u/Beautiful_soul2212

My college project randomly started getting traffic and now I’m more invested in GA than my actual coursework.

My college project randomly started getting traffic and now I’m more invested in GA than my actual coursework.

Submitted this as part of a kickstarter-style project last semester via Tetr college. Built almost the entire thing using Claude Code out of curiosity more than anything. Opened analytics today, and the traffic had randomly spiked 😭

It’s genuinely weird seeing strangers use something that was literally just “a project idea” a few days ago.

Still have no clue where the traffic came from though, i think its SEO.

Student builder brain is cooked because this graph moving up somehow became the highlight of my week 💀

u/Beautiful_soul2212 — 2 days ago
▲ 6 r/ghana

I’m currently in Ghana with my cohort from Tetr College of Business, and my birthday is coming up soon. Since I’m not from here, I don’t want to just do the usual dinner + cake thing, feels like a waste when I’m literally in a new country.

So I’m looking for ideas that feel local / memorable, not touristy-for-the-sake-of-it.

Open to anything…

If you’ve been to Ghana (or live here), what would you do if it was your birthday here?

reddit.com
u/Beautiful_soul2212 — 9 days ago

Picked up Psycho-Cybernetics recently and honestly didn’t expect much. But one idea stuck with me: Your brain just follows the self-image you feed it.

As a student founder, it made me rethink:

1/ why I hesitate on certain decisions

2/ why I sometimes default to playing small

3/ and how much of that is just… conditioning

I’ve read a bunch of “business” books, but this felt more foundational than tactical.

Curious, what’s a book that actually changed how you think?

reddit.com
u/Beautiful_soul2212 — 10 days ago

India’s oral care market is basically owned by giants like Colgate and Pepsodent. So I was curious how a newer brand like Perfora managed to get people to actually switch.

Perfora’s founder came to Tetr College, and he explained that they didn’t try to compete head-on.

They went after a smaller group first, people already open to trying premium / “clean” products focused a lot on design + branding (which is rare in this category) and built around habit, not just first purchase.

Basically made oral care feel less clinical and more like a lifestyle product. Still feels counterintuitive though. In a category this entrenched, do people really switch because of design + positioning? Or is this just a niche that doesn’t scale as easily as it looks?

wdyt?

reddit.com
u/Beautiful_soul2212 — 17 days ago