Startups Feedback Fridays - A Friendly Feedback Exchange For Ideas and Products |
- Feedback Fridays - A Friendly Feedback Exchange For Ideas and Products
- I’m tired of reading the same FB advertising tips on the internet. So I interviewed two smart Belgian companies to make this one different.
- My startup is gaining traction, but I'm stuck on Wordpress using plugins and don't know what to do
- B2B Marketplace requires $2k+ transactions, but stripe limiting us? Anyone aware of alternatives?
- Delaware Corporation Annual Report -- Do I need to give a home address?
- What terms are best for a reseller of a SaaS?
- I would like to start a gaming lounge in my small town.
- Anybody use mixpanel? Is there a way to get the legacy/classic UI and filtering back, or modern equivalent to this?
- Products or APIs for tracking traffic we send to other sites?
- I am a... “1 man founder with an mvp, no marketing capital, no target niche, very little experience, no way to monetize until critical mass is reached”... should I just quit now or try & pray for a viral miracle??
- What is your experience hiring a consultant?
- Fundraising Thursdays - A Forum to Ask About Fundraising, Investors, Accelerators, and Other Sources of Capital
- Evaluating employees during a prolonged work-from-home period?
- I got offered options at work. What's this?
- Would you rather use a WP theme for Saas, or no-code platforms?(Bubble,Workflow)
- Trouble charging what product is worth
- Website + Mobile app or Webapp + Mobile app
- When do you need a data protection officer and how did you appoint yours?
- Trying to find a technical cofounder
- Anyone know where to find market/industry-specific data (economic indicators) online dating back to the 2008 financial crisis? Trying to build automated tool & need economic indicators
- I have a good idea, what’s next?
- Looking for general advice on my next steps in building this skincare startup
- Advice on supply chain?
Feedback Fridays - A Friendly Feedback Exchange For Ideas and Products Posted: 08 May 2020 06:07 AM PDT Welcome to this week's Feedback Thread. This is the place to request feedback on your ideas and products. Be sure to give feedback if you are requesting feedback. Equivalent exchange goes a long way towards reaching your own goals and it makes for a stronger community. Please use the following format:URL: Purpose of Startup: Technologies Used: Feedback Requested: Additional Comments: Post your site along with your stack and technologies used and receive feedback from the community. Please refrain from just posting a link and instead give us a bit of a background about your creation. Feel free to request general feedback or specific feedback in a certain area like user experience, usability, design, or code review. You can also find more support using instant chat on the /r/startups discord. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 08 May 2020 04:40 AM PDT Hey guys, It's really annoying to read the copycat tips all over the blogs. So this week I interviewed two smart Facebook ad experts to tell a different story. They answered a list of questions and explained their strategies and tips for growing and scaling-up with Facebook ads. These two are growing brands but they were recently in your shoes So I thought their real-life cases and examples could be useful for this community. Sweet warning: The post will be long (around 10 minute reading time). But I'm sure you'll get your instant ROI for your time investment. Read it if you're serious about Facebook advertising. I'll shortly describe the products, in the beginning, to give you the context to paint a clear picture. Here I go. Crimibox, Founder - JimmyCrimibox is doing a bloody good job. They're selling unsolved murder cases as a detective game. There are two versions of the game. The digital version: You're trying to solve the case on the internet. But it's super interesting with phone calls, Instagram stalking and many other interactive elements. The analog version: It's where things get real. You receive the case like a true detective and try to solve it by creating your own Sherlock mind map. So now you know the product, let's get to the interview. I hear you say "Who the fuck is this guy, I'm not reading unless it's Seth Godin", so I'll leave this screenshot here. Now you have a reason to read the rest. The interview.--> The Budget Crimibox target audience age is between 20 and 40. After experimenting with young platforms, he saw FB was outperforming all. Right now he's investing 85% of his media budget on FB ads. --> The goal of the campaigns. The conversion is the holy grail for Crimibox. Jimmy is only using newsfeed display ads. Straight to the most influential and valuable estate on Facebook. --> The audience The main focus of Crimibox is Belgium and the Netherlands. Before they got serious with Facebook advertising, Crimibox had a successful kickstart launched and had over 10k subscribers out of it. So they leveraged the force of lookalike audiences and retargeting a lot. Jimmy also using interests a lot. He found people who are interested in detectives such as Sherlock Holmes. Applied the same strategy for detective books, games and so on. --> How much money are you spending to validate your ad campaign? People usually test their Facebook ads with 5€ per day. That's what Jimmy did when he started but by the time Crimibox got enough $, he increased the daily budget to 20€. Why? Well, Jimmy claims that you can get more results and see the bigger differences between ad sets. If you use a 5€ budget the difference is not remarkable. So testing with bigger budget = bigger overview. --> How do you choose your creatives? He is following a unique path to do his own A/B test. The first week: He makes three versions of his Facebook ad creative with different pictures and keeps the rest of the elements the same. And shows them to the same audience. A: Picture 1 B: Picture 2 C: Picture 3 After a week, he chooses the best performing version. (version B). Then he takes the best performing picture. Then he creates three more creatives with the winning version but this time he only tests the copy. A: Picture B – Copy 1 B: Picture B- Copy 2 C: Picture B – Copy 3 After a week, the last version (C) was the winner of the copy test. Then in the third week, he tests the final version of the Facebook ad to see the outcome. If it's good, he goes all-in with the winner version and shows it to all the audiences. All advertising efforts laser-focused on 1 Facebook ad creative. --> Do you use certain psychological triggers in your copy or ads to make sure people will click? This is the part you'll get your ROI for clicking this post, heh. Jimmy says, "I think the success of the ad was because of social proof." Now check this Facebook ad: This picture was taken 3 days after the first appearance of the ad. Running for three days and got already 300 likes, 1.5k comments, shares and plus many people tagged each other. Social proof is a popular phenomenon: when people see all that likes, they get curious, join the herd and eventually it returns as ROI. And this is no luck, Jimmy did it intentionally. How? He found a way to stack the social proof Let's say you're going to create 5 different Facebook ad sets. You already set the first one up and it's running, now you're going to set up the others. Here you have the option to use the same ad creative in the rest of your ad sets. So what's the deal if you use the same ad creative? When you do that, all the likes, comments and shares merge into one ad creative. So if someone comments on the ad set 1, that comment applies to the rest of your ad sets. All the engagement numbers stack up and build a huge social proof post that boosts all of your ad sets. I don't have to say (yet I did) that this causes a snowball effect on social media. Remember, Jimmy chose his champion ad and used it for all campaigns. Get closer. He has 3 more tips and tricks under his sleeve. 1. Retargeting Hack You know Crimibox had a successful Kickstarter launch. The Kickstarter people are fanatic Crimibox supporters from day one. Knowing that Jimmy made a smart move there and showed his ads to them by retargeting them. The main focus here is not to sell, but to reap the maximum engagement. So for every new Facebook ad he creates, he first shows them to the retargeting audience to get that sweet social proof effect. After he gets a bit of traction, he starts to activate other audiences. We think this is quite an interesting way to use retargeting ads. 2. Long Copy Jimmy is a fan of storytelling and long copy. He uses a long copy to tell a story and drag readers to the crime scene. (It's working because the product is suitable to tell stories) 3. Usage of emoji. Crimibox also noticed a remarkable increase in attention, click rate and conversions when they use emojis such as detective emoji. Or in the Christmas season, they used the Christmas tree to make their ads more attractive. Notice the strategies Crimibox uses in the Facebook ad image, it's full of tips:
--> What is your daily budget and how do you scale up? Crimibox was spending 20€ daily per ad set. When the CAC (customer acquisition cost) was good, Jimmy decided to take action and increased the budget by 10€. But increasing the budget caused an increase in frequency and conversion rates were not as good as before. And the total daily budget got up to 800€! So he maneuvered back to 20€. He noticed that he couldn't increase the budget of ads so he figured out he needs more ad sets. But Jimmy was running out of "Detectives series and other interests." So they did something very experimental indeed. And targeted people who are between 20-40 and liked big cities such as Amsterdam, Brussels and so on. The result? New ads were converting at the same rate as all the others. Not so fun fact: In that, all in FB ads era, Crimibox had some problem with logistics and the team had to pack and sent 7-8K game boxes. So it's really hard-earned money. --> Do you have an ad sales funnel? Are you showing different ads to different audiences? Crimibox is showing the same ad to the warm and cold audience. They're not doing what the industry preaches and going straight for the kill (conversion). Why? Because that strategy is working for them. Here's what Jimmy says: "I read every article on Facebook Advertising but I discovered that this strategy works for Crimibox, so I'm going for it" So don't take this part as the ultimate truth, every brand and audience is different. --> How often do you change the creative of your Facebook ad campaign? If someone sees the same ad for the four times, Jimmy shutdowns the audience. Then he'll create a new creative or different ad and push a new version to the same target audience. --> Have you experimented with some new additions like 'direct to messenger'? Crimibox launched a kick-ass Kickstarter project by experimenting with new features of Facebook. They used Facebook Messenger and Manychat and prepared a FB chatbot quiz themed "Which detective is hidden inside" The assumption: If people are interested in knowing which kind of detective they are, they are potentially also interested in solving a murder case. So they asked several questions in a chatbot and helped them find out their inner detective. At the end of the quiz, we offer them to solve a murder case and direct them to the crime scene. This scene was a Kickstarter landing page. Crimibox increased its subscriber number from 2K to 10K in 15 days and successfully launched on Kickstarter. Why did this campaign work?
(Note: They didn't ask for any email address or contact information to not scare away people) Onwards to the next interview. QIQO, Founder - AmauryQIQO is an energy tea that helps people to beat the afternoon slump. It's also my favorite drink in the mornings because of its gentler than coffee. Both to your tummy and breath. Since tea and coffee are the competitors of QIQO, it's a hard product to advertise. But Amaury tested many things with Facebook ads and found some holes in the market, so he shared lots of learnings. --> The budget It's 100%. Because people don't really search a product like QIQO, so SEA(Search Engine Advertising) is not an option. --> What campaign structure do you use? QIQO's objective is always conversions. They saw lots of different results by doing awareness first then conversions campaigns before. But since QIQO is an impulse product, the first visit can also lead the conversions. That's why the target is always conversion. Ideally, it's even purchase conversions. Even though Facebook takes some time to optimize for the right audience, QIQO looking for purchase conversions. How do you decide on the placement of your ads? QIQO lets Facebook optimize the ads and decide where to put them. Amaury is not creating different versions (sizes) of creatives for Instagram and so on. They didn't see a big difference between vertical and horizontal ads, so they don't waste their energy on it. --> What's your targeting, how do you choose your audience? QIQO is still experimenting with interest audiences, although they had some trouble to find interest to target. Also, Amaury focuses a lot on lookalike audiences. They create lookalike audiences based on lifetime value and purchases from visitors. Then once they get a certain volume of a hit, they let Facebook decide who to target and that's usually a very broad audience. He claims, "Once your Facebook Pixel has enough data, it actually becomes quite good at finding those people." Once they spent 10K in a month and let Facebook decide and do its thing. The results were ok, but Amaury says it could be better for any other product. Because QIQO is a cheap product so the return on ad spent is not optimal And as long as the budget is big enough, QIQO works with very big audiences. -->How do you determine your budgets? What do you optimize for? Since the product has a lifetime value, they focus on optimizing acquisition cost. They're trying to go below the one return on ad spend. This metric is quite critical for products like QIQO, which aims to recurring purchases. --> How often do you change your creatives? QIQO is currently running 23 ads on Facebook. Each one is quite different than each other and every two weeks or month, they launch new creatives. They launched hundreds of different ads to continue testing and see what works. And what Amaury says is shocking: "We see that targeting is actually has a bigger importance than creatives." You're (and we're) probably jealous of those super creative ads on social media by big brands. But Amaury doesn't see a huge gap in conversion rates. --> What are your Facebook Advertising tips regarding the type of creatives? This the juicy part and Amaury is quite generous with tips. Here is a big list of actionable tips that you can use in your next Facebook ad campaign.
QIQO is running 23 ads right now, you can click here to see all of them. Also, Amaury noticed something negative but it also falls under the tips category: "When we start a video with an eye-catcher like a viral funny video, we see the click-through rate going up a lot. But then the conversion rate drops. Because you're just attracting clicks but not necessarily traffic willing to buy." --> How do you scale up? How do you decide which campaign works and doesn't work? Amaury thinks the Facebook ads algorithm becomes better and better. So they're giving it as much freedom as they can and fuel the budget. So he uses CBO (campaign budget optimization) and just increasing the budget. Some Facebook ad experts on the internet say things like: "You need to double your budget every 24 hours at 12 am to hack the algorithm" we don't believe in that kind of stuff anymore." Well, Amaury doesn't believe in that kind of stuff anymore. Instead, he puts his faith and money on Facebook's algorithm. --> How do you use retargeting? Are you doing something special? They're always running retargeting for website visitors. But something that also overlooked but worked actually works super well for QIQO is engagers. (or engagement ads.) What is engagement ads? It's an ad format and it helps you to retarget people that liked your post. Or clicked your post to read more, buy, download or etc. Using that ad format had a lot of positive effects for QIQO. It has lowered CPAs (cost per action) by 50% compared to normal ads or retargeting campaigns. --> Have you experimented with some new additions like 'direct to messenger'? There are two things on Amaury's wish list. Messenger Chatbots: he thinks they're working and converting very well. Dynamic Product Ads: If you want to show super personalized ads to your potential customers, this might be interesting for you. Dynamic product ads are basically carousel ads, but Facebook decides what to put on the carousels. For example, you browsed a particle page or landing page, Facebook tracks your footprints and decides which products to put based on your history and personal interest. (It only works with carousel ads) --------------- I seriously don't think people will follow this until the end, it is way too long for Reddit. But if you're here, say hi to me in the comments. Heh. I hope you get your ROI of your time investment. You can go to the original article here. If you liked this, there are similar articles on the blog. Cheers, [link] [comments] |
My startup is gaining traction, but I'm stuck on Wordpress using plugins and don't know what to do Posted: 07 May 2020 03:28 PM PDT Hi everyone, Currently, I'm running a marketplace type start-up and the website is gaining traction and landing sales every day. Things are growing and I'm stuck on a platform that doesn't scale. I am not a computer developer and built this website via plugins (WC Vendors, Woocommerce, etc.) and also hired some outside developers to make changes to the site that I couldn't (added an intuitive messaging feature and other seller options). However, the platform is not scalable, and I hit issues due to website traffic, having to sign up users manually because I have no idea how to automate it, random bugs that pop up, plugin problems, and other things I can't fix. It takes up way too much time and I usually get nowhere, and it's frustrating because I want to focus on sales and growth. I have been scouting for a potential technical co-founder, but I am not too sure where to even start in that process. Ideally, would this person rebuild the entire platform on a custom stack, and then relaunch that website in place of the Wordpress site? Or should they build from what I have and scrap what they don't need? I guess where I am struggling the most is knowing what the first step is if I decide to hand equity over to a developer, and what they should be doing. How can I go about this the right way? What is it that a great technical co-founder should be doing to make this right? I appreciate any insight! Thanks so much [link] [comments] |
B2B Marketplace requires $2k+ transactions, but stripe limiting us? Anyone aware of alternatives? Posted: 08 May 2020 07:46 AM PDT I'm working on a B2B marketplace where we need ACH payments/credit card payments sometimes in the tens of thousands of dollars. Stripe has us limited to $2k. We've tried reaching out to support, but they basically said we're out of luck. Anyone else running a B2B marketplace and found a different payment processors for larger payments? [link] [comments] |
Delaware Corporation Annual Report -- Do I need to give a home address? Posted: 08 May 2020 06:54 AM PDT I was reading that you need to give the address of at least one officer and all the directors on the annual report. Does this need to be a home address or just somewhere they can be reached? If I have an office, can I give the office address? I noticed a lot of corporations in delaware will leave this info out of the annual report, but make a note that it's been included in the proxy statement. Is there a benefit to doing so? [link] [comments] |
What terms are best for a reseller of a SaaS? Posted: 08 May 2020 05:06 AM PDT I have reached out to a startup in hopes of forming some sort of partnership/becoming a reseller. Our initial 90 minute conversation went very well. I would be able to reach markets that they would have difficulty in do, due to barriers of language, culture or geography.The ball is in my court and they have asked that I propose something on how we can collaborate i.e financial structure. What kind of agreement that wouldn't come off as too aggressive would help us both arrive to a win-win solution. They're priced as a SaaS. [link] [comments] |
I would like to start a gaming lounge in my small town. Posted: 08 May 2020 04:48 AM PDT I've always had a passion of video gaming. After a while I came up with an ideal to start a gaming lounge but the problem is I don't have any idea of the equipment I need or any research that I need to do before I start. I also don't know what legal procedures I need to do. And how to construct a business plan. My home town has a population of about 60 000. If you have any ideas please help, I would appreciate it. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 08 May 2020 03:26 AM PDT I used mixpanel for analytics on a previous project and loved it. There was a table view of all my events, where I could click any event to expand and see all it's exact fields, data, etc. As well as filter through these. This was super helpful for gauging engagement, etc. I'm working on a new project and wrote mixpanel into it from the start. Today as the project neared completion I actually signed in and looked at it on mixpanel for the first time...they have a "revamped" UI that frankly is trash for my purposes. There is no equivalent to that table view, in fact it seems that it is impossible to even view exact field values for any event. I.e. if I have an event "paymentPrice" and it had a value of 35, mixpanel would report this as 30-40, along with any other events in that range. It seems like maybe I could get the old mixpanel functionality back by making a bunch of custom dashboards, but this would take many minutes-hours vs. the old one which took 0 seconds, and I'd have to redo this work every time I made a new tracking event. Am I being dumb and just missing something obvious? Is there any way to get the old mixpanel functionality back? If not, can anyone recommend a different analytics service that does what mixpanel used to do? Thanks! [link] [comments] |
Products or APIs for tracking traffic we send to other sites? Posted: 07 May 2020 09:26 PM PDT Looking for suggestions here. Feel like this falls somewhere in the affiliate/lead gen space but definitely not my area of expertise. Fintech startup trying to monetize our financial planning platform. One strategy is to embed partner listings in our site that are contextual based on user profiles. Pretty straightforward. Not a bidding model like other big platforms. But how best to track that and invoice for that and are there go-to tools or APIs we can integrate with to do that? Been to a few sites thanks to Google but a lot of the copy there seems very adspeak and doesn't clearly answer what they do and how they do it. Goals:
Any suggestions that are SaaS friendly and not overkill for an early stage startup? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 07 May 2020 01:36 PM PDT Maybe I should go into this project thinking of it as a learning experience and go in with the expectation that it won't make money and that it won't ever blow up. I can learn marketing and learn through trial and error how to get users on future projects... sort of like a crawl before I walk sort of deal. [link] [comments] |
What is your experience hiring a consultant? Posted: 07 May 2020 04:22 PM PDT I'm in a position where I have a bootstrapped startup and have been approached by a consultant at a reduced rate. Like any industry is their bad and good that comes along with them? Should I be allocating the funds elsewhere and learning from experience instead of fast tracking it by paying someone else? They would be insight into the industry we service, but nothing I don't think I would learn on my own my just creating relationships. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 07 May 2020 06:06 AM PDT Welcome to this week's Fundraising Thursdays Thread. Ask about anything related to fundraising, investors, accelerators, grants, and other sources of capital. That includes how to find these sources, how to work with them, and how to negotiate with them. Don't be shy. The purpose of this is to learn and share ideas and methodologies with one another. Any question is a good question! If you are answering questions, remember to be kind and supportive. Many are just starting out and have no idea what they are doing. That's okay! We all knew nothing before we knew something.You can also find more support using instant chat on the /r/startups discord. [link] [comments] |
Evaluating employees during a prolonged work-from-home period? Posted: 07 May 2020 07:03 PM PDT A question to all of you managing a company with at least a few employees working from home because of the pandemic - how do you track your employees' activity/engagement while they are working from home? I'm having trouble with this topic - getting the feeling engagement is decreasing as a result of the team working remotely, and potentially without more immediate "supervision". I hate to think about it this way, but this is my interpretation? What do you guys think about it? [link] [comments] |
I got offered options at work. What's this? Posted: 07 May 2020 06:47 PM PDT I am a developer at a pre-seeded startup. At work they offered offered options. What's the difference between stock shares and options? I know its a 4 year vest, and after a year I get 1/4th of those option shares.
I know we are in the final stages of getting a term sheet. [link] [comments] |
Would you rather use a WP theme for Saas, or no-code platforms?(Bubble,Workflow) Posted: 07 May 2020 05:59 AM PDT Hello, I only code in Python and don't have the basics in HTML/CSS/PHP What would you go with and why? [link] [comments] |
Trouble charging what product is worth Posted: 07 May 2020 11:56 AM PDT Hi redditors! I have a question. Im in the starting phase of selling my own products. The problem is however, that the selling price should be way higher then Im comfortabale asking. Based on market value and similar products. I feel unsure asking $210 when the actual price should be $300. The issue is the fact that I grew up poor and my references for prices have always been at the lower/bottom end of the market (Also my social group would balk at the prices Im asking and probably would spend $5-20 on a similar product of lesser quality and value) . Even at my current financial situation I wouldnt be able to purchase the product that im selling myself. This has made it hard for me to understand/sympathize with my target market which is a luxury consumer who has enough disposable income. Their financial reality is very different from my current situation. ( I know the target customer exist because at my internship I saw the same type of customers spending $3000-15000 easily albeit on a different but similar product categorie. Does anyone have suggestions how to overcome this insecurity ? Im very confident in my talent to design must have products for this group. I would like to be way more confident in the value im offering and confidently ask prices in accordance with that. I truly believe that confidence is really important because if your arent sure. How will your customer be? Looking forward to your replies! [link] [comments] |
Website + Mobile app or Webapp + Mobile app Posted: 07 May 2020 05:39 PM PDT I am planning a new business line/platform which is going to be a telemedicine service. I am wondering which of the following to have:
Both have pro's & cons. Option 1 forces users to download the app so, for example, you can send app notifications to increase engagement. Option 2 makes the service more widely available & might improve initial conversion (by removing the step of going to the appstore & making people download another app). I was wondering if there is any consensus on this? Eager to hear your thoughts. [link] [comments] |
When do you need a data protection officer and how did you appoint yours? Posted: 07 May 2020 10:51 AM PDT Hi all Hope everyone is well. Thinking a bit ahead, but on the basis that my startup will be collecting certain personal data - i.e. contact details, names etc I am wondering at what point do you need a data protection officer? Can anybody share their experiences of being a startup controlling and processing user data and how you have managed that from an early point when it was just a few of you working and how you went about assigning a data protection officer? [link] [comments] |
Trying to find a technical cofounder Posted: 07 May 2020 04:30 PM PDT I've had this idea for a social media network that I want to pursue. However, I don't have the technical skills to develop it myself or the money to pay someone to do it for me. I've asked some developers in the area but they've responded that they're too busy. Any advice on how I can find a technical co-founder? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 07 May 2020 11:51 AM PDT Hello! I'm trying to build an automated tool that predicts demand for specific industries in uncertain times / economic instability (such as this one). This is how my system would work: we give the system a timeframe (let's say two months from now) and it gives you an estimation of how much the demand (and therefore supply needed) would change in those two months for a specific industry (eg. clothing industry, real estate, hospitality, you name it). I don't know where to find data sources though. If you know any economical data sources for specific markets (even if it doesn't go back to 2008) please let me know. :) Also, if you're economics-savvy please do let me know of any important market indicators. Thanks! [link] [comments] |
I have a good idea, what’s next? Posted: 07 May 2020 02:28 PM PDT Hey New to this sub so I'm sure this is been asked before so apologies. Always wanted to be successful but wasn't sure if it would be starting my own business. Always thinking of new ideas, brainstorming with friends, the usual. I now have an idea, one I really think will work. So I'm working on a business plan. But what next, where do I go from there? Honestly I have no idea, so any suggestions, experiences or step by step guide would be welcome! Ps, the idea will need dev work, in the end an app maybe, but first manufacturing. [link] [comments] |
Looking for general advice on my next steps in building this skincare startup Posted: 07 May 2020 12:29 PM PDT Hey all. So I've been working on a startup in the beauty space since 26th December, and I'm looking for some general guidance on what you guys think should be my next step.Below is what I've done so far:
I did the above things to understand the problem and customers better, the built the advert to prove demand. I'm wondering at how many signups should I cease the adverts? I am only semi-technical and have started building the MVP myself, but figured it'd make more sense to prove demand first, which looks to be working. Now I need a technical co founder, since the product is code-only, so needs to be good to work. I'm thinking of approaching devs on LinkedIn when I have maybe 100-200 subscribers, to show the demand. I'm also thinking of adding in something like viral loops to make the waitlist a little more fun/potential to be viral. What are your thoughts on what I should do next? Thanks! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 07 May 2020 10:10 AM PDT Hi r/startups! I'm working on a startup that is all about sharing physical tech products, and we wanted to ask the community if they had any advice on getting products. We are currently working on a P2P model, where we buy used technology like Switches and Drones directly from people. We originally planned to buy products wholesale, but we are struggling to find fair prices and the volume we need. Anyone have any ideas? [link] [comments] |
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