▲ 19 r/IndiaInternshipDaily+1 crossposts

Hiring Mobile App Interns

Stipend: 5k per month (first month training)

Work from home, 6h per day, tasks with time-based deadlines given.

Duration: 4 months.

Skills: Python, Django or FastAPI, Reactjs, Nodejs, Flutter

Candidate must have good problem solving skills.

Perks: Fixed working hours (to be agreed on), experience/recommendation letter

How to apply:

Upvote this post and DM your Resume link (Google drive link- make resume link public) and LinkedIn profile.

Note: Training period (1month) is unpaid.

Good Luck.

reddit.com
u/x1021 — 4 days ago

Update 1: I can't give up

Hi guys,

So, after a long time lurking, making efforts and failing, I have finally decided to build in public and be honest accountable for my work.

I want to build a product that helps users. It has to be ethically valid, none of this gamifying/anxiety-inducing apps. So, I'm doing market research to identify my ICP (ideal customer profile).

I've been struggling though because I don't have users who would love to carry out a paid pilot for a pain point. That, as I understand from YCombinator (and other sources), is the hallmark of a valid problem to solve.

There are two main causes of the struggle:

  1. I don't understand how to narrow down an ICP. Usually what happens is their pains are so specific to their domain, that I don't understand what specifically hooks them to accepting a paid pilot.
  2. I can't decide on an ICP based on founder-market fit because I have done a wide variety of jobs, but none in too much depth. I do know that I want to help businesses because that fascinates me.

In order to help with this struggle, I built an agentic workflow for myself, which takes an idea, browses through Reddit based on some guesses for subreddits, iterates until it finds [target] number of posts/comments. Then, what I do is, I look at the context, look at a draft of AI generated response and I write a personalized non-AI message to these people as cold DMs.

If they are putting in the efforts to respond to me, the least I can do is put the same effort while reaching out to them.

Sharing how that looks like here:)

If you have anything to share at all, please text me and thank you for reading all the way to the end!

u/x1021 — 1 month ago

Service Business Owners, what business do you run and how do you handle client service through a CRM?

Hi fellow service business owners,

I come from a data engineering consulting background but I have never used a CRM because I don't have many clients at once (I work as a freelancer).

Recently, I came across a post on another sub-reddit (r/CRM, proof) where they are looking to automate the standard service cycle without a bloated platform.

I know for sure that there must be more service business owners with a similar problem. Excel + Calendar must solve it for some (like me), but I want to know about people for whom it's still a problem.

Please help me understand this space better. Who knows, maybe if there's 5-10 people who actually have this problem, it's worth building a simple, straightforward product that helps you out!

Thanks in advance for your time:)

reddit.com
u/x1021 — 1 month ago
▲ 4 r/SaaSMarketing+1 crossposts

No Marketing, Real Feedback only please: Next steps in a event-networking app

Hi guys,

So, I go to a lot of networking events. And to know who the people are and what their interests are, you need to meet everyone and find out for yourself. This is an exhausting, iterative process (unless you have ADHD, in which case it is just amazing). 

Especially if it's more than 25 people at the event, it gets very taxing.

The way people currently solve this problem is: 

  • People rely on chance conversations, or 
  • People carry name tags explaining who they are and what they do but these name tags don't provide enough detail, or 
  • There are apps out that are just bad and not user-friendly (someone was actually talking about this after an event).

 

As a result, networking isn't as impactful as it could be. People miss out on highly-valuable connections just because they didn't know those people existed in the same room!

The solution is to create a simple, user-friendly, live-attendee directory. I've created a demo for it here: https://demo.intheroom.online/. All the user-data is fake, but you get a feel for what I'm thinking.

What I want to know from the community is this: ok, I created a demo and I sent it out to some event organizers to know what they think. I also meet people at events who are like, oh this is great, I would pay for it, but I don't know what the event organizers might say. I am also a bit stuck regarding next steps. What should I do?

reddit.com
u/x1021 — 2 months ago