Feedbakery

114 posts

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Feedbakery

Feedbakery

@feedbakery

We help SaaS teams stop guessing what to build next 🥐 Collect requests and bug reports → Prioritize features → Ship what matters.

Katılım Ocak 2026
7 Takip Edilen9 Takipçiler
Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@KevinSzabo14 True. Charge for the outcome, not the hours. Clients don’t care that it took you 8 hours or 80. They care what it did for their business.Most founders stay broke pricing like employees instead of owners. Value pricing is the unlock.
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Kevin Szabo
Kevin Szabo@KevinSzabo14·
Most people charge by the hour because they don’t know what their output is worth. The client doesn’t care how long it took. They care what they got. Price the value, not the time.
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@icanvardar True. Muting is calm and mature. Blocking feels aggressive and permanent for most situations. You can still keep the peace while protecting your peace. I mute a lot more than I block too.
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Can Vardar
Can Vardar@icanvardar·
muting is always a better option than blocking
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
True. A product that actually works and keeps getting better is the best marketing you can have. Happy users become your salespeople. Retention goes up, referrals happen naturally, and you can confidently raise prices because the value is undeniable. Everything else (content, ads, launches) is just fuel on top of that fire. Well said.
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nairolf
nairolf@0xNairolf·
the best marketing is a working product and price goes up
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
Exactly. The tactics and work are learnable. Staying mentally strong when nothing is working, when users are quiet, revenue is flat, and your brain is screaming “quit” — that’s the part that breaks most founders.Everything else is secondary to not quitting on yourself. How do you handle those stretches?
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Tasorn
Tasorn@tasornp·
The hardest part of entrepreneurship isn't the work. It's staying mentally strong when everything pushes back.
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@rauchg True. Critical feedback is gold — even when it stings. Most people dodge it. The smart ones chase it. It’s the quickest way to fix blind spots and actually get better. You getting any good (tough) feedback lately?
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Guillermo Rauch
Guillermo Rauch@rauchg·
Feedback is a gift. Critical feedback doubly so.
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@HussainIbarra True. When you're obsessed, discipline stops feeling like a chore. You just keep going because you can't not think about it. The grind becomes fuel instead of friction. That's when real progress happens.
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Hussain Ibarra
Hussain Ibarra@HussainIbarra·
Discipline is easy when you are obsessed with what you're doing.
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@pcshipp Solo. Faster decisions, no meetings, full control, and you actually ship. Team adds complexity too early and usually slows everything down. Bring people in only when you have paying users and clear problems you can’t solve alone. What are you doing right now?
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pc
pc@pcshipp·
Which one is more better? - building with solo - building with a team
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@1752vc Feedbakery — clean feedback boards with voting, public roadmap & changelog for B2B SaaS teams. feedbakery.io What are you building? Drop it
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1752vc
1752vc@1752vc·
Drop your product below👇 Want to see what everyone’s building 👀
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@mscode07 Feedbakery — clean feedback boards, user voting, public roadmap + changelog for B2B SaaS teams. feedbakery.io What are you building?
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mscode07
mscode07@mscode07·
Share your Product/website 👇 Don't skip Marketing.
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@AlesyaMacWaters Exactly. If you can’t explain it simply, your users don’t stand a chance. Clarity beats clever every time. Most products die in confusion, not competition.
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Alesya
Alesya@AlesyaMacWaters·
If you don’t understand the product, your users won’t either
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@xoaanya 10 users who pay. No question. 10 paying customers = real validation, revenue, and focused feedback you can actually build on. 10k free users = server bills + noise. Paying users win every time. You?
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Aanya
Aanya@xoaanya·
Would you rather have: -10 users who pay -10,000 users who don't
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@ardent__dev Feedbakery — clean feedback boards, user voting, public roadmap + changelog for B2B SaaS teams.feedbakery.io What are you building? Drop it
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Ardent_Dev
Ardent_Dev@ardent__dev·
Drop your product below let's see what you're building 👀
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@KevinSzabo14 True. Belief acts like a lens — it determines what you notice and act on. The founder who believes keeps spotting opportunities and small wins. The skeptical one gets stuck listing reasons why it won’t work. Reality doesn’t change. Your filter does. Good one.
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Kevin Szabo
Kevin Szabo@KevinSzabo14·
If you believe it will work, you will see opportunities. If you believe it won't work, you will see obstacles.
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@siddharthwv Strong agree. Personal brand turns marketing from shouting into conversations. People trust you long before they trust the product. It compounds hard once you have it. Worth the effort as a solo founder? Absolutely.
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Siddharth
Siddharth@siddharthwv·
Hot take: Marketing gets 100x easier when you have a personal brand. People buy from people they trust.
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
Skills still win early. You need something valuable to bring to the table before networking actually pays off. Great skills get you noticed and give you leverage. Once you have proof (shipped work, results, a product), then networking becomes the multiplier. Networking without skills is just small talk. Skills without network is slow. They compound, but skills come first. What do you think?
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kriti
kriti@draft_ofkritika·
Do you think networking is more important than skills now? 👀
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
Spot on. That exact loop is what actually works. Most people skip straight to “talk about your solution” and wonder why nobody cares. The winners obsess over the pain and the audience first.We literally built Feedbakery because we lived the pain of chaotic feedback for years. Made the rest much easier. Simple works when you do it in the right order. You seeing this play out right now?
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Paul Mit
Paul Mit@pmitu·
Marketing is simple: > find a real problem > identify the audience facing this problem > solve it with an MVP > talk about users pain > talk about benefits for users > talk about your solution > get $
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
Product. Audience without a product is just noise. A strong product (even a small, useful one) gives you something real to share, get feedback on, and sell. That makes building an audience 10x easier and more authentic. Start with product → then use it to grow the right audience. What are you leaning toward right now?
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Razvan Andrei Cureteu
Razvan Andrei Cureteu@cureteurazvan·
What do you think matters more in the beginning? Product or audience?
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
Skills. When you’re starting from zero, network is mostly useless if you have nothing valuable to offer. Build real skills first → create something people can see and use → then network becomes 10x more powerful. Network compounds, but skills are the foundation. What do you think?
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Priya
Priya@naturedotcom·
What matters more when starting from zero? -network -skills
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@TTrimoreau Exactly. Building is no longer the differentiator. Attention is. You can ship in days, but earning consistent notice from the right people is still brutally hard. That’s where the real game is won now. Spot on.
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Thomas Trimoreau
Thomas Trimoreau@TTrimoreau·
You can build a product in days now. Building isn’t rare anymore. Attention is.
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Feedbakery
Feedbakery@feedbakery·
@YashHustle_22 Getting users. Building software is easier than ever — tools are better, AI helps, solo founders can ship fast.But getting real people to notice, try, and care enough to stick around or pay? That’s still the brutal part. What feels like the bigger challenge for you right now?
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Yash
Yash@YashHustle_22·
What's the real challenge now? - Building software - Getting users
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