Hey IH! I just launched Dealpad on Product Hunt today.
I built it because every CRM I tried was built for teams, not individuals. HubSpot, Salesforce — way too much setup for one person who just wants to track their deals.
Dealpad is a lightweight Kanban-style pipeline tracker:
Free plan (5 deals) + Pro at $9/mo.
Would love honest feedback from the IH community!
Nice clean home page. Simple wins.
I appreciate the simplicity of Dealpad, as many solo salespeople can get bogged down in feature-rich CRMs that don't cater to their needs. I've seen similar success with niche digital products, such as the Pine Script strategies we offer at propfirmpinescripts.com, where a focused solution can resonate with a specific audience. What inspired you to choose a Kanban-style pipeline tracker, and do you plan on adding any integrations with popular sales tools in the future?
I appreciate the problem you're trying to solve with Dealpad, as many solo salespeople are indeed overwhelmed by the complexity of traditional CRMs. Your solution's simplicity and focus on essential features like follow-up reminders and weighted pipeline value are likely to resonate with your target audience. How do you plan to reach and educate solo salespeople about the benefits of using a dedicated CRM like Dealpad, similar to how niche digital product stores like propfirmpinescripts.com effectively target a specific group of traders with tailored solutions?
I think it's great that you've identified a specific pain point for solo salespeople and built a lightweight solution to address it, and I'm curious to know how you plan to reach your target audience and differentiate Dealpad from other minimalistic CRM solutions. Your focus on simplicity and ease of use is reminiscent of how we approach creating Pine Script strategies for traders at propfirmpinescripts.com, where we prioritize ease of implementation and use. How do you envision Dealpad evolving to meet the needs of its users as it grows and scales?
I appreciate the simplicity of Dealpad, addressing a specific pain point for solo salespeople who don't need the complexity of larger CRMs. It's interesting that you've taken a similar approach to what we've done at propfirmpinescripts.com, where we cater to a niche audience with specific needs, in our case, futures traders using TradingView Pine Script. What motivated you to choose a Kanban-style pipeline tracker over other visualization methods for Dealpad?
Clean execution. I like the “solo-first CRM” positioning.
One thing I’ve noticed with these tools is the real challenge isn’t tracking deals, it’s maintaining consistency in follow-ups over time without the user actively managing the system every day.
Curious how you’re thinking about preventing it from becoming just another “manual update app” after the initial excitement wears off?
The "dead-simple" positioning is hard to stick to once users start requesting features. What's your rule for deciding what NOT to build? Curious how you're drawing the line.
Solo salespeople are honestly the most underserved segment in the CRM space — most tools are built for teams with way more features than one person needs. Love the focused approach here.
Congrats on the launch, Dealpad! 🚀 The UI looks incredibly clean, and the problem you're solving for solo salespeople is very real.Quick technical feedback: Since it’s hosted on Vercel, make sure your mobile-first rendering and Core Web Vitals are fully optimized to capture organic traffic on Google later on. Tech tools often suffer from heavy JS payload on mobile.Rooting for you on Product Hunt! 📈
This is a clean wedge. Most CRMs add structure for managers, reporting, teams, permissions, and forecasting, but a solo salesperson mainly needs one thing: know what deals are active, what needs follow-up, and what is likely to close.
The Kanban angle makes sense because it keeps the product close to the way a solo seller actually thinks.
The part I would pressure-test early is the brand frame. Dealpad is clear, but it also sounds very close to a lightweight deal board. If the product stays as a simple pipeline tracker, that works. But if you expand into reminders, stats, follow-up logic, prospecting, notes, or AI-assisted sales workflow, the name may start feeling smaller than the product.
Before more Product Hunt traffic, users, and search memory lock in, I’d think about whether the brand should carry the broader solo-sales workspace direction.
Xevoa .com would fit that direction well because it feels more like a modern sales workflow platform than just a place to store deals.