u/Wonderful_Author5973

Genuine advice needed

Hi all. I’m someone who started an Instagram page around two or so weeks ago. I’ve managed to get 1500+ followers and 300k views in this amount of time. My feed is full of ‘digital products can make you x amount of income’. I’ve no experience in what I’m doing but it’s essentially a quotes page in the parenting niche. I’m hoping to make some money from this, not expecting to become a millionaire or make $10k a month as a lot of these pages promise. I find it hard to believe. But this early progress in a short amount of time has made me hopeful that I *might* be able to make some money from it.

After all that, I’m looking for some genuine advice on what kind of digital products to sell to my audience. Every helpful post I’ve come across in the parenting sector say a planner, a tracker etc etc. but I don’t know how to nail down THE product. I do genuinely want it to be something that adds value to a busy mom’s life. Maybe I have a lot of learning to do.

I look forward to some helpful responses (I hope) TIA!

reddit.com
u/Wonderful_Author5973 — 11 days ago

We’re looking for a Full Stack Developer who cares about clean, maintainable code.

The stack:

Next.js, React, TypeScript, Supabase, Tailwind, Resend, Docker

What matters most:

•	Strong TypeScript — proper typing, not silencing errors  
•	Reusable components and well structured hooks  
•	Next.js App Router experience  
•	Supabase including Auth  
•	Unit testing experience

Nice to have:

•	Cursor experience including sub-agents and rules  
•	UI sensibility  
•	Docker familiarity

What we provide:

•	Cursor Pro licence  
•	OpenAI Codex access  
•	Claude by Anthropic access  
•	Google Stitch access

Share your GitHub and a brief note on your experience with the stack. No GitHub, no review.

Competitive salary depending on experience

DM me, please only apply if you have the relevant experience.

Thanks

reddit.com
u/Wonderful_Author5973 — 2 months ago
▲ 0 r/uklaw

Running into a pattern with a few firms I’ve spoken to recently. As they take on more clients, the admin doesn’t scale with it, it just gets heavier. Fee earners are spending time on things that should be automatic, compliance tasks that rely on someone remembering, case management that doesn’t talk to billing.

Curious whether this is a widespread problem or whether most firms have figured out a way to manage it. What’s actually working for people here?

reddit.com
u/Wonderful_Author5973 — 2 months ago