Simple hack to find a winning idea

So is it like Google where you put the quotes around what you’re searching? Do they have more search operators like that on Reddit?
 
So is it like Google where you put the quotes around what you’re searching? Do they have more search operators like that on Reddit?
Yes that's correct

If you scroll down the comments on that Twitter thread there are a few recommendations on the variations one can use
 
So the idea is to use that to find something relatively new or something that has not yet been built so that you can create it, correct?

Is this a possible use case? :)
 
So the idea is to use that to find something relatively new or something that has not yet been built so that you can create it, correct?

Is this a possible use case? :)
Offcourse something that has not been built

I don't see why not?

You never know how it might help someone and someone from this forum might turn out to be a startup story 😁
 
So the idea is to use that to find something relatively new or something that has not yet been built so that you can create it, correct?

Is this a possible use case? :)
You probably could or test out something
 
So is it like Google where you put the quotes around what you’re searching? Do they have more search operators like that on Reddit?
You shouldn't use this on reddit, you should just google this:

Code:
site:reddit.com "is there a tool that"

This would take you here:
Code:
https://www.google.com/search?q=site%3Areddit.com+%22is+there+a+tool+that%22
 
Nice one, wonder if...
 
You shouldn't use this on reddit, you should just google this:

Code:
site:reddit.com "is there a tool that"

This would take you here:
Code:
https://www.google.com/search?q=site%3Areddit.com+%22is+there+a+tool+that%22
Yeah good one these are called Google dorks and there a ton of them for different purposes
 
He says "never give up", "try more things", "find something you have been overlooking".
One player told me that once. I followed his advice. It worked with each step I took.
After 500 fails I had a brief idea of what to do and what works, and what fails.

I think if you follow random projects, you're going to create clusterfuck.
 

Attachments

  • thought.png
    thought.png
    23.8 KB · Views: 7
I get ideas by scraping questions on YouTube and Reddit on posts in my niche. Answering those questions and if possible expanding on them works. The more times a question is asked the more valuable it is. I like the comment sections the most rather than the thread itself or the videos

You shouldn't use this on reddit, you should just google this:

Code:
site:reddit.com "is there a tool that"

This would take you here:
Code:
https://www.google.com/search?q=site%3Areddit.com+%22is+there+a+tool+that%22
I agree with this. I still scrape Google for the questions not the site itself. Google is still king for this imo
 
Back
Top