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🚀 How Are AI Agents Affecting Product Discovery and Growth on Product Hunt?
AI agents are everywhere right now.
They help with launch copy, visuals, outreach, follow-ups basically most of what used to take days can now be done in hours.
But I keep thinking about something. Are AI agents actually improving product discovery on Product Hunt or are they just making launches look more polished?
Yes, AI speeds things up. You can test messaging faster, create better assets, prepare more efficiently.
âš¡ 5 New Problems to Build a Startup | ProblemHunt
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Global problem: Dating apps fail for complex lives (illness, relocation, unfulfilled youth). A platform is needed for matching based on life path compatibility.
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Daily routine: after every client meeting, I need to write a structured report for colleagues. Existing corporate tools (Microsoft 365) are inefficient and slow for this.
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A startup founder loses focus and productivity juggling 5-7 tools for a single project. Existing all-in-one platforms don't provide the feel of a unified workspace.
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An African entrepreneur cannot accept international payments on Shopify. PayPal blocks, Stripe is unavailable. There is no payment gateway that does not discriminate based on geography.
Micro-influencer cannot monetize a loyal audience: there is no safe and effective platform for deals with small brands and those willing to work with small influencers in India.
What do we need to prepare before launching on Product Hunt?
Our team is planning to launch a new version of our product on Product Hunt next week, after a period of optimization and improvements. As we get closer to launch day, I realize there s a lot to prepare, and I m curious about how other teams usually approach this process.
So far, here s what we ve been focusing on:
Most importantly, making sure the product works well and delivers real value
Continuous testing to ensure performance and stability
Designing clean and clear product screenshots
Preparing a summary of what s been updated, fixed, or optimized
Writing launch content (tagline, description, first comment, etc.)
Maintaining good health and a stable mindset for the launch
Expanding our network and connecting with other makers
Y Combinator offers 7 startups ideas they want to fund (Spring 2026)
As usual, Y Combinator came up with segments that are worth investing:
1. Cursor for Product Managers
2. AI-Native Hedge Funds
3. AI-Native Agencies
4. Stablecoin Financial Services
5. AI for Government
6. Modern Metal Mills
7. AI Guidance for Physical Work 8. Large Spatial Models 9. Infra for Government Fraud Hunters 10. Make LLMs Easy to TrainCan you explain your product in less than 20 words? I'll start 👇
CoreSight: AI consulting team that builds financial models, presentations, and benchmarks like McKinsey would, minus the 500K price tag.
I'd love to hear your feedback on CoreSight and also see your product with its super short description.
âš¡ 5 New Problems to Build a Startup | ProblemHunt
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A 3-year search for a simple tool to track both personal and business finances in one place. Nothing fits.
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Website owners constantly need minor edits in the admin panel. They are forced to pay specialists for 5-minute tasks. We need an AI agent that does this on command in the browser.
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An indie hacker spends 20-30 hours manually cold launching each new product in directories, Reddit, and blogs. There is no tool that fully automates this and proves its effectiveness.
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A freelancer often loses in proposal competitions due to the inability to quickly create personalized and visual website concepts for each job order.
A Telegram channel owner is losing their audience without understanding the reasons for unsubscriptions. There is no simple tool for automatically collecting feedback from departed subscribers.
What are your top resources for being on watch of AI?
News in the tech world gets old quickly. It's no longer relevant in 10 minutes.
What helps you quickly navigate the world of AI?
I caught the latest news about AI from:
What I Learned Relaunching My App on Product Hunt After 3 Years
First of all, I want to thank you for voting for us in yesterday's launch - you still can, the week is not over. HERE
Second thing, I summarised some things that I realised, reflected on, and maybe should have known sooner:
Genuinely blown away by the support today
Just wanted to say a quick thank you to everyone who checked out Cue today.
I launched this morning not expecting much. It's a tool I built over the holidays that turned from a side project into the main project I'm working on. Seeing it hit #3 (so far) is honestly surreal.
What do successful Product Hunt launches have in common?
Over the past few days, I ve been trying to understand what helped the most successful launches stand out.
In general, here s what I noticed they tend to share:
Their Product Hunt page had at least 500 followers.
The product was in overall good condition (I mean, already had some level of reputation, really good marketing).
Many were hunted by well-established, well-known hunters on the platform.
Every comment received a response.
The visuals were strong there was almost always a video or demo featured at the beginning of the carousel.
We can do so much more in the Product Hunt community
I joined Product Hunt about 2 months ago, and ever since receiving my first compliments and comments on our recent product launch, I ve truly felt how nice and supportive people here are. Everyone seems open to discussion, willing to help, and genuinely curious about what others are building.
At first, I thought it would be really hard for a newcomer like me to join such a big community. But it turned out to be much less strict than I expected - actually, it feels like a place with so much potential for us to grow together.
Every day on Product Hunt, I feel like I m learning or discovering something new. It s not just about upvotes. It s about ideas, feedback, and seeing how others think and build.
Round Two on Product Hunt: What to Do (and Not Do) for a Successful Launch
We re getting ready for our second Product Hunt launch on Jan 31, and a post by @busmark_w_nika got me thinking.
What to do (that we didn't do the first time):
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Plan your launch. What does it mean?
Write down everything you need to do before you launch.
Cleaning your copy
Your product images
Your product video (demo under 60 seconds if you can)
For our first launch, we didn't do anything. Even though we got 2nd Product of the Day, I would not recommend others to leave it to their luck. Plan and maximize your chances of success.
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Keep it simple, stupid.
Don't overcomplicate your page with lots of marketing language.
Simplicity, clean product screenshots, and clear language.
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I think this is the single most important thing to take into account when launching, and why we probably did so well on our first launch.
Ask yourself: Does the tagline make sense? Will others understand what the product does and what it is in under 10 seconds?
For us at @Pretty Prompt: Grammarly for prompting. (Grammarly = it is an extension.) Improve prompts in one click. (super clear what it does).
You can straight away visualise how you might use the product and what it will do for you.
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Focus on your strengths.
Don't give everything you got in one go.
Earn the right for people to read and scroll down. Read and scroll down.
Save some stuff for your pinned post.
People have a short attention span.
Hook people on your most important feature, showcase it front and centre, don't give me everything together cos I'll forget, and also I'll get lost.
For us at @Pretty Prompt: Improve your prompts in one click. Works inside ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Perplexity, Lovable, and more.
Even though you have about 10 other features on Pretty Prompt, we don't talk about them right in the beginning; we just feature that one "killer feature" and let users dive deeper afterwards.
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Product assets = show, don't tell.
Your images and video should be about your product.
Don't make it marketing-heavy. Make it product-heavy.
Show me what the product does, don't tell me about it.
For us: 60-second demo video actually using the tool. Screenshots of the top features (Improve - Refine - Save - History). Not fancy Figma designs, I mean screenshots of the actual product.
If you get big like Notion, Cursor, Claude, etc. you may also be able to add a more human video of you talking about the product, or new functionality, your story, etc. But for the majority, just show your product, and let the product win.
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Learn from others.
Though no two products or launches are the same, you can learn from others and pick the best things that fit your own product.
Checkout this post by @fmerian on "The Cursor Way to Launch". Great tips.
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Warm up the Audience.
Don't just rely on your followers.
Use as many channels as possible to maximise the reach and get people excited about your launch, even before you launch.
If you do this step well, the launch is just 50% of the job, and you're already a step ahead of most.
For us: I did a community post, Substack one, LinkedIn one, Slack one. We'll be recording a founder video too. I want it to be as human as possible; people buy into people.
Dos and don'ts before the Product Hunt launch
It s almost here for me. In three days, I ll be relaunching a major update for the app I have been collaborating with, and I ve set clear boundaries for myself about what I will and won t do before the launch. I guess these are some general, unwritten rules I try to follow
Definitely DON T:
Accept offers from charlatans promising votes or engagement for money
Send unsolicited messages begging for votes or support
Spam other people s posts with launch announcements
How do you perceive competition on Product Hunt on the same day?
My question is as follows, and I'll ask it right at the beginning:
Do you ask for help with upvoting from the people you're competing with on that day?
Do you think founders should talk more openly about projects that didn’t work?
We often see launch posts, milestones, and success stories.
What we don t see as much are honest breakdowns of products that quietly stalled or failed.
I feel there s a lot of learning hidden there about timing, assumptions, and trade-offs.
2026 and your goals. Let's try to set them for Q1.
Since I haven't been able to meet my work goals very well in the last few quarters, I now plan to approach them more systematically and not push myself too hard on work goals, as that ultimately led to problems that made my plan less sustainable.
So here is my structure and list:
🔥 Drop your tagline and I'll try to guess what your product is
A tagline is the first piece of content a user will see about your product on the leaderboard. It's so important that you get it right. You should be able to get a really solid idea of what your product is just by reading a handful of words.
In the spirit of forever optimising our taglines, I wanted to do a little experiment:
🔥 Drop your tagline and I'll try to guess what your product is
A tagline is the first piece of content a user will see about your product on the leaderboard. It's so important that you get it right. You should be able to get a really solid idea of what your product is just by reading a handful of words.
In the spirit of forever optimising our taglines, I wanted to do a little experiment:
Is October the best month to launch on Product Hunt?
By tradition, every first day of the month I open hunted.space and scroll back through previous years. Today, I checked October 2024 and what I saw was fascinating.
Unlike September 2024 (which was crazy strong in 2024: six products over 1000 upvotes, 6 more than 900 upvotes and more than ten over 800), October looked very different.
Only one single product passed 1000 upvotes: bolt.new (with exactly 1003) which has been performing brilliantly and organized the largest online hackathon a few months ago.
We Tanked our Product Hunt Launch on Purpose
There are a hundred posts about how to succeed on Product Hunt.
This is about how to not fail.
Our latest Product Hunt launch was a disaster. Just as we had hoped.







