u/Different_Thanks_158

I built a SaaS but I got only 2 sign ups

I built a SaaS but I got only 2 sign ups

Hey, how are yall doing?

So the thing starts in april 18th iirc, I was chatting with claude about some saas ideas, and I got told one that I liked (maybe it was overused).

An AI contract reviewer for freelancers and small business owners.

After some time vibe coding and building an MVP, I bought a domain and I realeased it on april 24th, all good.

The problem starts there, I never thought that the marketing phase is that hard, I made some posts on reddit asking for feedback and how to market it, and I did all that I got recommended.

DMs on Linkedin, cold emails, posts on reddit, improved SEO and created use case pages.

The SaaS was firstly made for Spanish people since im from Spain (thats why my english isnt the best), but after some days I realized that the people from my country arent used to pay for this kind of stuff, they are more classic.

So I transformed the saas for the US people, changed the language (i kept the spanish language).

After that i started focusing more the people from US, but i got nothing at all, no response from the emails or linkedin dms, no one answered.

I changed the landing page a lot of times thinking that maybe that was the problem, but still nothing at all.

Ive been tracking the traffic with vercel analytics and microsoft clarity and i saw that im still getting more people from spain than any other country (my saas now supports laws from USA, Canada, UK and Australia), the percentages are 75% Spain, 10% US and the rest some random countries.

4 days ago i saw on microsoft clarity that 2 persons used the free trial on the saas, with real contracts, it made me happy and I contacted them via email, but i got no answer from them, they are from Spain and the emails that they used they were real.

Now I dont know what to do or what should my next steps be.

The site is signoti.com if anyone is interested in taking a look. Thanks and if anyone got any advices please feel free in commenting.

u/Different_Thanks_158 — 4 days ago
▲ 3 r/expo

After a long wait my vocabulary app finally got published in the playstore. Its my first app so im really excited. if anyone wanna give me some feedback pls tell me!

reddit.com
u/Different_Thanks_158 — 22 days ago

After a long wait my first react native got published into the play store! Ill keep an eye on it and update this post, if anyone wanna give some feedback pls tell me

reddit.com
u/Different_Thanks_158 — 22 days ago

I keep getting negative comments telling me that my idea wont work, I want to know ur opinions.

Its tool that scans and analyzes contracts to find "red flags" on them, like abusive clauses etc etc.

What to you think about it? I think that the landing page its really cool so idrk, thank you!

reddit.com
u/Different_Thanks_158 — 23 days ago

This is a question for the owners of a small business. I wanna know what do you do with the contracts, I mean, do you read them from start to end? With all the details? Or just read it quickly and sign without looking with any worries? If you do that, have you ever gotten in any trouble because of some abusive clause?

Thanks, and sorry for any grammatical mistake, english isnt my first language

reddit.com
u/Different_Thanks_158 — 23 days ago

I’ve been building a SaaS that reviews business documents with AI. This is the basic idea:

Small business owners, freelancers, consultants, and agencies upload a contract, invoice, NDA, vendor agreement, etc.

The tool gives them:

- a plain-English summary

- risky clauses / red flags

- negotiation points

- jurisdiction-aware review for the US and Spain

- a PDF report they can keep or send internally

The thing I’m struggling with is positioning. If I call it “AI contract review” or “legal AI”, it’s immediately clear what it does, but it also creates trust issues because people may think it’s trying to replace a lawyer.

If I call it “AI document review for small businesses”, it feels safer and broader, but maybe less sharp.

I’m trying to position it as:

“a first-pass document review before you sign, send, or pay”

Not legal advice. Not a lawyer replacement. More like a way to spot issues and know what to ask before escalating to a professional.

I have a few questions for other saas developers:

  1. Would you lead with “AI contract review” or “AI document review”?
  2. Does the “not a lawyer replacement” angle build trust or weaken the product?
  3. Would you focus the landing page on contracts only, or contracts + invoices + business documents?
  4. If you were targeting small businesses in the US, would you start with SEO, Reddit, partnerships, or paid ads (I already did something with the seo, but it still needs some work)?

I’m mainly looking for positioning/marketing feedback, not trying to pitch.

PD: English is not my first language, so I used AI to redact this text, sorry for that, all the answers are going to be 100% mine.

reddit.com
u/Different_Thanks_158 — 23 days ago

I’m building Signoti, a SaaS that helps small business owners and freelancers review contracts, invoices, NDAs, and vendor documents before they sign or pay.

The positioning I’m testing is: “AI document review for small businesses before you sign, send, or pay.”

What it does:

- plain-English document summary

- red flags / risky clauses

- negotiation suggestions

- jurisdiction-aware review for the US and Spain

- PDF report

What I’m worried about:

- whether people would trust an AI tool with sensitive documents

- whether “AI document review” is too broad

- whether I should focus only on contracts first

- whether the pricing feels clear

I’m not trying to position it as legal advice or a lawyer replacement.

Would appreciate brutal feedback on:

  1. headline clarity
  2. trust/privacy
  3. pricing
  4. whether you understand what problem it solves
reddit.com
u/Different_Thanks_158 — 23 days ago

I’m building Signoti, a SaaS that helps small business owners and freelancers review contracts, invoices, NDAs, and vendor documents before they sign or pay.

The positioning I’m testing is: “AI document review for small businesses before you sign, send, or pay.”

What it does:

- plain-English document summary

- red flags / risky clauses

- negotiation suggestions

- jurisdiction-aware review for the US and Spain

- PDF report

What I’m worried about:

- whether people would trust an AI tool with sensitive documents

- whether “AI document review” is too broad

- whether I should focus only on contracts first

- whether the pricing feels clear

I’m not trying to position it as legal advice or a lawyer replacement.

Would appreciate brutal feedback on:

  1. headline clarity

  2. trust/privacy

  3. pricing

  4. whether you understand what problem it solves

Link: https://signoti.com

u/Different_Thanks_158 — 23 days ago
▲ 2 r/SaaS

I’ve been building a SaaS that reviews business documents with AI. This is the basic idea:

Small business owners, freelancers, consultants, and agencies upload a contract, invoice, NDA, vendor agreement, etc.

The tool gives them:

- a plain-English summary

- risky clauses / red flags

- negotiation points

- jurisdiction-aware review for the US and Spain

- a PDF report they can keep or send internally

The thing I’m struggling with is positioning. If I call it “AI contract review” or “legal AI”, it’s immediately clear what it does, but it also creates trust issues because people may think it’s trying to replace a lawyer.

If I call it “AI document review for small businesses”, it feels safer and broader, but maybe less sharp.

I’m trying to position it as:

“a first-pass document review before you sign, send, or pay”

Not legal advice. Not a lawyer replacement. More like a way to spot issues and know what to ask before escalating to a professional.

I have a few questions for other saas developers:

  1. Would you lead with “AI contract review” or “AI document review”?
  2. Does the “not a lawyer replacement” angle build trust or weaken the product?
  3. Would you focus the landing page on contracts only, or contracts + invoices + business documents?
  4. If you were targeting small businesses in the US, would you start with SEO, Reddit, partnerships, or paid ads (I already did something with the seo, but it still needs some work)?

I’m mainly looking for positioning/marketing feedback, not trying to pitch.

PD: English is not my first language, so I used AI to redact this text, sorry for that, all the answers are going to be 100% mine.

EDIT 1: I changed the landing page thanks to some feedback, now it only aims for contracts and leaves the rest as an extra.

reddit.com
u/Different_Thanks_158 — 23 days ago