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founder blind spot?
Many products are hard to explain in one sentence especially to their own founders
You live with the idea every day.
You know the problem deeply.
Things that make a good difference at a launch on Product Hunt
Whenever I browse product launches, I somehow subconsciously judge not only the product itself and its quality, but also the quality that is reflected in the effort the makers put into preparing it.
It may sound insignificant, but in my case, these things also make a significant difference:
Icon GIF at the launch it enlivens the overall impression and is dynamic
Quality graphics and video
First, a properly filled-out comment
Photos in the makers' profiles (it's less trustworthy for me when there's only the letter "J" or something similar)
Whether any of my contacts or acquaintances on the platform reacted to the launch
What makes you decide not to try a product?
There are plenty of tools that seem useful on paper, yet something makes us close the tab instantly.
Sometimes it s pricing, sometimes messaging, sometimes the onboarding feels unclear.
Often it s a gut feeling that s hard to explain.
Product Hunt, TLDR: A Comparison Guide
According to @Supabase's State of Startups 2025, founders follow newsletters like TLDR.
ICYMI Product Hunt isn t just a launch platform. It s also a collective of newsletters.
Do you think founders should talk more openly about projects that didn’t work?
We often see launch posts, milestones, and success stories.
What we don t see as much are honest breakdowns of products that quietly stalled or failed.
I feel there s a lot of learning hidden there about timing, assumptions, and trade-offs.
At what point does a side project stop being “just a side project”?
Many products start as experiments built at night or on weekends.
At first, there s no pressure just curiosity and momentum.
But at some point, expectations creep in: users, revenue goals, support, roadmap decisions.
Is “US-first” still the right default for AI products?
With today s tools, translation (UI, copy, even video) is no longer the hard part.
What slows us down instead are things like tax, legal compliance, hiring, support, payments sometimes even geopolitics. The moment users show up from a new country, a product problem turns into an operating one.
Is building founders’ social media personas becoming a new business? How does it cost?
The day before yesterday, I was looking at the profiles of founders and team members of Lovable, as well as other companies, e.g. Hubspot, and they all look pretty good.
Lately, I ve been getting offers to help grow LinkedIn profiles from several founders, and I m starting to feel like at least LinkedIn is hype.
When do you actually decide to go beyond English?
I keep going back and forth on this, so I m curious how others think about it.
At what point do you start taking non-English markets seriously?
only after you feel solid PMF in English?
when inbound users from certain regions show up?
by picking one market early (Japan, LatAm, etc.) and committing?
or do you just keep pushing it off to stay focused?
How would I approach Product Hunt in 2026?
We recently discussed the changes that took place on the platform in 2025, so it s clear that the approach to Product Hunt will need to evolve as well.
Some features were removed, others were added, but there are still opportunities to gain visibility.
🔥 Drop your tagline and I'll try to guess what your product is
A tagline is the first piece of content a user will see about your product on the leaderboard. It's so important that you get it right. You should be able to get a really solid idea of what your product is just by reading a handful of words.
In the spirit of forever optimising our taglines, I wanted to do a little experiment:
🔥 Drop your tagline and I'll try to guess what your product is
A tagline is the first piece of content a user will see about your product on the leaderboard. It's so important that you get it right. You should be able to get a really solid idea of what your product is just by reading a handful of words.
In the spirit of forever optimising our taglines, I wanted to do a little experiment:
A post mortem on YourStack



