Hey everyone, I'm Benoit. I run a digital marketing agency in Quebec (Ursa Marketing) managing 200+ ad accounts across Google and Meta with a team of 20.
If you've ever run an agency, you know the tension. Every client expects their account to get the white-glove treatment. And they should. But 20 people across 200+ accounts means your team is spending most of their week pulling numbers, checking search term reports, and monitoring for the slow creep of ad fatigue, not building strategy or testing creative. The stuff they actually got into marketing to do.
I've spent over a decade designing engagement systems for the mobile game and online casino industries. The irony of being good at getting other people's attention while being deeply uncomfortable asking for my own is not lost on me.
I started infolib directly out of university with my business partner to solve a problem I consistently ran into while trading stocks, none of it is on the same page, there's ads everywhere, signups lead to nowhere, and everything important seems to be delayed or behind a paywall. The site aims to directly solve all of these issues, by providing an ad free, signup free, free, centralized and customizable data dashboard. Personally, I think we've done a pretty good job at achieving the product vision, but we are STRUGGLING to get our name out there. The site isn't free to run, and if we want to maintain our philosophy on it we are going to have to make money somehow, which we have an idea for :) but it requires us to have a lot more users than we currently do, and since we are pitching to a saturated market we haven't had much success on that front. I'm hoping to connect with, and receive feedback from, some people who have marketing experience and can offer some guidance for how we can take our site from our current 4.3k users a month to the 20ks 30ks and so on while operating on a limited budget.
I'm Engin, a software developer with 13 years of experience from Germany. Today I'm launching FoundersDeck an EU-hosted monitoring and status page toolkit built specifically for SaaS founders.
The problem I solved for myself: When I needed monitoring for my own projects, every tool I found was US-hosted. EU alternatives exist, but each one is a separate tool, separate account, separate invoice. Quickly 80 +/month.
I'm Lee, a non-technical founder who kept running into the same wall: I'd have a solid startup idea, spend weeks building it on Bubble or prompting Lovable, and eventually realize I'd built the wrong thing or hit a ceiling I couldn't get past.
WorthyCoder is what I wish existed when I started. It's an AI co-founder built specifically for non-technical founders who want to:
Validate their idea before writing a single line of code (or paying a developer)
I m a developer and founder based in the UK, and I spend most of my time building products and experimenting with new ideas. I enjoy working on tools that make developer workflows simpler, especially around infrastructure and automation. Alongside building, I work at Business Wales, which is a Welsh Government initiative helping new and established businesses to grow and succeed in Wales. Business is my passion!
Hey everyone! I'm Mohammed, and I built CryptoeSIM (cryptoesim.io) a travel eSIM store where you can pay with Bitcoin, Ethereum, and 300+ other cryptocurrencies.
The idea came from a pretty simple frustration: I travel a lot, and I was tired of the whole "land in a new country, find a SIM kiosk, hand over my passport, wait 20 minutes" routine. eSIMs solved the convenience problem, but every provider still wanted a credit card and an account with my personal info.
I ve always struggled with traditional planners. They felt like a chore, and when I missed a deadline, the only "consequence" was a mounting sense of guilt. I wanted to turn my weekly to-do list into something that felt more like a quest.
I built Shiba Scheduler, a gamified weekly planner where you look after a virtual Shiba Inu companion.
I m Jos phine. About six months ago, I left my job at an AI research lab to focus on building full time. Since then I ve explored a few directions and learned pretty quickly what I enjoy and what I don t.
Lately I ve been focused on creative, consumer projects. I recently built a personalised comic product that turns people s stories into printed comics, and saw strong uptake around Christmas.