u/Akshat_srivastava_1

[FOR HIRE] Still Not Booking Enough Qualified Calls? Your Client Acquisition System Is Probably The Problem.

If you’re struggling with getting consistent clients, qualified calls, or converting inquiries into actual business…

the problem usually isn’t just traffic.

A lot of service-based businesses are already getting attention online, but still lose opportunities because:

  • follow-up is weak
  • inquiries are unorganized
  • booking flow has friction
  • response time is slow
  • and there’s no proper client acquisition system behind the business

That’s exactly what we help businesses improve.

Over the last few months, we’ve helped multiple service-based businesses improve inquiry handling, build better lead systems, and generate more consistent qualified booked calls through structured customer acquisition workflows.

This includes:

  • lead generation systems
  • landing pages
  • WhatsApp follow-up
  • CRM organization
  • appointment workflows
  • and conversion-focused booking systems

Because getting leads is one thing.

Turning them into actual conversations and paying customers consistently is a completely different game.

Also, to be transparent:
we do not work on commission-based models, free trials, or “let’s test first” type setups.

We only work with businesses that are already operating seriously and are willing to invest into improving their acquisition systems and growth infrastructure.

So if your business is already making money but not growing as consistently as it should, there’s usually a system problem somewhere behind the scenes.

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 13 hours ago

Most Businesses Don’t Need More Leads — They Need A Better Lead System

If your business doesn’t have a proper lead pipeline, follow-up system, or booked-call process…

you’re probably losing more customers than you realize.

A lot of businesses focus heavily on getting traffic and generating leads…

but what happens after someone shows interest is usually where the system breaks.

Common problems:

  • slow response times
  • weak follow-up
  • unorganized inquiry handling
  • poor booking flow
  • low-quality leads
  • customers disappearing before calls even happen

Most businesses don’t actually need “more traffic.”

They need:

  • better conversion systems
  • faster inquiry handling
  • structured lead management
  • and smoother customer acquisition workflows.

Because traffic without conversion is just an expensive leak.

Lately I’ve been noticing that businesses with:

  • faster response systems
  • stronger follow-up
  • cleaner booking flow
  • and organized lead pipelines

usually outperform businesses spending much more on ads.

If your current lead flow feels inconsistent or unstructured, happy to share a few observations privately.

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 1 day ago

After 4+ Years Working With Businesses Online, One Problem Keeps Repeating

After working with businesses online for more than 4 years and helping 20+ businesses improve their online presence, one thing keeps repeating again and again:

Most businesses don’t actually have a lead problem.

They have a conversion and customer journey problem.

A lot of businesses are:

- running ads

- posting consistently

- trying different marketing strategies

- spending money to generate traffic

But what happens after someone clicks is usually where the system breaks.

Some common patterns we keep seeing:

• slow or outdated websites

• poor mobile experience

• no clear next step for customers

• confusing booking/inquiry flow

• weak follow-up after inquiries

• businesses replying too late while leads are still comparing competitors

• no trust-building structure online

• websites that look “fine” but convert terribly

And honestly, customers today decide very quickly.

If the experience feels:

- slow

- confusing

- outdated

- or unprofessional

they leave silently.

One thing we realized after working with multiple businesses:

The businesses getting the best results are usually not the ones generating the most traffic.

They’re the ones with:

- better inquiry systems

- faster follow-up

- stronger online trust

- cleaner customer journey

- better conversion structure

In many cases, improving:

• mobile experience

• booking flow

• inquiry handling

• landing page clarity

• response speed

• automated follow-up systems

created bigger results than increasing ad spend itself.

Feels like many businesses are trying to scale traffic before fixing what happens after the click.

And over time, that becomes an expensive leak.

We focus heavily on helping businesses improve:

- online trust

- inquiry conversion

- appointment flow

- customer experience

- lead-to-call conversion systems

because at the end of the day, businesses don’t need “more clicks.”

They need more qualified conversations and customers.

Curious if anyone else working with businesses has noticed the same thing lately.

If anyone wants, happy to share a few observations on their website, landing page, or booking flow privately.

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 3 days ago

After 4+ Years Working With Businesses Online, One Problem Keeps Repeating

After working with businesses online for more than 4 years and helping 20+ businesses improve their online presence, one thing keeps repeating again and again:

Most businesses don’t actually have a lead problem.

They have a conversion and customer journey problem.

A lot of businesses are:

- running ads

- posting consistently

- trying different marketing strategies

- spending money to generate traffic

But what happens after someone clicks is usually where the system breaks.

Some common patterns we keep seeing:

• slow or outdated websites

• poor mobile experience

• no clear next step for customers

• confusing booking/inquiry flow

• weak follow-up after inquiries

• businesses replying too late while leads are still comparing competitors

• no trust-building structure online

• websites that look “fine” but convert terribly

And honestly, customers today decide very quickly.

If the experience feels:

- slow

- confusing

- outdated

- or unprofessional

they leave silently.

One thing we realized after working with multiple businesses:

The businesses getting the best results are usually not the ones generating the most traffic.

They’re the ones with:

- better inquiry systems

- faster follow-up

- stronger online trust

- cleaner customer journey

- better conversion structure

In many cases, improving:

• mobile experience

• booking flow

• inquiry handling

• landing page clarity

• response speed

• automated follow-up systems

created bigger results than increasing ad spend itself.

Feels like many businesses are trying to scale traffic before fixing what happens after the click.

And over time, that becomes an expensive leak.

We focus heavily on helping businesses improve:

- online trust

- inquiry conversion

- appointment flow

- customer experience

- lead-to-call conversion systems

because at the end of the day, businesses don’t need “more clicks.”

They need more qualified conversations and customers.

Curious if anyone else working with businesses has noticed the same thing lately.

If anyone wants, happy to share a few observations on their website, landing page, or booking flow privately.

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 3 days ago

We Audited a website , over 150+ Business Websites Most Are Losing Customers Before The First Conversation

Over the last 4 months, we audited 150+ business websites and also reviewed hundreds of businesses that still don’t even have a proper online presence.

One thing became very obvious:

A lot of businesses are losing customers before the conversation even starts.

We’ve been in this field for more than 5 years, and the same pattern keeps repeating across industries.

Some businesses had:

  • outdated websites
  • slow mobile experience
  • no clear inquiry flow
  • weak trust signals
  • poor Google visibility
  • no proper WhatsApp system
  • no follow-up process after lead generation

What surprised us even more:

Many businesses without websites were still spending money on Instagram ads and trying to scale online.

The issue is:

Today, most customers search online before they trust a business.

If your business:

  • looks outdated
  • is hard to find
  • has no proper website
  • or doesn’t respond professionally

people move to competitors very quickly.

During these audits, we also realized something important:

A lot of businesses don’t actually have a traffic problem.

They have:

  • conversion problems
  • positioning problems
  • trust problems
  • follow-up problems

In many cases, improving:
• website structure
• mobile experience
• Google visibility
• landing page clarity
• WhatsApp inquiry flow

generated better results than simply increasing ad spend.

Feels like many businesses are focusing too much on “getting more traffic” before fixing what happens after the click.

Still analyzing more businesses every week.

DM me if you want us to audit your website or online presence.

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 3 days ago

We’re building the software infrastructure layer behind modern EV charging ecosystems

We’re building the software infrastructure layer behind modern EV charging ecosystems.

Most EV charger manufacturers build solid hardware

but still depend on fragmented third-party software, generic apps, disconnected dashboards, and revenue-sharing platforms.

We think the real opportunity in EV infrastructure is not just the charger itself

it’s the software and operational ecosystem around it.

So we started building:

- Enterprise Charging APIs

- White-label mobile apps

- CMS dashboards

- Fleet charging workflows

- Revenue analytics

- Remote diagnostics

- Smart charging infrastructure systems

The goal is simple:

Manufacturers focus on hardware.

Operators focus on scale.

We power the software layer behind the network.

We’re currently open to:

- collaborations

- pilot partnerships

- software integrations

- hardware ecosystem partnerships

- strategic business discussions

Especially with:

- EV charger manufacturers

- fleet operators

- parking infrastructure companies

- hotels & commercial properties

- smart mobility businesses

And if anyone here can help us connect with EV charger manufacturers or relevant infrastructure players, we’d genuinely appreciate it.

Happy to explore partnership incentives, revenue opportunities, or collaboration models where it makes sense.

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 14 days ago

We’re building the software infrastructure layer behind modern EV charging ecosystems

We’ve been researching the EV charging space deeply over the last few months and one thing keeps standing out:

Most EV charger manufacturers build strong hardware

but the software ecosystem around EV infrastructure still feels massively fragmented.

Different vendors for:

- charging APIs

- mobile apps

- dashboards

- analytics

- fleet workflows

- diagnostics

- payments

The hardware side of EV infrastructure is evolving fast.

The operational software layer behind it still feels early.

So we started building a more unified EV charging software ecosystem focused on:

- enterprise APIs

- white-label mobile apps

- operational dashboards

- fleet charging workflows

- smart charging systems

- remote diagnostics

The idea is simple:

Manufacturers focus on hardware.

Operators focus on scaling networks.

The software layer should feel seamless across the ecosystem.

Curious how others in EV infra see this.

Do you think EV charging companies underestimate the operational/software complexity behind scaling charging networks?

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 14 days ago
▲ 2 r/SaaS

We’re building the software infrastructure layer behind modern EV charging ecosystems

We’ve been researching the EV charging space deeply over the last few months and one thing keeps standing out:

Most EV charger manufacturers build strong hardware

but the software ecosystem around EV infrastructure still feels massively fragmented.

Different vendors for:

- charging APIs

- mobile apps

- dashboards

- analytics

- fleet workflows

- diagnostics

- payments

The hardware side of EV infrastructure is evolving fast.

The operational software layer behind it still feels early.

So we started building a more unified EV charging software ecosystem focused on:

- enterprise APIs

- white-label mobile apps

- operational dashboards

- fleet charging workflows

- smart charging systems

- remote diagnostics

The idea is simple:

Manufacturers focus on hardware.

Operators focus on scaling networks.

The software layer should feel seamless across the ecosystem.

Curious how others in EV infra see this.

Do you think EV charging companies underestimate the operational/software complexity behind scaling charging networks?

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 14 days ago

We’re building the software infrastructure layer behind modern EV charging ecosystems

We’re building the software infrastructure layer behind modern EV charging ecosystems.

Most EV charger manufacturers build solid hardware

but still depend on fragmented third-party software, generic apps, disconnected dashboards, and revenue-sharing platforms.

We think the real opportunity in EV infrastructure is not just the charger itself

it’s the software and operational ecosystem around it.

So we started building:

- Enterprise Charging APIs

- White-label mobile apps

- CMS dashboards

- Fleet charging workflows

- Revenue analytics

- Remote diagnostics

- Smart charging infrastructure systems

The goal is simple:

Manufacturers focus on hardware.

Operators focus on scale.

We power the software layer behind the network.

We’re currently open to:

- collaborations

- pilot partnerships

- software integrations

- hardware ecosystem partnerships

- strategic business discussions

Especially with:

- EV charger manufacturers

- fleet operators

- parking infrastructure companies

- hotels & commercial properties

- smart mobility businesses

And if anyone here can help us connect with EV charger manufacturers or relevant infrastructure players, we’d genuinely appreciate it.

Happy to explore partnership incentives, revenue opportunities, or collaboration models where it makes sense.

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 14 days ago

We’re building the software infrastructure layer behind modern EV charging ecosystems

We’re building the software infrastructure layer behind modern EV charging ecosystems.

Most EV charger manufacturers build solid hardware

but still depend on fragmented third-party software, generic apps, disconnected dashboards, and revenue-sharing platforms.

We think the real opportunity in EV infrastructure is not just the charger itself

it’s the software and operational ecosystem around it.

So we started building:

- Enterprise Charging APIs

- White-label mobile apps

- CMS dashboards

- Fleet charging workflows

- Revenue analytics

- Remote diagnostics

- Smart charging infrastructure systems

The goal is simple:

Manufacturers focus on hardware.

Operators focus on scale.

We power the software layer behind the network.

We’re currently open to:

- collaborations

- pilot partnerships

- software integrations

- hardware ecosystem partnerships

- strategic business discussions

Especially with:

- EV charger manufacturers

- fleet operators

- parking infrastructure companies

- hotels & commercial properties

- smart mobility businesses

And if anyone here can help us connect with EV charger manufacturers or relevant infrastructure players, we’d genuinely appreciate it.

Happy to explore partnership incentives, revenue opportunities, or collaboration models where it makes sense.

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 14 days ago

Looking for a mobile app developer for a restaurant/cafe ordering app MVP.

Current app flow includes:

• Customer login/signup

• Menu browsing & ordering

• Admin-side menu management

• Manual order status updates

• Firebase backend

• Android + iOS deployment

The goal is to build a clean functional MVP first not a very complex Swiggy/Zomato-style platform initially.

To be completely transparent, the current client budget is roughly around ₹26k–₹27k for the MVP phase.

We understand this budget is on the lower side considering the scope, but if something workable is realistically possible within or near that range, please feel free to DM us.

Would love to know:

• Your mobile app development experience

• Previous apps/projects

• Your best possible quotation & timeline

This is being handled through our IT solutions & agency workflow, and we’re also looking for reliable long-term collaborators for future projects as well.

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 15 days ago

Looking for a Flutter developer for a restaurant/cafe ordering app project.

Current features:

• Login/signup

• Menu management

• Customer ordering system

• Order status updates

• Admin dashboard

• Firebase backend

• Android + iOS deployment

The client and project are already confirmed — currently looking for someone reliable for development support.

Preferably someone with:

• Flutter + Firebase experience

• Basic UI understanding

• Good communication

• Long-term collaboration mindset

This may suit students/junior developers looking to build portfolio + work on real client projects.

Feel free to DM with:

• Previous work/apps

• Approx quotation

• Expected delivery timeline

reddit.com
u/Akshat_srivastava_1 — 16 days ago