u/Dineshvk18

Anyone switched from Canva/Gamma to Runable for content production?

Used Canva for years and Gamma for decks, but lately I’ve been testing Runable for campaign assets and presentations.

Biggest difference for me is speed. I can go from rough idea to usable content way faster, especially when batching multiple assets in one sitting. Curious what others here are using now.

reddit.com
u/Dineshvk18 — 5 days ago

Runable quietly became part of my weekly marketing workflow

Not even trying to hype it, but I realized I’ve been using Runable almost every day for the last month.

Usually Claude for drafting ideas, Runable for turning them into decks/carousels/one-pagers, then Buffer for scheduling. Feels like production speed matters way more than people admit in content marketing.

reddit.com
u/Dineshvk18 — 5 days ago

What are people actually using Runable for besides landing pages?

Been seeing Runable mentioned more lately and curious how people are actually using it in production.

I mostly use it for decks and LinkedIn carousels because it saves me a stupid amount of time compared to designing manually. Curious if people here are using it for client work, internal docs, websites, or something else entirely.

reddit.com
u/Dineshvk18 — 5 days ago
▲ 3 r/SaaS

Bootstrapped SaaS founders: what marketing task eats the most time every week?

Feels like most bootstrapped SaaS founders eventually hit the same problem, there’s never enough time for both product and distribution.

For me the actual bottleneck usually isn’t strategy, it’s production and consistency. Landing pages, onboarding flows, content, emails, demos, screenshots, social posts, analytics cleanup, etc. Small things pile up fast.

Curious what consumes the most time for other SaaS founders right now, and what systems/workflows actually helped reduce the chaos without hiring a huge team.

reddit.com
u/Dineshvk18 — 6 days ago

How are small teams keeping up with content demands without burning out?

Feels like content expectations exploded over the last 2 years.

LinkedIn posts, short videos, carousels, newsletters, landing pages, email sequences, ad creatives, reporting screenshots, etc. Even small teams are expected to produce constantly now.

Curious how other people are handling it operationally without quality collapsing or teams burning out.

What actually helped you most?
Repurposing, batching, AI workflows, outsourcing, stricter calendars, better tooling, something else?

reddit.com
u/Dineshvk18 — 6 days ago

AI didn’t replace our marketing team, it removed production bottlenecks

Talk about how:

  • strategy still matters
  • messaging still matters
  • but production speed changed completely
  • landing pages, carousels, decks, reporting assets now take far less time

Very natural place for future workflow discussions.

reddit.com
u/Dineshvk18 — 6 days ago

I’ve noticed a lot of my time isn’t actually spent on creative design, it’s things like resizing, formatting, making small layout changes, and keeping everything consistent across files.

It’s important work, but it doesn’t really feel like the part you get into design for.

Curious how others handle this. Do you just accept it as part of the job or have you found ways to reduce that time?

reddit.com
u/Dineshvk18 — 13 days ago

I’ve tried a few AI tools for UX work, but most of the time they feel useful for quick ideas rather than actual product work.

In real projects with constraints, feedback, and iterations, I’m not seeing a huge impact yet.

For people actively using AI in UX, where does it actually save time in your workflow?

reddit.com
u/Dineshvk18 — 13 days ago

I’ve noticed a big chunk of my time isn’t really design thinking, it’s formatting, layouts, variations, and making things look consistent across screens.

The actual UX decisions take way less time compared to all the production work around it.

Curious how others handle this. Do you separate the two somehow or is this just part of the job?

reddit.com
u/Dineshvk18 — 13 days ago