4
12 Comments

Cmon, you need more paying clients..

We all know it, we all want, we provide a solution. We act as a "sales OS" inside of your business. Our only goal is to get you clients.

Let me know when this somehow got your attention.

posted to Icon for group Looking to Partner Up
Looking to Partner Up
on November 8, 2025
  1. 1

    Totally agree — getting paying clients isn’t just about having a great solution, it’s about visibility and trust in the right places. A lot of founders think client acquisition is all about ads or fancy funnels, but communities and authentic engagement (like Reddit or niche forums) work really well when you treat them as value places, not promotional channels.

    Curious — when you think about your “sales OS,” how much do you lean on organic community engagement vs outbound outreach? Often the two work best when they reinforce each other — community builds trust, and outreach brings in steady conversations.

  2. 1

    Good one, Colin , direct and to the point. 👏

    Getting more paying clients really comes down to visibility and trust, and I’ve found Reddit to be surprisingly powerful for both when done right. Many founders overlook it because they think it’s “anti-sales,” but authentic engagement there can consistently attract high-quality leads.
    Would be interesting to explore how your “sales OS” could integrate with organic client acquisition channels like Reddit , they actually complement each other really well.

  3. 1

    Hey Colin 👋 this definitely caught my eye.
    I’m with Cognimuse — we build fast, ethical, founder-first software products (MVPs, web, AI tools).
    We’ve got delivery power and structure, just missing consistent global visibility.
    Would love to explore if there’s synergy here.

    1. 1

      Spot on, Colin most businesses don’t have a sales problem, they have a visibility problem

      I help founders and small teams fix that by positioning their offers inside the right Reddit and niche communities where real buyers already hang out. That’s how we turn attention into conversations and conversations into paying clients

      If you’re open, I can share a few of the exact community playbooks that helped others get consistent leads without ads

      1. 1

        Stealing my clients here or what haha

        1. 1

          Haha, no stealing, just spreading the Reddit marketing love! Always happy to share tips that help founders get traction but hey, maybe we can collaborate instead of compete?

        1. 2

          Sent you an invite :D (I'm Colin)

          1. 1

            Hi Colin
            Thanks for the invite! I really appreciate it

            I’d love to explore how we might collaborate and share some of the Reddit marketing strategies that have helped founders turn community engagement into paying clients

            Would you be open to a quick chat sometime this week? I can walk you through a few actionable approaches that have worked for startups like yours

            Looking forward to connecting

        2. 1

          Wount be a good idea fr me to reach out to you on linked in right now are you ontelegram or whatsapp ?

  4. 1

    Absolutely, Colin getting more paying clients isn’t just about the product; it’s about visibility where your audience hangs out.

    I help founders and small businesses position their solutions inside targeted communities like Reddit to spark real conversations, build trust, and attract clients organically

    If you’re interested, I can share a few strategies that have helped startups get consistent leads without paid ads happy to DM the details

    1. 1

      That sounds interesting, Stelly
      At Cognimuse, we’re actually facing that exact challenge : strong delivery, but still working on visibility and trust in global markets.
      I’d love to hear what kind of community-based strategies have worked for your clients. DM works great.

Trending on Indie Hackers
I shipped 3 features this weekend based entirely on community feedback. Here's what I built and why. User Avatar 155 comments I'm a lawyer who launched an AI contract tool on Product Hunt today — here's what building it as a non-technical founder actually felt like User Avatar 139 comments “This contract looked normal - but could cost millions” User Avatar 53 comments 👉 The most expensive contract mistakes don’t feel risky User Avatar 40 comments The indie maker's dilemma: 2 months in, 700 downloads, and I'm stuck User Avatar 32 comments I spent weeks building a food decision tool instead of something useful User Avatar 27 comments