Comment by raw_anon_1111
16 days ago
And you still for B2B SaaS have to worry about:
1. Where does this fit in Gartner’s Magic Square? No one ever got fired for buying Salesforce/ServiceNow/Workday/well known company
2. “What if I don’t need feature $y now. But I might need it in the future?”
3. “Everyone in my industry already knows how to use $x, so it will be easier to onboard new employees. Even if they don’t know it, there are courses available”
In today’s world for any SaaS to be taken seriously, it has to have Slack/Teams integration and SSO logins with the company’s IDP - there is an industry standard so if you support one, it’s relatively painless to support all of them. So what is your enterprise sales story - even for small startups?
Even if you work at a company that gives everyone a yearly stipend to get almost anything they want that will improve their work, you still have to get approval for any tool where the company’s info is sent to a third party.
These are all things that most people don’t think about when they want to turn their passion product into a business
This is being built by a single dev. He only needs a couple thousand users to likely make this a meaningfully successful product to him. You guys are really blowing this out of proportion if you think there’s no room for stuff like this. There’s tons of potential users out there. His challenge will be reaching them but it’s totally possible he’s on to something decent here. Even if he shuns enterprise altogether. If he’s solved this problem in a way that is simplistic and approachable then he’s maybe onto something. Pro designer likely are not his target user.
I’m not making assessments of whether it is or not, but it sure as hell could be. There’s room for all this and he can choose to add features or choose to stay feature light.