u/f3n1xfr0m7h345h35

Wie als IT-Freelancer absichern

Hallo zusammen,
ich habe vor kurzem ein Kleingewerbe gegründet und nun die ersten entgeltlichen Aufträge. Es geht hierbei primär um die Entwicklung von statischen html-Seiten. Also ohne Kundfndaten etc.

Ich würde mich hier gerne mit einer IT-Versicherung schützen, falls ich zum Beispiel Fehler mache und das Impressum oder DSGVO passt was nicht.

Mein Versicherungsmakler hat jetzt jedoch gemeint, vor sowas schützt keine Versicherung. Was ist mit den Bekannten wie Hiscox usw. bin ich hier Safe oder rausgeworfenes Geld, falls ein Streitfall entsteht.

Beste Grüße und vielen Dank

reddit.com
u/f3n1xfr0m7h345h35 — 2 days ago

Feeling overwhelmed by the IG content grind (Reels/Carousels). Need some brutally honest feedback on my new account!

Hey everyone,
I recently started an Instagram account (@F3N1XLabs) with the ultimate goal of driving traffic to a landing page where I plan to offer web development and SaaS development services.
Right now, I’m trying to position myself as a tech/AI educator to build trust, but to be completely honest: I am incredibly overwhelmed by the content creation process.
Between scripting Reels, designing complex carousel graphics, and trying to figure out the right visual balance, I feel like I'm spending way too much time in Canva/Photoshop and not enough time actually building or connecting with people.
I just posted an infographic explaining LLM, RAG, and MCP (trying to break down complex tech topics simply), but I'm just not sure if I'm on the right track.
I would love some feedback on a few things:
Does this type of "tech explainer" content actually work to attract potential web dev/SaaS clients, or am I targeting the wrong audience?
How can I streamline my content creation so I don't burn out on Reels and Carousels?
Looking at my current visual style, what should I improve to look more professional?
Please be brutally honest. I really want to make this work but need to find a sustainable workflow.
Thanks in advance!

reddit.com
u/f3n1xfr0m7h345h35 — 3 days ago

Hilfe und Feedback für neuen Insta Channel

Hallo zusammen,

ich könnte etwas Unterstützung gebrauchen, um meinem Kanal etwas Reichweite zu geben. Er soll eigentlich dazu dienen, später einen Einstieg für meine landingpage und meine Produkte zu bieten.

Ich arbeite gerade an zwei SaaS und habe mittlerweile 3 Websites als Auftrag entwickelt.

Allerdings bin ich mit dem erstellen von reels, carousels usw aktuell noch etwas überfordert.

Für Tipps und evtl. den ein oder anderen Like wäre ich dankbar. Würde mich natürlich auch erkenntlich zeigen.

Liebe Grüße

https://www.instagram.com/f3n1xlabs?igsh=c2ZkaDc1MGptbzJk&utm\_source=qr

instagram.com
u/f3n1xfr0m7h345h35 — 3 days ago

Hey creators,

I’m researching how content creators manage comments and DMs at scale.

One idea I’m exploring is an AI assistant that studies a creator’s previous replies and suggests new responses that match their tone, wording style, and communication habits.

It would not auto-send anything. The creator would always review, edit, approve, or ignore the suggestions.

I’m trying to understand whether this would actually be useful or whether it would feel fake, uncomfortable, or unnecessary.

For creators here:

- Would tone-matched reply suggestions save you time?
- Would you trust something like this if it never posted automatically?
- What would make it useful instead of creepy or generic?
- Where is the line between helpful assistance and fake interaction?

Not selling anything — just trying to understand whether this is a real problem worth solving.

Blunt feedback is welcome.

reddit.com
u/f3n1xfr0m7h345h35 — 18 days ago

Hi zusammen,

ich recherchiere gerade ein mögliches Tool für kleine Handwerksbetriebe und hätte gerne ehrliches Feedback.

Viele Anfragen laufen ja über WhatsApp, Telefon, Fotos, E-Mail oder Zettelwirtschaft. Daraus müssen später Rückfragen, Angebote, Arbeitszettel oder Rechnungen entstehen.

Mich würde interessieren:

Wie kommen Kundenanfragen bei euch meistens rein?

Was kostet euch im Büro am meisten Zeit?

Nutzt ihr bereits Handwerkersoftware? Wenn ja: Was nervt daran?

Wäre ein Tool hilfreich, das aus WhatsApp-Nachrichten, Fotos oder Sprachmemos automatisch einen strukturierten Anfrage- oder Angebotsentwurf macht?

Was müsste es können, damit ihr es wirklich nutzt?

Was wäre ein fairer Preis pro Monat?

Keine Werbung, kein Verkauf — ich will nur verstehen, ob das ein echtes Problem ist oder ob ich komplett danebenliege.

Danke euch

reddit.com
u/f3n1xfr0m7h345h35 — 25 days ago
▲ 2 r/SaaS

Hi everyone,

I’m trying to validate a small idea and would appreciate honest input from web designers, freelancers, or small agencies.

When building or maintaining client websites, do you ever run into accessibility-related topics such as:

- poor color contrast

- missing alt text

- unlabeled form fields

- unclear buttons or links

- heading structure issues

- keyboard navigation problems

I’m exploring whether a short, client-friendly accessibility report would be useful.

The idea would be:

- scan a client website for common accessibility issues

- explain the problems in plain English

- prioritize them

- suggest concrete fixes

- make it easier to communicate the issue to non-technical clients

This would not replace a full professional accessibility audit or legal advice.

My questions:

  1. Do clients ever ask you about accessibility?

  2. Do you currently check accessibility before handoff?

  3. Would a short report help you sell fixes or maintenance work?

  4. What would make such a report actually useful?

  5. Would this be a one-off need or something you’d use across multiple client sites?

No link, no pitch. I’m just trying to understand if this is a real workflow problem or just a nice-to-have.

reddit.com
u/f3n1xfr0m7h345h35 — 25 days ago

Hi everyone,

I’m currently validating an idea for a small tool/service called AccessFix.

The idea is simple: help web designers and freelancers quickly identify common accessibility issues on client websites and turn them into a clear, client-friendly report.

The report would focus on things like:

- missing alt text

- poor color contrast

- unlabeled form fields

- unclear buttons or links

- heading structure issues

- basic keyboard navigation problems

- common WCAG-related issues

The goal is not to replace a full professional accessibility audit or legal advice.

The goal is to make it easier for small web design teams and freelancers to:

- spot obvious accessibility problems faster

- explain those problems to non-technical clients

- prioritize fixes

- create a stronger upsell or maintenance offer

- give developers or clients concrete next steps

I’m looking for honest feedback from web designers, freelancers, and small agencies:

  1. Do clients ever ask you about accessibility?

  2. Would a short, client-friendly accessibility report be useful in your workflow?

  3. Would you use something like this before handing over a website?

  4. What would such a report absolutely need to include?

  5. Would you prefer a one-time scan/report or recurring monitoring for client sites?

I’m also offering a few free test reports for real websites in exchange for feedback.

Not trying to sell anything here. I’m mainly trying to understand whether this solves a real problem for web designers or if it’s just a “nice to have”.

Thanks for any honest thoughts.

reddit.com
u/f3n1xfr0m7h345h35 — 25 days ago

Hi everyone,

I’m validating an idea for a tool/service that helps web designers and freelancers create simple accessibility check reports for client websites.

It would scan for common issues like poor contrast, missing alt text, unlabeled forms, unclear buttons/links, heading problems, and basic keyboard navigation issues.

The output would be a client-friendly report with:

- the main issues

- plain-English explanations

- priority levels

- concrete fix suggestions

- optional notes for WordPress/Webflow/Shopify projects

This would not replace a full accessibility audit or legal advice. The goal is to help small web design teams catch obvious issues earlier and explain them better to clients.

Questions for web designers/freelancers:

  1. Do your clients care about accessibility at all?

  2. Would this help you sell or deliver better website projects?

  3. What would make such a report actually useful?

  4. Would you pay for one-off reports or recurring monitoring?

I’m offering a few free test reports in exchange for honest feedback.

Curious if this is a real pain or just a nice idea.

reddit.com
u/f3n1xfr0m7h345h35 — 25 days ago
▲ 0 r/webdev

Hi everyone,

I’m currently validating an idea for a small tool/service called AccessFix.

The idea is simple: help web designers and freelancers quickly identify common accessibility issues on client websites and turn them into a clear, client-friendly report.

The report would focus on things like:

- missing alt text

- poor color contrast

- unlabeled form fields

- unclear buttons or links

- heading structure issues

- basic keyboard navigation problems

- common WCAG-related issues

The goal is not to replace a full professional accessibility audit or legal advice.

The goal is to make it easier for small web design teams and freelancers to:

- spot obvious accessibility problems faster

- explain those problems to non-technical clients

- prioritize fixes

- create a stronger upsell or maintenance offer

- give developers or clients concrete next steps

I’m looking for honest feedback from web designers, freelancers, and small agencies:

  1. Do clients ever ask you about accessibility?

  2. Would a short, client-friendly accessibility report be useful in your workflow?

  3. Would you use something like this before handing over a website?

  4. What would such a report absolutely need to include?

  5. Would you prefer a one-time scan/report or recurring monitoring for client sites?

I’m also offering a few free test reports for real websites in exchange for feedback.

Not trying to sell anything here. I’m mainly trying to understand whether this solves a real problem for web designers or if it’s just a “nice to have”.

Thanks for any honest thoughts.

reddit.com
u/f3n1xfr0m7h345h35 — 25 days ago