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I launched a Windows utility for a problem that kept stealing 10 minutes at a time

I think some of the best software opportunities are hiding inside tiny recurring annoyances.

Not giant painful problems.
Not urgent problems.
Just the kind of thing that keeps quietly taxing your attention every few days.

For me, that problem was folder cleanup on Windows.

Downloads would slowly turn into a junk drawer.
Desktop would disappear under screenshots and exports.
Work folders would drift back into chaos even after I cleaned them.

The frustrating part was not that cleanup was hard.
It was that it kept coming back.

So I built SortSage, a Windows app that organizes files automatically with rules, rename support, and duplicate detection.

The product positioning that lands fastest is probably:
"Hazel for Windows."

But the real promise is simpler:
set the rules once, stop repeating the cleanup forever.

One thing I am betting on pretty heavily is that "pay once, not monthly" is a stronger story here than trying to maximize ARPU with another subscription. If the user is already annoyed by a recurring task, recurring billing feels like the wrong emotional shape for the solution.

So far, the biggest lesson has been that the boringness of the problem is actually a strength.

Nobody needs to be convinced folder mess exists.
They have already lived it.

That makes the copy clearer, the SEO clearer, and the audience easier to find:

  • automatic file organizer for Windows
  • organize Downloads folder Windows
  • Hazel for Windows
  • File Juggler alternative

I’m curious how other founders think about this:

Have you found that small recurring annoyances convert better than bigger, more ambitious ideas because the pain is easier to recognize immediately?

Product is here if useful:
https://enlightpixel.gumroad.com/l/xopsr

on July 5, 2026
  1. 2

    I like the distinction you're making between solving a dramatic problem and eliminating a recurring one.

    The interesting thing about recurring annoyances is that people don't need to be convinced they exist—they've already experienced the cost dozens of times. That usually makes the value proposition much easier to communicate than a solution looking for a problem.

    1. 1

      Exactly. I think that's why "small" problems can make surprisingly good products. The pain isn't intense, but it's repeated often enough that people already understand the value of removing it. You don't have to educate them about the problem, you just have to show that your solution fits naturally into their workflow.

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