u/Justfoody

▲ 1 r/SaaS

I am in the process of preparing an Android application for release on the Google Play Store and am currently working through the required testing phase. To proceed with , I am seeking who have Android devices and are willing to participate in app testing.

The objective is to meet Google Play’s testing requirements and identify any potential issues prior to public release. The testing involved is straightforward and focused on general usage and stability.The app is already functional, and I mainly need:

  • Testers with Android devices
  • Basic usage and feedback (no heavy testing effort required)
reddit.com
u/Justfoody — 13 days ago

Hi everyone,
I’m currently having a hard time getting my app published on the Google Play Store due to the testing requirements. I’m looking for a few volunteers who have Android phones and are willing to help test the app so I can move forward with the release.

The app is already functional, and I mainly need:

  • Testers with Android devices
  • Basic usage and feedback (no heavy testing effort required)

If you’re interested in helping out or want more details about the app, please comment or DM me. Your help would mean a lot 🙏

Thank you!

reddit.com
u/Justfoody — 13 days ago

Hi everyone,

I’ve recently launched a SaaS product, and at the moment we’re not charging users. Here is our saas. www.connectiko.io

Given the current AI‑driven market, I’m trying to figure out what the right pricing decision should be at this early stage.

A bit of context:

  • Some of our competitors offer paid plans
  • Others are free with limited/basic features
  • We’re an early‑edge startup, still validating traction
  • Our main competitors overlap with only ~20% of our target users
  • Beyond that overlap, competitors are segmented by industry/domain

My questions:

  • In today’s AI era, what pricing strategy generally makes sense for an early‑stage SaaS?
  • Is it better to stay free longer, introduce freemium, or start charging early?
  • How much should limited competitor overlap influence pricing decisions?

Would love to hear insights from founders, builders, or anyone who’s been through this phase. Thanks!

reddit.com
u/Justfoody — 14 days ago
▲ 3 r/SaaS

Hi everyone,

I’ve recently launched a SaaS product, and at the moment we’re not charging users. here is our saas www.connectiko.io

Given the current AI‑driven market, I’m trying to figure out what the right pricing decision should be at this early stage.

A bit of context:

  • Some of our competitors offer paid plans
  • Others are free with limited/basic features
  • We’re an early‑edge startup, still validating traction
  • Our main competitors overlap with only ~20% of our target users
  • Beyond that overlap, competitors are segmented by industry/domain

My questions:

  • In today’s AI era, what pricing strategy generally makes sense for an early‑stage SaaS?
  • Is it better to stay free longer, introduce freemium, or start charging early?
  • How much should limited competitor overlap influence pricing decisions?

Would love to hear insights from founders, builders, or anyone who’s been through this phase. Thanks!

reddit.com
u/Justfoody — 14 days ago
▲ 2 r/micro_saas+1 crossposts

I have a question. We have our SaaS product already launched. www.connectiko.io

In the current market there are so many things are newly coming in. So should we keep continue building it or first get more organic customers ?
At end of the day goal is to need more customers to use our product.
which should prioritize first? Since we do not have have much feedback data it is not helping to get direction that which way we should focus.

reddit.com
u/Justfoody — 15 days ago

P.S I am only one who were all different hat. I have a question for my micro SaaS https://www.connectiko.io . So far I have registered on google. I am in the process of adding blogs to the site like compare and cases. Also, have added keywords specific pages. Claude suggested that I should start listing on G2, capterra, product hunt,etc. start with free. As per Claude. Also, I read that back links play important role. Could I ask here expert advice for scaling and get the organic traffic?

reddit.com
u/Justfoody — 17 days ago