Hey IH,
I just shipped a small automation that I think solves a real problem for offline small businesses (restaurants, salons, studios).
What it does:
Watches a Gmail inbox → auto-formats incoming booking/reservation requests → fires a clean, structured alert email to the owner the moment a new request arrives. No more digging through messy inboxes, no missed bookings.
My situation:
I'm a student, basically $0 budget, no network. I can build the tool. I have no idea how to reach the people who actually need it.
I've been going back and forth between:
Cold email to local restaurants/salons (feels like shouting into a void)
Posting in niche Reddit communities where these owners hang out
Offering it free to 3–5 businesses first to get proof-of-value before charging
My honest question:
For those who've sold simple B2B automation tools to offline small businesses — what actually worked? Not theory, actual results. Did free-first work? Did cold outreach die? Is there a channel you'd go back and try first?
Especially curious if anyone's cracked distribution for tools targeting non-tech business owners.
— xiao jie
I would not treat this as “is cold outreach dead?”
The bigger risk is testing three channels before you know the exact owner moment you’re selling into.
A restaurant, salon, and studio owner may all miss booking requests, but the pain is not identical. One cares about lost tables, one cares about missed appointments, one cares about class/session fill rate.
If you pitch the tool as “booking alerts,” it may sound useful but not urgent. The sharper test is finding one business type where a missed inbox request directly means lost money that day.
I’d probably avoid broad Reddit/community posting first. You need 5 real owner conversations around missed bookings, not general feedback from builders.
Happy to put a tighter first-customer path in writing if useful. This is the kind of tool where the first 3 paying local businesses matter more than picking the perfect channel.