Hey IH đź‘‹
I’m Julien, founder of Linkeme — a SaaS that automates social media content for solo founders and small teams.
Our goal from day one was clear:
Build something invisible.
Set your brand voice.
Review a few suggestions.
Then Linkeme takes over — generating, scheduling, and publishing posts weekly.
You don’t even have to log in.
Great in theory.
But then I hit a problem I hadn’t expected:
“If the product works so well… they forget it exists.”
Automation is a blessing.
But it also means:
Users don’t log in
They don’t explore features
They don’t check results
They stop feeling connected to the product
They still benefit…
But when the trial ends, or when something breaks, they’re already emotionally checked out.
That’s what I’m facing now.
Light rhythm emails — not marketing, just “here’s what Linkeme posted for you this week”
Visual summaries — a mini digest with thumbnails + stats
Small nudges — a monthly “Want to tweak your tone?” prompt
Occasional surprises — like new templates or post types, delivered automatically
The goal is not to bring them “back” —
It’s to keep them feeling like the product is quietly moving forward with them.
Has anyone here faced this with a “background” product?
How do you stay visible enough — without becoming annoying?
Do you send updates? Automate check-ins?
Have you seen something that made you, as a user, feel engaged with a tool you rarely touch?
Any examples (good or bad) are welcome — this feels like a subtle but important challenge.
Julien
Great insight, Julien. When a product works too well in the background, subtle value reminders like visual recaps or tone suggestions can keep users emotionally connected without being intrusive.
nice work