u/Mclovelin32234

▲ 6 r/nocode

Which no-code tools actually held up past the first few hundred users, and which ones did you have to rip out?

Everyone posts the "I built X with no code" launch. Almost nobody posts what happened 8 months later when it had real load. I want the boring sequel as i am kinda tired chasing the golden goose of tools

If you built on Bubble / Glide / Softr / Airtable / whatever: what broke first, at roughly what scale, and did you patch it or migrate off entirely? Trying to map which tools are "fine forever for a small tool" vs "fine until you have actual customers."

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u/Mclovelin32234 — 1 day ago

how to improve clicks and click through rate

so to keep this short i have started a blog with the goal to rank in the upcoming lets say year iv started on the first of May, and of course i know that this is for the long run and i am already getting impressions however i want to increase my clicks and clickthrough rate my niche is finance micro saas for small business and i post guides and how tos and comparison tools and the goal of my blog ultimately is to help people start their business and to also start affiliate marketing through the page so i want to avoid any mistakes in general that hurt my Clicks and click through rate or even more advice on how to move that way faster

Thank you and any advice is welcome

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u/Mclovelin32234 — 1 day ago

Your business can be profitable on paper and completely broke in real life at the same time (i will not promote)

nobody warned me about this when I started.

you invoice $40k in march. your accountant records it as profit. you feel good. then you open your bank account and it's empty because the client pays net-60 and your rent was due april 1st.

that's not a bad business. that's a cash flow problem inside a perfectly healthy business. and it kills companies that had no reason to die.

the stat that messed me up when I first read it: JPMorgan found the average small business holds 27 days of cash reserves. one slow month, one late client, one unexpected expense and you're calling your bank on a tuesday morning hoping someone picks up.

the fix isn't complicated but nobody actually builds it until they're already in trouble. a 13-week rolling cash flow forecast. not a profit projection. a week-by-week map of what's actually going out versus what's actually hitting your account.

if you can see a shortfall 8 weeks ahead you have options. if you see it when it arrives, you don't.

has anyone here been blindsided by this? profitable on paper, crisis in the bank?

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u/Mclovelin32234 — 1 day ago

So i want to start a blog site on hostinger and using html and php was cool for website front end but what else should i know and since i am posting 3 times weekly how will i make sure that the needed home page and blog page will be updated as well . Any help and tips would be very helpful

reddit.com
u/Mclovelin32234 — 25 days ago