
ConceptSeek
Search by concept, not keyword. Across every source.
30 followers
Search by concept, not keyword. Across every source.
30 followers
ConceptSeek finds the exact moments that matter across your videos, podcasts, lectures, and documents. Skip keyword matching. Search by concept, idea, or theme across your entire research library at once. Save your searches, see how sources connect with Threads, watch source material right inside the tool. Spend less time hunting through sources and more time using them.











Hi, I am Eduard, the founder of ConceptSeek.
I built this while working on my master's thesis in philosophy of art.
I was constantly dealing with videos, interviews, and long articles that contained valuable ideas, but it was incredibly slow to find where specific concepts were actually discussed across all that content.
When I tried using typical AI tools, I kept getting generalized answers, often incorrect, and disconnected from the actual sources I cared about.
Even when I tried feeding them the content manually, the results were not precise enough to be useful.
So I built ConceptSeek.
ConceptSeek does the opposite:
it helps you find and explore ideas inside real sources.
You can jump to exact moments in videos, search across multiple sources, and compare how different people explain the same concept.
I would really love your feedback:
• What would you use this for?
• What feels confusing or missing?
Happy to answer anything here!
I actually love this idea.. do you plan on adding voice features also? Would love to pull this website up on my phone and just talk to it while on the move!
@jason_kim18 That’s a really nice idea, I like that a lot.
Voice or audio features would fit really well with what I'm trying to do. It would require a few tweaks here and there, but it’s definitely manageable.
Thank you for the suggestion, I’ll definitely take it into consideration.
This sounds helpful. Although I'd describe in more detail the use cases for some specific user group, and this way, as a potential user, I'd know exactly what I'm going to get as a result. For example, target only medical students, or similar. I've also seen an overview of Eden by Dan Koe recently. The interface is completely different, and the use cases intersect just partially, but I'd recommend you look at it more closely to maybe distinguish your product from that one (and similar categories). They seem to struggle with targeting - the product is too broad. Studying their case will help you to avoid many costly mistakes. Good luck!
@tetiana_n Thank you, this is really thoughtful feedback.
I think you’re right about the need to focus more on a specific niche. At the same time, I do feel the tool can be useful for different types of people like students, journalists, researchers, or even policy makers.
What I’m trying to figure out now is whether that focus should come more from how I position and communicate the product, or if I should actually shape the tool itself around a more specific use case.
Definitely something important to think about at this stage. Really appreciate you taking the time to write this
@eduardhartley Everything will work out! Polishing your strategy is part of the journey.