8
10 Comments

How do you know your SAAS idea is any good?

How do you know if your SaaS idea is on the right track?

Share your thoughts and experiences!

on February 19, 2024
  1. 5

    We hear this question multiple times in our Micro SaaS HQ community. The simplest answer is to build a landing page to clear your thoughts and start building your waitlist. Make sure you get atleast 40-50 signups and you are able to talk to 10-15 folks 1:1. Don't get into coding unless MVP is a must need for users.

    But long answer:
    Don't pick an idea casually. Do some research, there are hundreds of niches available. You can find some good ideas in Micro SaaS Ideas Newsletter.

    Once you get a hang of the SaaS ecosystem, this is what I recommend to people -

    1. Start small
    2. Start with landing pages and build waitlist without building full product
    3. Launch on BetaList, PH
    4. Make posts on Reddit, IH
    5. Use ads to add a few more signups.
    6. Talk to users 1:1 (Read The Mom's Test)
    7. Get the vibe and incrementally build the product if there is positive vibe.
  2. 2

    There are different ways to approach this

    • Launch a landing page and see if ppl are interested
    • You can do the same with a Tweet if you have some followers
    • You can validate by checking if other startups exist in the same field/competitors
    • You can use SEO keyword research - is there good volume behind some of the key words behind your startups?
    • You can build an MVP (< 1 week) and see if ppl are interested in using it/get feedback from ppl!
    1. 1

      Thanks for your sharing!

  3. 1

    I can tell you it's a bad idea if you can't find other startups doing exactly the same thing.

  4. 1

    If it's easy to get interviews and you are able to get some meaningful description of a problem from them. For me it shows at least that:

    • someone have this problem
    • people want to talk + that's not a big deal to get interviews with them -> signs that it would be not so hard to get first few users for MVP
    • you know audience a little bit and your wording resonate with them -> you have some kind of unfair advantage due to your previous knowledge of nieche
  5. 1

    Conduct a Market Opportunity Assessment > if it passes that, build a landing page and promote it to see how much interest/sign-ups it gets > build a proof of concept and let testers try it out > build an MVP and let testers try it out > Launch it and let everyone try it out.

Trending on Indie Hackers
Why Indie Founders Fail: The Uncomfortable Truths Beyond "Build in Public" User Avatar 139 comments Your AI Product Is Not A Real Business User Avatar 88 comments Stop Building Features: Why 80% of Your Roadmap is a Waste of Time User Avatar 34 comments The Clarity Trap: Why “Pretty” Pages Kill Profits (And What To Do Instead) User Avatar 34 comments I built an enterprise AI chatbot platform solo — 6 microservices, 7 channels, and Claude Code as my co-developer User Avatar 30 comments I got let go, spent 18 months building a productivity app, and now I'm taking it to Kickstarter User Avatar 22 comments