Lovely thread. Great recommendations overall. My 2 cents:
Good design is a make-or-break factor for SaaS products. You need to delight your users — if you don't then someone else will, and they will win against you eventually.
@soumya_chaturvedi@imtiyaz922@hubert_chan1 Yeah great stuff! Users are literally who we're building for at the end of the day and it is critical that we get feedback. There's a fine line to draw though - ask too many questions and you'll end up building a faster horse and not a car.
The most crucial aspect of developing a SaaS product is creating a user-friendly, intuitive, and reliable experience for the customer. Developing a product that is easy to use and provides a positive user experience is essential to the success of any SaaS product.
Been in Micro SaaS space with https://microsaasidea.com
Below are three most important aspects
- Enjoying what you are doing
- Not losing the momentum
- Maintain consistency
- Be ready to experiment and adapt
Problem validation
It took me 2 pivots and 10 months of building while building my first saas tool to have a customer.
With eventhq, time to mvp launch is 8 weeks and we have 6 enterprise companies ready to pay and use.
What was different this time around was, we narrowed our problem and spent 4 months talking to our potential companies asking what they would like to solve and how much they would be willing to pay
To put it in simple terms - 1. understand your ACVs and how many customers it would take to hit every revenue mark 2. What do you have planned to increase ACVs over time
Just because it works in the first instance doesn't mean it will work in all.
Analyse the attributes of the first successful customer and try to find new clients that share the same essential attributes. eg. is the niche of national scope
👋🏾 Hi @soumya_chaturvedi, thanks for your comment!
Yes, it certainly can come second. There is no silver bullet approach, as I'm sure you know.
However, I would like to advocate for search volume & search trends as key tools for planning and pre-promoting, not just for go-to-market motions. For example, comparing Google Search Trends of "Figma" versus "Invision", gives me a clear signal on which API integration that I may want to prioritize. And volume in SEM Rush helps me understand..."is this problem really large enough and worth solving?"
Evoke