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Owned by Connor

SaaS Life

92 members • Free

🚀 SaaS Founders Community: Connect & grow with builders at all levels. 📊 Learn proven SaaS SOP's & strategy. 🎯 Fastest way to PMF & beyond!

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Skoolers

174.6k members • Free

18 contributions to SaaS Life
Podcast and workshop guests
Hello everyone! I finally sorted an agreement with my company to allow me to spend 2 days a week on the Skool community. I therefore really want to start growing this community but in order to do that - I need some help. Firstly, I need to know what type of areas you are all interested in? In other words, where do you think your current bottlenecks that are preventing you from going to the next stages are? Lastly, in order for me to get to grips with were you all currently are, can you please select which stage your product is in below:
Poll
7 members have voted
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Huge LinkedIn response rates
Hi everyone, I thought that I’d share some data from Monty (my SaaS company) that we have gathered over the last 60 days. Our sales team switched from sending DM’s to using voice notes. At first the response rates were in the low 30’s but in 60 days my team have refined their approach and gotten to a 60-70%! Roughly 2/3 ICP’s responding to us - HUGE. We also started at 1 in 66 outreaches booking a call. We are now at 1 in 19. Our takeaway is that LinkedIn is being filled with so much AI garbage that the only way to cut through is with human first approaches. The irony - I’m not sure AI bros will approve. I thought that I’d share just incase you haven’t tried this approach. It’s working so well that we are thinking about ditching our email outreach team and doubling down on this!
0 likes • 14d
@Kieran Gray We tried 🙈 We had a 50% better response rate when a/b testing with humans!
How My Clothes-Obsessed Ex Accidentally Showed Me the Secret to Product Validation
Earlier this year, I quit my job to build a SaaS. My first idea flopped. Why? Because I didn’t truly validate the market or figure out how I’d stand out against competitors. And when I say validate, I mean I barely scratched the surface. One afternoon, I glanced up from my laptop and asked my girlfriend at the time, “Scrolling TikTok again?” But she wasn’t. She was hunting for the perfect brown jacket. Over the following weeks, I got curious about her process. Here’s how she shopped: - She defined exactly what she wanted (Brown Long Jacket, quality fabric, specific look). - She scoured the web and saved options to wish lists. - She’d use those wish lists to get notified when items went on sale—sometimes that even prioritized which jacket she bought first. - She compared them over weeks—sometimes months. - And only then, she made her purchase. At one point she told me: “I only want to buy one brown jacket for life, so it needs to be pretty much perfect.” That was her standard—one jacket for life. A high bar, maybe unrealistic, but it fueled her obsessive search online and in-store. That’s when it really dawned on me: she had spent more time researching a single jacket than I had spent validating my entire SaaS idea. I’d already sunk around $25k into it, while she wouldn’t have spent more than $1,000 on the jacket. The contrast was sobering—she put weeks into a single decision, and I had thrown money and time at mine in a rush. Her approach wasn’t complicated. It was just careful, consistent, and intentional. She explored with curiosity until she was confident in her decision. Meanwhile, I had rushed headfirst into building—without even a fraction of that effort. The lesson? If you want to validate a product, act like you’re buying your one jacket for life. Set high standards, dig deep, track signals (like wish list alerts), compare the options, and only commit when you’re sure you’ve found the right fit.
How My Clothes-Obsessed Ex Accidentally Showed Me the Secret to Product Validation
1 like • 14d
Great contribution! Product validation is basically research and development. Commonly it’s viewed as ‘selling before you build’. Which is bull shit. It’s a long drawn out process of subtle feedback loops and product iteration!
486 Backlinks For Your SaaS!
Good morning everyone! I woke up to some strange news - my Reddit account was banned! They gave no explanation but my last post was about my partners young boy with cancer. So my only thoughts are that someone was offended by that. I had 2,869 karma votes and I was a top poster in 5 communities with over 200,000 people. So it sucks but I am going to challenge myself to grow it to that stage again! In the meantime, my friend sent me this and I have compiled it for you all: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1UX5vjlalUF95onSv-JrPOsypqvU0An-13bjJ59PGABI/edit?usp=sharing This is a list of 486 free high DA directories, forums etc. These sites allow you to both share your SaaS publicly to gain attention and gain high quality backlinks to your site! Hopefully you find it useful! - Connor
1 like • 17d
@Eric Ingvarsson I've had to start a new Reddit. I made a Micro-SaaS two days ago (whilst my wife was watching some reality TV sh*t). It basically allows me to create lead magnets super quickly. So I am going to rebuild the Reddit (I am pretty good when I am committed to it and I have a strategy) whilst including lead magnets. I have integrated Mailchimp, Mailerlite and Zapier so that when a user downloads a resource, they will get a notification about the Skool community! :) The apps called magflow.gift and anyone can use it (it's free as I built it for myself)
1 like • 17d
@Eric Ingvarsson In my experience, just talk about why your lead magnet helps, explain the story and then just sprinkle a CTA in at the end. Make sure that the tone of the text isn't salesy - people prefer stories and honesty over everything so make that the tone of your piece. In regards to sharing it - Reddit is the obvious place but founders communities (particularly on Facebook) also get a reasonable amount of traffic.
SaaS API advice
Hey everyone! I've been loving reading everyone's insights and thier SaaS journeys. I've run into some issues and if love anyone's advice on what I should do: Some quick context: I'm building a SaaS tool for a trading card game that will allow users to fairly score and compare decks (even if they aim to do 2 completely different things). My initial gameplan is to run B2B and let other platforms use my tool via an API (to get my name out there before I run my own platform). 1. I have no idea if the API I have set up is built correctly for what I want it to do. (I'm not too code savvy) 2. I haven't had any luck getting B2B responses to my emails I appreciate any help on these issues and I hope you all have a great day!
0 likes • 20d
Welcome! How many outbound B2B outreaches are you doing a day?
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Connor Jones
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@connor-jones-9890
Built my first SaaS from scratch → now 7-figure valuation & 8,000+ users. I created SaaS Life to give new founders a community I wish I had.

Active 19h ago
Joined Aug 24, 2025
London