"I'm testing a dev subscription for lean SaaS teams — one task at a time, 48hr delivery. Does this solve a real problem?" from Reddit r/saas, ranked #23. By overDos33, 1 score, 1 comments. Data from Daily Trends.
I'm testing a dev subscription for lean SaaS teams — one task at a time, 48hr delivery. Does this solve a real problem?
- Rank
- 23
- Subreddit
- r/saas
- Author
- overDos33
- Score
- 1
- Comments
- 1
- Posted
- 3/25/2026, 10:07:31 PM
- Snapshot
- 3/26/2026, 12:00:00 AM
Links
Content
Been running a dev agency for a few years and kept noticing the same pattern with smaller clients: they didn't need a €20K project. They needed 3-4 things built per month, reliably, without having to find and manage a freelancer every time. So we're testing a productized model: * Submit one task at a time via a shared board * Get it delivered within 48 hours with a Loom walkthrough * Fixed monthly price, pause or cancel anytime * Same developer every time — no re-onboarding Positioning it against the frustration of "I've spent $400/month on AI tools and still have a half-built product" because AI generates code but doesn't own the task end to end. Honest question for this community: would you actually use something like this, or is there a reason you'd still go freelancer/agency? What would make you trust it or not trust it? Not selling anything here genuinely trying to understand if the model fits how people actually work.