Three months ago, I shipped my AI tool for B2B lead generation. I posted on Twitter, Hacker News, and a few Slack communities. The growth charts looked exciting—500 signups in 30 days.
Then I looked closer. 500 signups. 3 paid. A 0.6% conversion rate that would make any marketer wince.
I was chasing vanity metrics. Signups felt like validation. Each new user felt like a small win.
But here's the thing nobody tells you: in B2B, a free signup isn't a warm lead. It's a "I'll try this when I have time" signal.
1. I built for everyone, not someone
My tool did "lead generation for B2B companies." That's not a niche. That's a market segment the size of the ocean.
2. I didn't talk to users until week 8
I was heads-down building features. I assumed I knew what they needed. I was wrong.
3. I ignored the signup-to-paying gap
I celebrated 500 signups instead of asking: "Why aren't these people paying?"
The biggest lesson? Talk to 10 users before you ship anything.
I eventually rebuilt clienthunter.ai with a different approach: real conversations first, features second. Now I understand why people convert, not just why they sign up.
Getting people to your tool is one thing. Getting them to pay is entirely different. I spent so much time on "growth" that I forgot to solve the actual problem—which was never the tool itself, it was understanding the buyer's psychology.
The question I should've asked from day one: "What would make you pull out your credit card right now?"
Not "what features do you want?" Not "would you use this?"—but the actual trigger for a purchase decision.
Has anyone else experienced this conversion gap in B2B SaaS? Would love to hear what's worked for you.
How did you field users? What tactics did you use for publicity?
This resonates a lot. I'm in a similar spot — just built a competitor tracking tool for SaaS founders and trying to find my first paying customers. Did you try any outreach or just waited for organic signups?
One thing I keep noticing with AI SaaS tools is that signups are often driven by curiosity, not buying intent.
People think:
“this looks interesting, I’ll try it later”
—not:
“I need this badly enough to pay today.”
Especially in AI lead gen, where users have already seen a lot of similar tools.
Sometimes the biggest conversion issue isn’t traffic or even features, but whether the first session creates enough clarity and trust for someone to believe:
“this could realistically save me time or make me money.”
A lot of products lose people in that gap between signup and first meaningful outcome.
Curious what your onboarding looked like during those first 30 days.
You answered your own question, If you market to everyone you market to no one.
I'd suggest to refine your understanding on your specific market and ICP, and narrow your positioning towards it.
Other than that I can only reinforce what you've said yourself; Get feedback & iterate, and understand a prospect and a customer aren't the same thing...
There's some irony in the fact you're selling a lead generation tool, and it itself gets many leads but at a low conversion rate
Good luck man!
500 signups with almost no conversion is usually the moment founders realize attention and buying intent are completely different markets.
A lot of B2B AI tools can generate curiosity now.
Very few generate enough trust, specificity, or urgency to justify a payment decision.
“Lead gen for B2B companies” is broad enough that users can project anything onto it during signup — but when it’s time to pay, the positioning suddenly has to become concrete.
That’s also where naming starts mattering more than most founders expect.
Generic AI-growth style brands tend to convert curiosity better than commitment.
A tighter brand like Beryxa.com or Xevoa.com would fit this category much better if the product direction keeps moving toward serious B2B infrastructure rather than experimentation.
The 0.6% conversion rate isn't a product problem yet—it's a data segmentation problem. Those 500 signups likely fall into 3-4 distinct personas with completely different reasons for not paying (wrong ICP, didn't activate, pricing friction, wrong use case). Before rebuilding features, I'd pull your signups and tag each one: company size, acquisition channel, did they try the core workflow, did they return more than once. That segmentation usually reveals 1-2 cohorts where conversion should be high—and those are your 10 conversations worth having. I help SaaS founders set up this kind of customer data pipeline regularly. Also put together a free SQL diagnostic guide that covers segmentation queries you can run on your own DB → https://growthwithshehroz.gumroad.com/l/vgiex