting — until you hit the website wall. Designing landing pages, dashboards, and user interfaces can take days, if not weeks. And if you’re like most founders or indie hackers, time is your most valuable resource. That’s why 2025 has made it easier than ever to launch without a designer. A wave of free AI & SaaS templates now exists — fast, modern, and ready to plug your product into. Whether you’re building automati...")
  • 16:2116:21, 9 December 2025 How I’d Build a SaaS Startup in 2025 (hist | edit) [7,477 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Motivation: Why SaaS is finally Easier. A friend recently hit me up with the classic question: Hey David, I have this idea for a SaaS. Can I pick your brain? We jumped on a call and ten minutes in, I had this moment of clarity: “Man…building SaaS today is so much easier than it used to be.” I remembered the early days- installing and configuring NGINX, debugging localhost at 1AM, reverse engineering flo...")
  • 16:1816:18, 9 December 2025 Is AI Going to Take Down SaaS Companies? ServiceNow Isn’t Worried (hist | edit) [7,408 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Will there be a time when enterprises ask AI for an app instead of buying SaaS? Will there be a moment when, instead of comparing SaaS vendors, pricing tiers, features, and licenses, a company that needs a new app just asks an AI to build it? On one side, ServiceNow’s Bill McDermott says he is not worried that customers will replace what took them 20 years to build. On the other, Satya Nadella has openly suggested that SaaS as we know it might “collapse” in the a...")
  • 16:1616:16, 9 December 2025 Best SaaS Niches for Solopreneurs in 2025 (hist | edit) [8,333 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Looking Back to Look Forward Over the past several articles, we’ve traveled through industries that most solopreneurs overlook. Instead of hyped-up AI trends or glamorous tech markets, we zoomed in on plumbers, yoga teachers, food truck owners, and even home inspectors. These aren’t the darlings of Silicon Valley. They’re the people who keep daily life running smoothly, but they’re stuck using sticky n...")
  • 16:1416:14, 9 December 2025 7 Niche SaaS Concepts Begging to Be Created (and How to Create Them) (hist | edit) [6,590 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "I have a problem with the word “Total Addressable Market” (TAM). 📉 VCs love it. They want to hear that your market is “7 Billion Humans.” They want you to build the next Facebook. The next Google. The next Air “We-Sell-Breathing” Bnb. But here is the truth about massive markets: They are crowded. They are bloody. And you will probably lose. 🥊 If you want to build a SaaS that actually makes you a millionaire (not a paper millionaire, a liquid one), you...")
  • 16:1216:12, 9 December 2025 The $100 Tech Stack I Used to Build a $10k/mo SaaS in 90 Days (hist | edit) [6,970 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "You’re a hostage. You’re a “non-technical” founder with a million-dollar idea, held hostage by a $150/hr “freelancer” who hasn’t shipped a feature in 3 weeks. Or you’re a “technical” founder, held hostage by your own perfectionism — “refactoring the database” for 6 months while your competitor (who is dumber than you) just launched on a crappy WordPress site and is stealing your customers. You’re burning time. You’re burning money. You...")
  • 16:1016:10, 9 December 2025 What I Learned Launching an AI SaaS (in 30 days) (hist | edit) [7,340 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Last week, I launched my 2nd AI SaaS (called Ghst). Although I avoided many of the mistakes made from my first product, I learned many new lessons this time around. In this article, I’ll share my key takeaways and what I plan to do differently next time. Here's the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6yd-mezhro $600k/mo solopreneur Pieter Levels said that out of 70 ventures he pursued, only 4 of them mad...")
  • 16:0616:06, 9 December 2025 The $100k Analyst’s Copy-Paste Problem: A Blueprint for a Real Estate Micro-SaaS (hist | edit) [7,726 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px A real estate analyst, likely earning over $100,000 a year, recently posted a question on Reddit that stopped me in my tracks: How do you guys automate your work? He was drowning in the boring stuff. Tracking deals, chasing brokers, and manually drafting investment decks. This was a map to a hidden treasure💡 I’m going to show you how a single Reddit comment reveals a painful, expensive problem for an ent...")
  • 15:1915:19, 9 December 2025 Django + HTMX SaaS Frontend Part 2: Building Real Features (hist | edit) [16,860 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px In Part 1, we explored the foundations of building a SaaS application with Django and HTMX. Now it’s time to get our hands dirty building actual features that users will interact with daily. We’ll create a task management system with real-time updates, inline editing, and dynamic filtering — all without writing a single line of JavaScript. What We’re Building We’re going to implement a complete task management feature wi...")
  • 15:1215:12, 9 December 2025 Free hosting places for your SaaS applications (hist | edit) [3,165 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px In my 7 years of working with multiple clients and projects, I’ve seen that there are founders whose only source of income is their job, and they have some ideas they want to develop. But before starting with development and spending money/time on your project, it’s better to validate the target market first, keeping the expenditure to a minimum. And that is why in such scenarios it’s better to co...")
  • 10:2710:27, 9 December 2025 Building a Multi-Tenant SaaS in Django: Complete 2026 Architecture (hist | edit) [22,207 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Multi-tenancy is the backbone of modern SaaS applications. It allows a single application instance to serve multiple customers (tenants) while keeping their data isolated and secure. In this comprehensive guide, we’ll architect a production-ready multi-tenant Django application that scales. Understanding Multi-Tenancy Approaches Before diving into code, let’s understand the three main approaches to multi-ten...")
  • 10:2110:21, 9 December 2025 10 Intriguing Cybersecurity Startup Ideas You Can Build as a Micro-SaaS (hist | edit) [5,271 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Photo by GuerrillaBuzz on Unsplash Hello again! We’ve already explored several innovative startup ideas in our previous articles — Intriguing Startup Ideas in Cybersecurity and 10 More Intriguing Startup Ideas to Revolutionize Cybersecurity. Both discussed how AI, cybersecurity trends, and real-world B2B/B2C challenges intersect to create new opportunities. Today, cybersecurity continues to rank among th...")
  • 10:1910:19, 9 December 2025 A Step-by-Step Blueprint for Your First $15k/mo Micro-SaaS (hist | edit) [7,122 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px I wasn’t even looking for a business idea. I was just scrolling through Reddit looking for investing ideas on a subreddit called r/SecurityAnalysis. People there share analytics and investing letters. For a investor like me, the community is just great. In finance, some of the most valuable intelligence comes from the quarterly letters written by top investment managers. They are detailed strategy guides from the best play...")
  • 10:1710:17, 9 December 2025 The AI agents are coming for SaaS (hist | edit) [5,086 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px There are times when a hypothesis is more than just another statement, and becomes a mirror reflecting the age we live in. Jeremy Blaze, after years designing SaaS applications and establishing himself as an authority in the field, now argues that these systems will disappear with the rise of AI agents. It might sound dramatic, but his assessment resonates with recent Microsoft statements, which likewise predict the...")
  • 10:1610:16, 9 December 2025 How the Community Turned Into a SaaS Commercial (hist | edit) [6,904 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px So, here’s a weird feeling I can’t shake: Somewhere along the line, working on data started feeling … fake. A few years back, data engineering wasn’t something you’d casually mention to impress your Tinder date. Being a data engineer meant serving as the a duct tape of the tech stack, hacking things together to get data where and how it was needed. It was chaotic, and kinda ugly. It meant Sp...")
  • 10:1310:13, 9 December 2025 Is SaaS dead? The rise of AI agents and what it means for business (hist | edit) [6,055 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px There’s a growing acceptance among the world’s largest technology corporations that SaaS (Software as a Service), the cornerstone of decades of digital transformation, is going to be replaced by AI agentic systems. I discussed this recently in the wake of the news that Klarna was replacing its data management software with agents, LLMs and AI. Now, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella has predicted the “collapse” of SaaS in the bluntest o...")
  • 10:1110:11, 9 December 2025 The Story of SiteBeacon: How a Simple Idea Became a Full-Fledged SaaS Product to Fight Digital Carbon Emissions (hist | edit) [6,983 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px The Spark: Where It All Began Back in 2021, I was working remotely with Lemon Hive — a creative and development agency. My regular responsibilities were already in place, but I was also given a side task: to collect Lighthouse metrics of various websites listed in a spreadsheet. The goal? Identify underperforming websites and reach out to them with cold emails offering optimization help from Lemon Hive. It was a repetit...")
  • 10:0610:06, 9 December 2025 Top 10 AI SaaS Development Companies - June 2025 Rankings (hist | edit) [16,290 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Quick summary : This post lists the top 10 AI SaaS development companies for 2025, focusing on trusted partners with proven AI powered SaaS solutions. Learn the criteria used to evaluate these leaders and what sets them apart in scalable, secure and innovative enterprise software solutions. Each company on this list brings unique strengths that align with the evolving demands of AI-driven SaaS products. Introducti...")
  • 10:0110:01, 9 December 2025 Why Most AI Features in SaaS Products Fail (And How to Get it Right) (hist | edit) [4,456 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px The promise of AI in SaaS is compelling: smarter products, personalized user experiences, automated workflows, and data-driven insights that can drive competitive advantage. Yet, the road to successful AI integration is fraught with challenges. This article explores the key challenges businesses face when integrating AI into SaaS products and provides actionable strategies for overcoming these obstacles. K...")
  • 10:0010:00, 9 December 2025 Building the Right AI Feature: Lessons from 100+ Top SaaS Companies (hist | edit) [4,190 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Over the last month, I have spoken to more than twenty SaaS founders across different stages and industries. Despite their differences, they all circled back to one critical question: “What AI feature should we build that actually moves the needle?” It’s a valid fear. In today’s AI gold rush, wasting six months chasing a flashy feature, only to find it’s irrelevant to users, can burn precious runway. The problem isn’t a lack of ideas. It’s the noise: e...")
  • 09:5809:58, 9 December 2025 The B2B SaaS PM playbook I wish I had on day 1 (hist | edit) [6,992 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "No one really prepares you for B2B product management — there is no handbook for stepping into a live product with paying customers, multiple ongoing implementations with a flood of feature requests, bunch of stakeholders and a roadmap that seems both stuck and evolving at the same time. I have been there trying to look confident and at the same time quietly Googling acronyms in meetings. These are a few things that I wish someone had told me before I started managing...")
  • 09:5709:57, 9 December 2025 Build With Purpose: Stop Building SaaS Products No One Needs (hist | edit) [1,658 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "When you’re launching a SaaS startup, the temptation is real: build fast, launch fast, iterate later. But what if I told you that this “build-first” mentality is often the exact reason startups fail? Here’s the truth: launching a SaaS product without solving a real, validated user problem is like shooting arrows in the dark. You might hit something — but probably not your target. The most successful SaaS startups begin with deep user understanding. They liste...")
  • 09:5609:56, 9 December 2025 SaaS Founders: UX Should Always Come Before UI in SaaS Products (hist | edit) [4,128 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Imagine this: You land on a beautifully designed app — animations are smooth, colors pop, icons look like they belong in a design museum. But within minutes, you’re lost. The buttons don’t do what you expect, the navigation feels off, and the whole experience leaves you frustrated. You leave. Maybe you uninstall. Maybe you never come back. This is what happens when startups and SaaS products prioritize visual design over usability. And it’s more common than you...")
  • 09:5509:55, 9 December 2025 Designing SaaS Product for Humans? Stop Confusing Your Users: The Real Reason Users Stay or Leave (hist | edit) [4,248 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "In the race to scale fast and ship features, many SaaS founders overlook one key ingredient that makes or breaks product adoption: usability. Sure, your software might solve a real pain point. You might have the smartest features and slickest dashboards. But if your users feel lost during onboarding, struggle to complete basic tasks, or second-guess every click — they won’t stick around. Great SaaS Doesn’t Just Work — It Feels Right Think about the apps you lov...")
  • 09:5409:54, 9 December 2025 SaaS Founders: Stop Building Features That Don’t Matter (hist | edit) [3,299 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "In the fast-paced world of SaaS and startups, it’s easy to fall into the “more features = more value” trap. After all, who doesn’t love a shiny new functionality to show off in pitch decks or marketing campaigns? But here’s the problem: if those features don’t solve real user problems, they lose value fast. In fact, they can even hurt your product. More complexity means more maintenance, more potential bugs, and more confusion for users. Why Features Fail W...")
  • 09:5309:53, 9 December 2025 Why Being a SaaS Product Is a Game-Changer (hist | edit) [2,729 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px 🟢 The Real Question Have you noticed that nearly every new product today calls itself “SaaS”? Whether it’s a tool for designers, a finance tracker, or even a note-taking app being a SaaS product has become the default. As someone who works in product design and cares deeply about how people interact with digital tools, I started wondering why is everyone trying to be SaaS? And more importantly… does it actually m...")
  • 09:5009:50, 9 December 2025 From Features to Value: How Products Win Over Enterprise Users (hist | edit) [5,877 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Every product promises “value.” But not every user feels it. For most people, value isn’t defined by what a product can do; it’s defined by what it does for them. And for enterprise users, that definition goes even deeper. It’s not just about convenience or usability; it’s about ownership, consistency, and integration. How well your product fits into their ecosystem, amplifies their brand, and supports their goals. 650px...")
  • 09:4709:47, 9 December 2025 Discover the Top 10 Open Source SaaS Products Revolutionizing Our Workflows Today (hist | edit) [13,237 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Introduction In today’s rapidly evolving work environment, open-source Software as a Service (SaaS) products are playing a crucial role in transforming the way teams collaborate and innovate. Unlike traditional SaaS solutions, open-source tools offer unparalleled flexibility and adaptability, allowing organizations of all sizes to customize and enhance their workflows according to their specific needs. The essen...")
  • 09:4509:45, 9 December 2025 2 Important Lessons on revamping a struggling SaaS Product (hist | edit) [6,421 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "A couple of years ago [September 2019 to be precise], I accepted an offer to lead product advisory for one of the most challenging SaaS verticals — Workplace Productivity and Collaboration. In these 2 years, I watched our stories go from “huge losses” the organization had incurred in 3 years of competing with giants, to press articles about us coming full circle to profitability. You can imagine how great that made me feel. Given the uncertainty of the pandemic i...")
  • 09:4409:44, 9 December 2025 This is how I plan my SaaS or mobile apps for my clients (hist | edit) [4,926 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Image by: https://unsplash.com/@kellysikkema Technology is something that changes every day, one day your APIs and backend work, and the next day there might be issues in them that might form any updates or vulnerabilities to the package you are using. Also sometimes we don’t know what features we should be adding for MVP and where to stop, and if we don’t have a tight deadline we often miss out on things and stuck in...")
  • 09:4209:42, 9 December 2025 10 Proven Lessons for Indie Hackers to Build and Grow a Profitable SaaS (hist | edit) [4,015 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Becoming an indie hacker is an exciting but risky journey. You don’t have a big team or VC funding behind you. What you do have is speed, creativity, and the freedom to build something meaningful on your own terms. The question is: how do you maximize your chances of turning your idea into a profitable SaaS product? Here are 10 proven lessons that can help indie hackers go from idea to revenue, while keeping con...")
  • 09:4009:40, 9 December 2025 The Bowtie: A Game-Changer for SaaS Recurring Revenue Businesses (hist | edit) [9,814 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px If you’re navigating the world of recurring revenue — whether it’s SaaS, subscriptions, or usage-based models — you’ve probably noticed that the classic sales funnel doesn’t tell the whole story anymore. It’s built for getting customers in the door — but what about everything that happens after? In today’s landscape, the real growth kicks in post-sale: retaining customers, helping them succeed, an...")
  • 09:3509:35, 9 December 2025 SaaS Customer Acquisition Strategy: Proven Methods & CAC Benchmarks (hist | edit) [6,110 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Discover proven SaaS customer acquisition strategies, CAC benchmarks, and how leading companies attract customers to grow their SaaS businesses effectively. When crafting a SaaS customer acquisition strategy, relying on guesswork isn’t enough. The most successful SaaS companies analyze comprehensive industry data to guide their marketing and sales efforts. This article presents insights from 46 SaaS companies tra...")
  • 09:3109:31, 9 December 2025 SaaS User Retention: Psychology Behind Habit-Forming Products (2025 Guide) (hist | edit) [12,380 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Learn the psychology behind habit-forming SaaS products. Reduce churn by 40% using behavioral triggers, variable rewards, and user investment strategies proven by top companies. Why 90% of SaaS Users Abandon Products After Free Trials Every SaaS founder faces the same nightmare: users sign up, try your product, then vanish after the trial period. Despite competitive features and fair pricing, SaaS churn rates average 5–7% monthly across the industry. The problem isn...")
  • 09:2609:26, 9 December 2025 SaaS Growth Strategies: Dropbox’s 4000% Rise in 15 Months (hist | edit) [10,511 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Learn how Dropbox scaled from 100K to 4M users in 15 months using referral marketing, viral loops, and proven SaaS growth strategies that actually work. SaaS growth strategies that actually work are rare. Most companies struggle to scale beyond their initial user base, but Dropbox cracked the code with one ingenious approach that transformed them into a $10 billion company. They exploded from 100,000 to 4 million users in just 15 months using strategic referral programs...")
  • 08:4808:48, 9 December 2025 LTV CAC Ratio 2025: SaaS Growth & Benchmarks (hist | edit) [6,476 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Discover 2025 LTV CAC ratio benchmarks for SaaS companies. Get real-world insights on why 3:1 isn’t always optimal and learn industry-specific customer acquisition strategies. 650px So I was in this board meeting last month, right? Our numbers looked great on paper — 7:1 LTV CAC ratio, solid margins, everyone feeling pretty good about themselves. Then our investor drops this bomb: “Your biggest competitor just raised $50M and they...")
  • 08:4608:46, 9 December 2025 SaaS Founders: Fix How You Validate Product Ideas (hist | edit) [1,203 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Not a founder here — I come from the marketing side. But after working with enough early-stage SaaS teams, I’ve seen the same trap: they think they’re validating, but really, they’re just getting polite lies. You know the kind: Oh, that’s cool! Yeah, I’d use that. Sounds promising — keep me posted! Then… silence. No signups. No usage. Just a bunch of good vibes and a false sense of progress. That’s why The Mom Test by Rob Fitzpatrick hit home for me...")
  • 08:4108:41, 9 December 2025 Why Most SaaS Comp Plans Kill Growth — and How to Fix Yours (hist | edit) [13,192 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Here’s the uncomfortable truth: your sales comp plan might be the reason your customers keep churning. I’ve seen this play out dozens of times, and there’s a way to fix it. Radha called me on a Thursday afternoon, and I could hear the frustration in her voice. “I don’t get it,” she said. “We’ve got product-market fit. Our demo-to-trial conversion is solid. But our churn numbers are terrible, and my sales team seems to care more about closing than actual...")
  • 08:3708:37, 9 December 2025 Product-Led Growth: A SaaS Strategy That Works (hist | edit) [9,342 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Discover how Product-Led Growth helps SaaS scale faster, cut CAC, and grow sustainably. A full summary of Wes Bush’s proven PLG strategy. What SaaS Makers Think They Know About Growth (But Probably Don’t) Most SaaS founders believe they need an army of salespeople to grow their business. They gate everything behind demo requests, hire expensive sales teams, and wonder why their customer acquisition costs keep climbing. Sound familiar? Wes Bush’s “Product-Led Gr...")
  • 08:3208:32, 9 December 2025 SaaS Churn Prevention Tactics for 2025 (hist | edit) [9,979 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Why SaaS Customers Churn in 2025 and How to Stop It 650px Discover the two biggest causes of SaaS customer churn in 2025 — failed onboarding and loss of the champion — and learn proven strategies to improve retention. Customer churn is a critical challenge for SaaS businesses. Even a few percent lost each month can snowball into massive revenue declines. In 2025, two root causes stand out: poor onboarding and los...")
  • 08:2808:28, 9 December 2025 How I Learned That Pricing Strategy Can Make or Break Your SaaS (hist | edit) [7,835 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "What Slack taught me about building pricing that actually scales (and why most founders get it wrong) 500px I’ve been obsessing over SaaS pricing for the past five years, and I keep coming back to one story that changed how I think about the whole game. Back in 2013, when Slack was just getting started, they had this massive problem. How do you price something when your customers are so wildly different? I mean, think about it...")
  • 08:0808:08, 9 December 2025 Scale Your SaaS with Lean Analytics (hist | edit) [11,390 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "See how Lean Analytics helps SaaS startups grow smarter with the right data at every stage. 500px Imagine you’re the founder of an early-stage SaaS startup. You’ve built a cool product and even gotten a few hundred signups, but now growth has stalled. Marketing spend is rising and you feel lost in a sea of data — customer surveys, usage stats, revenue numbers — but don’t know which figures to focus on. This is a classic...")
  • 08:0508:05, 9 December 2025 SaaS Growth Frameworks: A Founder’s Guide to Scaling Success (hist | edit) [25,714 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Discover the SaaS growth frameworks that help startups scale quickly and sustainably. Learn about funnels vs loops, prioritization models (AAARRR, RICE, Bullseye, Four Fits, North Star), and real-world SaaS scenarios to put these strategies into action. 500px Growing a SaaS business isn’t magic — it’s a science guided by proven frameworks. As a founder, using structured growth models can turn guesswork into a repeatable process...")
  • 08:0008:00, 9 December 2025 Bootstrapping a $34K MRR SaaS: Sam’s TypeShare Story (hist | edit) [3,113 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "How Sam Shore turned 11 failed startups into TypeShare — a $34K MRR SaaS with $1M revenue, built without funding, ads, or Product Hunt. If you are building a SaaS product, then you must know how Sam Shore turned 11 failures into TypeShare — a platform now doing $34K MRR and $1 M in revenue without VC, Product Hunt hype, or paid ads. How Sam Shore Bootstrapped TypeShare to $34K MRR & $1 M in Revenue — After 11 Failed Startups Sam spent much of 2021 in “build an...")
  • 07:5807:58, 9 December 2025 Why Your SaaS Users Make Irrational Decisions (And How to Fix It) (hist | edit) [11,131 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Discover 4 behavioral economics triggers behind SaaS user choices. Learn proven fixes to boost conversions and lower churn today. 500px Understanding the psychological triggers that drive user behavior in subscription software A behavioral economics perspective on SaaS growth, pricing, and user retention I’ll be honest — I used to think my SaaS users were just… weird. They’d sit through perfect demos...")
  • 07:5607:56, 9 December 2025 Lessons from Scaling SaaS to $2M ARR (hist | edit) [4,801 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Behind the scenes of growing a SaaS from early traction to $2M ARR — what actually worked, what failed, and what we’d never do again. 650px How SaaS Companies Scale from $100K to $2M ARR Without Dying The unglamorous truth about what scaling actually looks like — lessons from the SaaS trenches. TL;DR: The 8 Scaling Lessons That Actually Matter Most SaaS companies don’t fail because the product is bad. They die...")
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