2
6 Comments

Would you pay for a product that helps you feel seen, or only appreciate it?

I’m exploring a product idea and I’d love honest feedback from people who’ve built consumer products.

The core problem is around matrescence: the identity shift that happens after becoming a mother. In early conversations and a small poll, the strongest signals were not “I need more parenting advice” or “I need another mom group.” They were more like:

  1. I wish someone checked in on me, not just the baby
  2. I want help understanding whether what I’m feeling is normal
  3. I want something low-friction, not another app or discussion-heavy community

The product idea is a WhatsApp-native companion for that transition. Not therapy, not medical care, not crisis support, and not a social network. More like an ongoing check-in that remembers context over time and reflects it back, so a mother doesn’t have to explain herself from scratch every time.

What I’m trying to figure out is whether this is:

  1. a real paid consumer product
  2. something that should be packaged as a structured program/journey
  3. or one of those ideas people find meaningful, but wouldn’t actually pay for

That’s my main fear: that it may create emotional resonance, but not enough repeated value to become essential.

A few questions I’d love feedback on:

  1. Does this sound like a sharp enough problem, or still too “nice to have”?
  2. Does “memory + check-ins + normalization” feel truly differentiated, or does it collapse into “why not just use ChatGPT?”
  3. If this worked, would you expect the best business model to be: subscription or guided program or concierge / human-assisted or something else?
  4. What are the strongest reasons this would fail?

I’m especially interested in feedback from people who’ve built subscription products, emotionally sensitive products, or products where “feeling understood” was part of the value.

Would really appreciate sharp skepticism.

posted to Icon for group Ideas and Validation
Ideas and Validation
on June 2, 2026
  1. 1

    Hello,
    The problem is real and significantly under-addressed. But your main concern is legitimate: emotional resonance alone is not enough to create a paying habit.

    What strikes me is that the WhatsApp approach is smart because it removes the friction of adopting a new app. However, it creates another problem. WhatsApp is not perceived as a private and structured space. For a topic this intimate, the medium matters just as much as the message.

    Regarding your business model: a subscription is likely to work better than a guided program in the short term for this type of need. Matrescence has no clearly defined endpoint, and an eight-week program underestimates the actual duration of the transition. A monthly subscription with the ability to pause feels more honest and is likely to generate better retention.

    As for the most convincing failure risk: timing. A mother in the first weeks after giving birth has very little energy to evaluate a new product. If you miss the onboarding window, you lose her. The acquisition channel should reach her before childbirth, not after.

    I am building a product myself around an emotionally complex topic that is difficult to validate, and I recognize exactly the tension you describe between emotional resonance and real-world usage.

    1. 1

      Thank you so much. This really helps.

      What channels would you suggest for user acquisition? Any channels that worked the best for you?

      1. 1

        Honestly, my product is still in the validation phase, so I don't have any proven acquisition channels to share.

        But for your specific case, this is how I would think about it:

        Timing is everything. You need to reach these women before childbirth, not after. That naturally points toward:

        • Prenatal classes: partnerships with midwives or doulas who could mention the product.
        • Facebook groups for expectant mothers: they are active, segmented by due date, and members tend to trust one another.
        • Maternity podcasts : an audience that is already engaged with the topic, and a long-form format that allows you to explain a complex subject.

        What I would avoid: post-partum channels. A woman with a newborn simply doesn't have the bandwidth to evaluate a new tool.

        The ideal channel is one that reaches her while she is still pregnant and beginning to think about what comes next.

  2. 1

    I think the risk is that “feeling seen” is emotionally strong but commercially vague.

    The sharper paid product probably is not “a companion for mothers.” That may get appreciation but not consistent payment. The stronger frame might be a structured transition support journey for the first 90 days after birth, where the mother gets check-ins, reflection, normalization, and a sense of progress through a very specific life stage.

    That also helps answer the ChatGPT objection. If this is just open-ended conversation, ChatGPT is a serious substitute. If it is a guided postpartum identity journey with memory, timing, emotional pattern recognition, and low-friction WhatsApp check-ins, then it becomes more differentiated.

    I would test it as a paid guided program first, not a subscription. Something like a 4-week or 8-week WhatsApp journey is easier to buy because it has a clear beginning, promise, and outcome.

    The biggest failure reason is not lack of emotional resonance. It is that mothers may value it in the moment but not see it as urgent enough to pay for unless the promise is packaged around a specific painful transition.

    I’d validate with one question: would a new mother pay upfront for “4 weeks of emotional check-ins after birth so you feel less alone and more normal in the transition,” or does she only say it sounds meaningful?

    1. 1

      Thank you so much. This really helps. We are starting with a pilot with few moms to train our product and to also understand the willingness to pay. Would you also guide on the channels for user acquisition in this case? In my personal opinion, reddit is quite slow. Facebook groups, whatsapp communities etc could be leveraged. But would like to hear from you.

      1. 1

        Yes, I would not rely on Reddit as the main channel here.

        For this kind of product, trust matters more than reach. New mothers are unlikely to pay from a cold post unless the product is introduced inside a context that already feels safe.

        The stronger channels are probably:

        small WhatsApp mom groups
        postpartum doulas or lactation consultants
        mom-focused Instagram micro-creators
        local parenting communities
        hospital/pregnancy class networks
        Facebook groups only if the post is framed as a pilot, not a product pitch

        I’d also avoid pitching it as “AI companion” in acquisition. The entry point should feel more like a guided postpartum support pilot for the first weeks after birth.

        If useful, I can put together a short written user acquisition plan for the pilot: best first channels, exact outreach angle, pilot invite message, and how to test willingness to pay without making it feel salesy.

        Share your email if you want me to send the details privately.

Trending on Indie Hackers
Your build-in-public audience is not your market. I learned the difference the slow way. User Avatar 197 comments I built a WhatsApp AI bot for doctors in Peru — launched 3 weeks ago, 0 paying customers, and stuck waiting for Meta to approve my app User Avatar 62 comments Built a "stocks as football cards" thing. 5 days in, my launch tweet got 7 views. What am I missing? User Avatar 33 comments From broke and burned out as a PM, to launching my SaaS and optimizing my health User Avatar 32 comments Why Claude Skills Are Becoming Important for Tech Careers User Avatar 24 comments I kept starting projects and dropping them. So I built a system that wouldn’t let me User Avatar 23 comments