
Leadverse
Find people looking for what you offer
About
Leadverse is an intent-based lead generation and outreach platform built for SaaS founders, agencies, and freelancers.
It helps you find people who are already actively looking for what you offer by scanning real-time conversations across the web - like posts asking for tools, services, or recommendations.
Instead of relying on cold outreach or manual prospecting, Leadverse surfaces fresh, high-intent opportunities every day - people explicitly asking for solutions you provide.
From there, Leadverse:
identifies and qualifies relevant leads automatically generates and sends personalized outreach books demos or drives signups on autopilot tracks competitor activity (e.g. launches) and highlights interested prospects in discussions
The goal is simple: turn existing demand into customers without spending hours searching, scraping, or sending cold messages.
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Submit your product and get discovered by builders and creators worldwide.
Launch NowFounderPlaybooks.
What other founders did to grow.
2722 dispatches from hundreds of founders, pulled from the week's best podcasts.
Our stack is pretty simple nextjs Postgress Coolify Next AL plus resend and our server cost $35 per month resend 20 bucks per month and next we have VPN so $5 per months per five devices and US phone numbers $5 per month per phone number so other than cost of our time the cost to run this business is very low.
Run A $100K Business On A $65/Month Stack From Your Bedroom
Nikita and Yini ran a $100K business from their bedrooms on a tiny fixed-cost stack: Next.js, Postgres, Coolify, NextAuth, and Resend, with a $35 server, $20 Resend, plus $5 VPN and $5 US phone number. Almost the entire cost was their time.
My accountant looked at my numbers and asked: 'Is this a hobby or a business?' It was the most important question anyone ever asked me about Shot Pattern. Once I decided it was a business, everything — pricing, marketing, decisions — changed.
"Is this a hobby or a business?" — the question that forces the right mindset shift
For Duffett, treating the app as a hobby meant making decisions based on what felt comfortable (low prices, reluctance to promote, irregular work hours). Committing to it as a business meant charging what the market would bear, investing in growth, and taking the work seriously enough to quit teaching. The label shift preceded the revenue shift — the mindset change came first.
There's a play for whatever you're stuck on.
Read all 2722 playbooks
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