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Ask HN: Need help narrowing down micro-SaaS idea

3 pointsby boeing767over 6 years ago
I&#x27;ve narrowed down my micro-SaaS idea to the following:<p>-B2B for non-technical customers -Something customers already pay for -Preferably something I have some domain knowledge in -Simplified&#x2F;dumbed-down app for a niche within a lucrative market -Something I can code part-time and get off the ground on my own<p>I&#x27;m considering 2 ideas:<p>1) Scheduling app for business with shift workers, specifically restaurants<p>2) Online rent collection without the bloat for small property owners&#x2F;accidental landlords<p>Only reason I chose 1 is that I work at a restaurant. We use HotSchedules. It&#x27;s actually pretty good, space is kind of crowded, but I guess I&#x27;ll try to differentiate on UI&#x2F;UX.<p>2 is something I might use personally too, as now I&#x27;m living in a property that uses the &quot;mail a check each month&quot; system for rent. There are tons of solutions out there, but I suspect there&#x27;s an under-served market of non-technical landlords that find the full-suite solutions overwhelming and just want a &quot;set up once, forget about it&quot; online system. Just a theory.<p>When I browse the forums, seems like landlords really only care about online rent collection and applicant screening, while the rest are &quot;good to haves&quot; (e.g. maintenance requests, property listing, bookkeeping, etc.). I&#x27;m planning to build an MVP with just the online rent collection feature first, charge per transaction, try to differentiate on UI&#x2F;UX.<p>Am I crazy to just basically dedicate months to creating stripped-down clones of existing solutions and think that it&#x27;s possible to get traction regardless? Am I wrong to think that, you don&#x27;t need to be significantly better (or even better) than existing competitors to get some market share? I&#x27;m not trying to &quot;win&quot; here, just trying to build up a good number of customers to live off of.<p>I guess the essential question is, can I do fewer features with simpler UI and still get <i>some</i> customers for me as a solo founder who wants location-independent income?

2 comments

cloogshicerover 6 years ago
I&#x27;d go on Craigslist or something and talk to landlords first, preferably in person. Try to figure out if they&#x27;re actually interested in buying, and don&#x27;t write a single line of code before you have an actual sale (have them pay you cash if necessary). If you&#x27;re not sure what to ask I&#x27;d recommend the book &quot;The Mom Test&quot; (not affiliated to it). The basic gist is that you need to be careful which questions to ask so you don&#x27;t bias the person you&#x27;re questioning. For an obvious example think of going to your mom and telling her in an excited tone of voice &quot;Hey mom I have this great idea, what do you think?&quot;, it&#x27;ll probably be really hard for her to tell you that she&#x27;d never pay for that idea. Same applies to potential customers.<p>Anyways, I&#x27;m in the same boat as you (I&#x27;m looking for the exact same kind of problem as you), so if you wanna bounce some ideas, shoot me an email: a (dot) v (dot) f (at-sign) gmx (dot) at
quickthrower2over 6 years ago
I&#x27;d do more market research before building anything. 2 sounds more promising as you have identified a problem. There is no problem in 1.<p>So I suggest go talk to some landlords and rental agents to get more information on that market.