u/advancedgoogle

Beta testers are needed for a surveys and quizzes app
▲ 3 r/indiebiz+1 crossposts

Beta testers are needed for a surveys and quizzes app

Hello everyone!

I am a founder of Poper, and we recently released quizzes and surveys on our platform. I would really appreciate if someone can test the product and give us the valuable feedback. It's free to sign up without a credit card.

u/advancedgoogle — 1 day ago

I created a free accessibility widget for websites

Accessibility is very important for every website, not just to make it friendly for disabled people, but also if you want to prevent legal notices from certain companies, you might want to add that. As rules are getting stricter and stricter, every website has started to add these accessibility widgets.

We launched a free accessibility widget for everyone, and anyone with less than 50,000 page views a month can use this free accessibility widget. It's fully customizable. You can change the colors and layout according to your website.

Available here - https://www.poper.ai/widgets/accessibility/

https://preview.redd.it/qf0fo24kln1h1.png?width=2968&format=png&auto=webp&s=a769d5f437aaec3bc1e4610dd1a32579b622b1bd

reddit.com
u/advancedgoogle — 3 days ago
▲ 5 r/nocode+2 crossposts

My experience from building no code tool

For my whole life, I thought no-code tools should have thousands of options and settings so people could customize them to their needs.

Now my ideology has changed, and now we ship only the critical features and a few UI options. It now seems clear that users are resonating with the product, and its adoptability has increased. Earlier, I used to get the same amount of sign-ups, but no one was using the product. Now they actually create a widget in their profile and try it out by adding it to their website.

I created a library of more than 150 widgets for Poper, which are embeddable experiences on a customer's website. In these experiences, I tried to keep the UI minimal and the number of settings low. This actually led to greater adoption of my product. What are your thoughts on the available options/settings in a no-code app?

reddit.com
u/advancedgoogle — 4 days ago

How do you guys grow affiliates for your product?

I’ve been trying to grow the affiliate program for my SaaS and reached out to a lot of agencies.

Sent around 500 cold emails till now and honestly got almost nothing from it.

One guy replied and asked me to install their JS/pixel on my website before moving forward. That felt weird to me and a bit scammy.

Now I’m confused how people actually find good affiliates for SaaS products.

Do affiliates come naturally once the product grows, or is there some better way to find them?

reddit.com
u/advancedgoogle — 5 days ago

I'm having a hard time finding an affiliate marketer for my SaaS.

How do you, as someone in SaaS, find a good affiliate? Are the best products automatically picked up by the affiliates for promotion and so on? What's your strategy?

reddit.com
u/advancedgoogle — 5 days ago

I run a popup, forms, and surveys SaaS - here’s what actually converts in 2026

I’m the founder of Poper.

We build popups, embeds, widgets, and gamification tools for websites.

I spent some time analyzing popup campaign data from the last 365 days. Everyone says popups are spam and scams, I used to think the same.

But after analyzing millions of popup displays, I realized most bad experiences come from badly timed and badly designed popups, not the format itself.

Here's what I found -

The dataset was pretty big.

5.3K domains.
15.7K campaigns.
133M+ popup displays.

A few things surprised me.

Overview

The average popup CVR was around 2.1%. You can ignore the top decile CVR, I think it's biased, I did not have time to clean out the data.

But the top campaigns were insanely higher.

Biggest insight: intent matters more than aggression.

Trigger Type Conversion Rate

On-click popups converted the best at almost 9% CVR.
Way higher than on-load or scroll popups.

Basically if the user chooses to interact, conversions shoot up.

Another interesting thing:
instant popups performed badly.

Display Delay Conversion Rate

0-second delay had less than 1% CVR.

But popups shown after 11–15 seconds crossed 5.6% CVR.

Looks like users need a little time before being interrupted.

Also found that center popups still dominate volume. 56M+ displays.

Position Conversion Rate

But some smaller placements actually converted better.

Three-field forms also outperformed one-field forms by a lot.
Didn’t expect that honestly. Maybe this is the format of first name, last name, and email field.

Form field count Conversion Rate

Seems like “slightly more qualified intent” beats “lowest friction possible.”

Campaigns with images performed almost 3x better than plain text ones.

Multi-step popups also beat single-step flows.

Feature comparisons

Industry-wise, real estate and healthcare had the best conversion rates.

Industries

SaaS and ecommerce had the biggest traffic volume.

Display volume

My overall takeaway:

The best popups don’t feel like popups.

They feel like the next logical step in the user journey.

There may be some bias in the data that I gathered, but it was just one hour of work, and I used Claude Code to generate this based on the data that I already had.

reddit.com
u/advancedgoogle — 7 days ago

I run a popup, forms, and surveys SaaS - here’s what actually converts in 2026

I’m the founder of Poper.

We build popups, embeds, widgets, and gamification tools for websites.

I spent some time analyzing popup campaign data from the last 365 days. Everyone says popups are spam and scams, I used to think the same.

But after analyzing millions of popup displays, I realized most bad experiences come from badly timed and badly designed popups, not the format itself.

Here's what I found -

The dataset was pretty big.

5.3K domains.
15.7K campaigns.
133M+ popup displays.

A few things surprised me.

Overview

The average popup CVR was around 2.1%. You can ignore the top decile CVR, I think it's biased, I did not have time to clean out the data.

But the top campaigns were insanely higher.

Biggest insight: intent matters more than aggression.

Trigger Type Conversion Rate

On-click popups converted the best at almost 9% CVR.
Way higher than on-load or scroll popups.

Basically if the user chooses to interact, conversions shoot up.

Another interesting thing:
instant popups performed badly.

Display Delay Conversion Rate

0-second delay had less than 1% CVR.

But popups shown after 11–15 seconds crossed 5.6% CVR.

Looks like users need a little time before being interrupted.

Also found that center popups still dominate volume. 56M+ displays.

Position Conversion Rate

But some smaller placements actually converted better.

Three-field forms also outperformed one-field forms by a lot.
Didn’t expect that honestly. Maybe this is the format of first name, last name, and email field.

Form field count Conversion Rate

Seems like “slightly more qualified intent” beats “lowest friction possible.”

Campaigns with images performed almost 3x better than plain text ones.

Multi-step popups also beat single-step flows.

Feature comparisons

Industry-wise, real estate and healthcare had the best conversion rates.

Industries

SaaS and ecommerce had the biggest traffic volume.

Display volume

My overall takeaway:

The best popups don’t feel like popups.

They feel like the next logical step in the user journey.

There may be some bias in the data that I gathered, but it was just one hour of work, and I used Claude Code to generate this based on the data that I already had.

reddit.com
u/advancedgoogle — 7 days ago