In May 2025, I rage quit flight search.
Not because flights were expensive, but because pricing felt opaque, dynamic, and unfair.
Same route, same date, same time window… yet different prices depending on where/how often searched. After checking what felt like a unending OTAs, I was frustrated by what I can only describe as digital discrimination in airfare.
The moment CannyFlyer was born.....
One day, while digging for cheaper fares, we noticed something interesting:
Group bookings can be ~15–35% cheaper.
That triggered a question:
Why is “group intent” rewarded, but individual travelers are stuck playing the refresh-lottery?
So we formed a concept:
That day, CannyFlyer got its first heartbeat......
The team
We were three people building from scratch:
May → October 2025: Roadmap → MVP → deployment → first 100 users
In the first 5 months, we did everything end-to-end:
By October 2025, we reached our first 100 users.
But it was painful. The hardest parts were:
The turning point: “Learn & Apply” (Oct → Nov 2025)
From October 2025, we stopped guessing and started learning.
We took help from industry experts people who understand airline distribution, demand, incentives, and constraints. We adopted one simple operating system:
Learn → Apply → Iterate.
That single shift sped up everything.
Nov 2025 → Jan 2026: 1,000+ users + airline partnerships
From November 2025 to January 2026, we scaled to:
What we learned (the real lessons)
Where I’d love your advice
If you’ve built marketplaces / travel / airline pricing / bidding systems:
How would you design the “supply side” onboarding and incentive model so airlines participate consistently (without harming user trust)?
And what would you track as the one metric that proves real PMF here?
🫡🫡 great
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Nice work👍
Great work!
Give a try to my Reddit Extension. It's a Chrome extension called Pulse of Reddit that basically acts like my own alert system for Reddit.
Anytime someone posts something with keywords I care about like 'looking for a designer' or 'best SEO tool' it pings me right away. It’s saved me so much time and helped me hop into threads while they’re still fresh.
If you’re tired of manual digging and want to catch those conversations early, I’d really recommend giving it a look.
It’s free to start and super simple to set up.
Website:
pulseofreddit.com
Thank you ! Check out the webpage : cannyflyer.com for group discounts on flight tickets .
Give a try to my Reddit Extension. It's a Chrome extension called Pulse of Reddit that basically acts like my own alert system for Reddit.
Anytime someone posts something with keywords I care about like 'looking for a designer' or 'best SEO tool' it pings me right away. It’s saved me so much time and helped me hop into threads while they’re still fresh.
If you’re tired of manual digging and want to catch those conversations early, I’d really recommend giving it a look.
It’s free to start and super simple to set up.
Website:
pulseofreddit.com
Interesting approach to the demand aggregation problem. The "group intent = better pricing" mechanic is clever — airlines get predictable demand signals, users get transparency.
To your questions:
On supply-side onboarding:
The chicken-and-egg here is real. A few thoughts:
On the one PMF metric:
I'd track "% of groups that receive at least one airline offer." That proves both sides are engaging. Conversion to bookings matters, but first you need proof that the marketplace mechanics work.
Curious: what's your current group-to-offer ratio? And how are you handling the cold start — do users see empty groups, or do you seed with real demand somehow?
Give a try to my Reddit Extension. It's a Chrome extension called Pulse of Reddit that basically acts like my own alert system for Reddit.
Anytime someone posts something with keywords I care about like 'looking for a designer' or 'best SEO tool' it pings me right away. It’s saved me so much time and helped me hop into threads while they’re still fresh.
If you’re tired of manual digging and want to catch those conversations early, I’d really recommend giving it a look.
It’s free to start and super simple to set up.
Website:
pulseofreddit.com
Great story, Raghav! I really resonate with your point that 'UI/UX is trust.' I’m currently building a hiring platform (Bossr) that tries to fix transparency in recruitment, and I see the same pattern: users drop off the second they feel like the 'system' is playing games with them.
Give a try to my Reddit Extension. It's a Chrome extension called Pulse of Reddit that basically acts like my own alert system for Reddit.
Anytime someone posts something with keywords I care about like 'looking for a designer' or 'best SEO tool' it pings me right away. It’s saved me so much time and helped me hop into threads while they’re still fresh.
If you’re tired of manual digging and want to catch those conversations early, I’d really recommend giving it a look.
It’s free to start and super simple to set up.
Website:
pulseofreddit.com
Where I’d love your advice…..
If you’ve built marketplaces / travel / airline pricing / bidding systems:
How would you design the “supply side” onboarding and incentive model so airlines participate consistently (without harming user trust)?
And what would you track as the one metric that proves real PMF here?