u/theme-man

My tiny productivity tool suddenly spiked to 1.6K users this month. I think I finally understand what worked.

My tiny productivity tool suddenly spiked to 1.6K users this month. I think I finally understand what worked.

For the past few weeks I’ve been building a small productivity tool called Voicer AI, Using LOVABLE.

Nothing huge. Just a simple idea:

speak → convert it into structured text (notes, emails, ideas, etc.)

At first the traffic was basically nothing.

Some days:

5 users

10 users

maybe 20 if I was lucky.

Then something strange happened around May 13.

The graph suddenly jumped.

Right now the analytics show about 1.6K active users this month, and the growth curve is the steepest it has ever been

u/theme-man — 5 days ago
▲ 2 r/SaaS

I built a voice-to-text productivity tool and got 80+ users in 2 weeks

u/theme-man — 5 days ago

I got 15,000 visitors from SEO in one week and it turned into ₹10,600 from my small AI tool

u/theme-man — 7 days ago
▲ 116 r/indianstartups+1 crossposts

I launched a tiny voice-to-text tool 2 weeks ago. 70 people signed up and 25 actually paid.

u/theme-man — 8 days ago
▲ 2 r/micro_saas+1 crossposts

I tried replacing typing with voice for a week. It changed how I write emails.

[removed]

u/theme-man — 10 days ago
▲ 3 r/StartUpIndia+1 crossposts

I’m 15 years old.

Two years ago I didn’t know anything about startups, SaaS, or building apps.

I just had a laptop, curiosity, and way too many ideas.

So I started experimenting with AI tools.

Not coding from scratch.

Just describing what I wanted to build and letting AI help me create it.

At first, everything I made was terrible.

Broken interfaces.

Ideas nobody cared about.

Things that worked only on my laptop.

But I kept building anyway.

Eventually I started making small productivity tools that solved problems I personally had.

One of them is EPIC — a visual sitemap builder that helps people plan websites visually.

Another is Voicer AI — a tool that turns voice into structured text like emails, lists, and paragraphs.

Nothing fancy.

Just tools that make work a little faster.

I launched them online to see if anyone would care.

Slowly something interesting started happening.

People started signing up.

First 5 users.

Then 20.

Then 100.

Today across my tools there are 500+ users from different countries using things I built from my bedroom.

Even crazier… some of them started paying.

I still remember the first payment notification.

It felt unreal.

Not because of the money.

But because someone on the internet trusted something I built enough to pay for it.

Here’s the biggest thing I learned from doing this at 15:

You don’t need a huge team.

You don’t need funding.

You don’t even need to be an expert.

You just need to start building small things and put them on the internet.

Most things won’t work.

But one might.

And that one can change everything.

Curious about something:

If you were starting again today with AI tools available everywhere…

what would you build first?

u/theme-man — 13 days ago
▲ 0 r/SaaS

Typing long things on a phone always frustrated me.

Emails.

Notes.

Ideas.

Random thoughts in the middle of the day.

Everything had to be typed on a tiny keyboard.

And the weird thing is… we can speak way faster than we type.

I kept thinking:

Why can't I just say what I want and let a tool structure it for me?

So a few weeks ago I started building something small called Voicer AI.

The idea was simple:

Speak naturally → get clean, structured text.

Examples:

• Speak → get a full email draft

• Speak → generate a to-do list

• Speak → turn rough ideas into paragraphs

• Speak → convert thoughts into structured notes

Instead of typing for 5 minutes, you just talk for 30 seconds.

I launched the first version recently.

No ads.

No big marketing.

Just shared it online to see if anyone else had the same problem.

In the first 2 weeks after launch, more than 50 people signed up and started using it.

Not huge numbers yet, but seeing real people try something you built is honestly a crazy feeling.

Now I'm improving things like:

- better formatting

- more accurate voice recognition

- faster text generation

- features for students and professionals

Still early, but it's been fun building something around a problem I personally face every day.

Curious about one thing though:

Would you actually use voice instead of typing for things like emails, notes, or writing?

u/theme-man — 14 days ago

I built a voice-to-text productivity tool because typing on a phone was driving me crazy (50+ users in 2 weeks)

Typing long things on a phone always frustrated me.

Emails.

Notes.

Ideas.

Random thoughts in the middle of the day.

Everything had to be typed on a tiny keyboard.

And the weird thing is… we can speak way faster than we type.

I kept thinking:

Why can't I just say what I want and let a tool structure it for me?

So a few weeks ago I started building something small called Voicer AI.

The idea was simple:

Speak naturally → get clean, structured text.

Examples:

• Speak → get a full email draft

• Speak → generate a to-do list

• Speak → turn rough ideas into paragraphs

• Speak → convert thoughts into structured notes

Instead of typing for 5 minutes, you just talk for 30 seconds.

I launched the first version recently,Using LOVABLE.

No ads.

No big marketing.

Just shared it online to see if anyone else had the same problem.

In the first 2 weeks after launch, more than 50 people signed up and started using it.

Not huge numbers yet, but seeing real people try something you built is honestly a crazy feeling.

Now I'm improving things like:

- better formatting

- more accurate voice recognition

- faster text generation

- features for students and professionals

Still early, but it's been fun building something around a problem I personally face every day.

Curious about one thing though:

Would you actually use voice instead of typing for things like emails, notes, or writing?

voiceset.lovable.app
u/theme-man — 14 days ago
▲ 4 r/lovable_AI_studio+2 crossposts

Typing is probably the most outdated interface we still use every day.

Think about it.

Computers became insanely powerful.

AI can generate code, images, videos.

But the main way we interact with machines is still… a keyboard invented in the 1800s.

QWERTY was literally designed to slow typists down so mechanical typewriters wouldn’t jam.

Yet here we are in 2026 using the same input method.

Meanwhile humans can speak about 3–4x faster than they type.

So logically voice should be the default interface by now.

But it isn't.

Why?

From what I’ve seen, there are three big problems:

  1. Voice input feels awkward in public

Talking to a laptop in a café still feels weird.

  1. Editing voice text is painful

Typing is still easier when fixing things.

  1. Most voice tools don’t structure thoughts well

They just dump raw transcripts.

That third one is interesting.

When people speak, they don’t think in perfect sentences.

They think in messy ideas.

The real challenge isn’t speech-to-text.

It’s speech → structured thinking.

For example:

You say:

“Remind me to finish the design tomorrow and send the proposal.”

And the system understands:

• Task: Finish design

• Task: Send proposal

• Reminder: Tomorrow

That’s the direction I’ve been experimenting with in a small project called Voicer AI.

Not voice transcription.

Voice → structured output.

I’m curious what others think about this.

Do you think keyboards will still be the main interface in 10–15 years?

Or will voice eventually take over a big part of it?

u/theme-man — 11 days ago