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I just launched SnipBox - a simple clipboard manager for macOS (free for 10 clips)

Hey everyone! 👋

So… I finally hit publish on something I’ve been hacking on for the past few months - SnipBox.
It’s a small clipboard manager for macOS that keeps your copied stuff organized.

The idea came after I once again lost a copied code snippet I needed 10 minutes later 😩
macOS still only remembers one copied item. I couldn’t believe it.

So I built SnipBox to fix that.

Right now it:

  • Keeps your last clips handy (free for up to 10)
  • Lets you search through past copies
  • Works quietly in the background
  • Stores everything locally and syncs to iCloud

I made it free for light users and added an optional upgrade ($3.99/month or $19.90/year) for unlimited history.
Mostly just to cover updates and coffee ☕️

It’s live on the Mac App Store here 👇
https://apps.apple.com/dk/app/snipbox-clipboard-manager/id6752333934?mt=12

Not doing any ads or marketing yet — just trying to see if it spreads organically among Mac users who actually need it.

If you try it, I’d really appreciate your honest thoughts.
What annoys you most about copy/paste on macOS?
Or what would make something like this useful to you personally?

Happy to share numbers later if people are curious how it performs.

#macOS, #indiehackers, #bootstrapping, #productivity, #showyourproduct

on October 9, 2025
  1. 2

    A fantastic example of scratching your own it.Solving that specific, repeatable pain of losing a copied code snippet is a great hook. You've built a clean product with a logical pricing tier.
    However, relying on passive organic spread for the paid upgrade is a tactical mistake that misinterprets the urgency needed for this kind of small utility purchase.

    The bottleneck isn't the Mac App Store algorithm; it's the free-to-paid conversion path.
    You need to guarantee the conversion right when the user hits the free limit. The superior strategic lever is using surgical, high-scarcity messaging that maximizes the immediate financial gain.

    The Real Win: Use the data you have (when a user copies their 11th item) to trigger highly personalized, high-value messaging.
    Don't just show a generic paywall. Use the upgrade message and the targeted upgrade emails to trigger the user's specific, original pain point (losing Clip #11) in that moment. Remind them of the cost of losing that specific piece of data.

    That precision in the messaging, guaranteeing the painful problem is solved forever: is the only way to convert a user from a happy free user to a guaranteed subscriber. You need to engineer that purchase decision with Conversion Certainty.

    1. 1

      This is gold - thank you for taking the time to write that.

      You’re absolutely right. Right now, the upgrade path is pretty soft - it just shows a simple paywall when users hit the 10-clip limit.

      I like your framing of “Conversion Certainty” - that idea of catching the user right in their moment of frustration (clip #11) and tying it back to the original pain they downloaded SnipBox to solve makes a ton of sense.

      I’ve been thinking about testing that exact trigger with contextual messaging - something like:
      “You’ve just hit your limit - don’t lose this clip. Unlock unlimited history and never lose a snippet again.”

      I’ll definitely experiment with that kind of more emotional, real-time nudge. Appreciate the insight! 🙏

      1. 1

        That is a brilliant instinct to test the trigger at the exact point of loss (Clip #11). You are already ahead of 99% of founders by prioritizing Loss Aversion messaging over a generic paywall.
        However, let's inject a final layer of Guaranteed Revenue Conversion into that message.

        The Current Copy: "You’ve just hit your limit - don’t lose this clip. Unlock unlimited history and never lose a snippet again."

        The Surgical Tweak: "You’ve just hit your limit—don't lose this valuable clip. Stop paying the cognitive cost of lost snippets forever. Unlock Conversion Certainty for less than a latte."

        Why the Tweak: Your original pain point was lost code/snippets (high value). The tweak moves the focus from losing the clip to stopping the hidden, recurring financial and cognitive cost of having to re-type or search for the snippet again. It turns a $3.99 expense into a $3.99 guarantee against future business distraction and time-waste. That is the language that converts a founder immediately.

        That should give you a significant spike in subscription conversion velocity.

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