Todayβs leaderboard is stacked
gm friends
ICYMI, today is Alpha Day β a one-day event for makers launching to the world for the very first time. They get a special leaderboard, a few extra points, and a decent excuse to shamelessly ask for your support.
Go show some new launches a little love. In the meantime, here are a few from today that stood out.
Pitch your product, win $1M+

Makers β tomorrow is your last chance to apply for The Pitch by Deel Berlin! Rolling deadlines are still open for Tel Aviv, London, New York, Singapore, and Dubai.
What's at stake: up to 100 regional winners each receive $50K in SAFE funding, and up to 10 grand finale winners take home $1M+. Apply now for a shot at game-changing funding, global exposure, and a dedicated Product Hunt x The Pitch by Deel leaderboard.
Regional event dates (applications close 10 days before each event):Β | Berlin β April 20 | Tel Aviv β April 23 | London β April 28 | New York β May 5 | Singapore β May 12 | Dubai β May 14
Google reviews just wrote your homepage

Brila builds one-page websites from Google Maps reviews. Paste in a business, and it pulls out the patterns behind why people actually pick that place, then turns that into copy, structure, and imagery for a site that sounds like real customers instead of a guy typing trusted local service into ChatGPT. It is doing the content part first, which is already a better sign than half this category.
π₯ Our Take: This is funny because the raw material was sitting there the whole time. Businesses spend forever trying to describe themselves, meanwhile their customers already did it in public with way less bullshit. Brila just grabs that and skips straight past the generic founder copy.
So weβre justβ¦ talking to software now?

ElevenLabs has been the go-to for voice for a while. Now they've turned that expertise into agents that actually get things done. You set one up, it talks like a real person, listens, responds, and helps handle the task β support calls, bookings, whatever the job is. Not a demo, not a "press 1 for sales" situation. It's ready to deploy. Feels like one of those shifts where the interface quietly changes. Less typing, less clicking, more just saying what needs to happen and letting it play out.
A DAW without the DAW

Riffle is a browser-based music playground for making songs with other people without getting buried in pro-audio nonsense. You can build ideas with samples, instruments, and audio, bring friends into the same space, and use its AI sous-chef for help with things like critique, guidance, and shaping a track without handing the whole job over.
π₯ Our Take: The nice part here is that it is not trying to replace making music with prompting. It is trying to keep you in that rare little window where an idea still feels alive and you have not yet opened a giant piece of software that makes you feel stupid. Big difference.
Your org chart learned how to talk

Offsite puts humans and AI agents on the same team instead of scattering them across tabs, terminals, and whatever other mess you have open. You drop everyone into a live org chart, connect them, and watch the work move between people and agents in real time. It plugs into tools like Claude Code, OpenClaw, and other MCP-compatible agents, with approvals in the loop so nobody quietly goes rogue.
π₯ Our Take: A lot of agent stuff still feels like babysitting a very eager intern in another tab. Offsite is trying to make that feel less lonely and more legible. The interesting bit is not the agents. It is getting to see the work happen as a system instead of a pile of disconnected prompts.
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Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterdayβs top ten launches. Thatβs it.
