"We built 1,000+ SaaS products — here are the 7 lessons that actually mattered" from Reddit r/saas, ranked #24. By Codeblix_Ltd, 0 score, 4 comments. Data from Daily Trends.
We built 1,000+ SaaS products — here are the 7 lessons that actually mattered
- Rank
- 24
- Subreddit
- r/saas
- Author
- Codeblix_Ltd
- Score
- 0
- Comments
- 4
- Posted
- 4/13/2026, 10:13:17 PM
- Snapshot
- 4/14/2026, 12:00:00 AM
Links
Content
Hey r/SaaS, Our team at Codeblix has spent the last couple of years building over 1,000 SaaS marketplace and AI platform products from Mauritius. Yeah, 1,000+. Not all of them are winners, far from it. But along the way we learned some things the hard way that I wish someone had told us earlier. **1. Ship ugly, ship early.** Our first 50 products were rough. Like, really rough. But the data from those early launches told us more in a week than three months of planning ever could. The products that succeeded were never the ones we polished the longest. **2. The market tells you what to build.** We stopped trying to predict what people wanted. Instead, we launched fast and let usage patterns guide iteration. Our best-performing products were ones we almost didn't build. **3. Niche beats broad every time.** Generic tools get generic adoption. The products that took off were the ones solving a very specific pain for a very specific audience. "CRM for freelance photographers" beats "CRM...