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Early
Early is a directory of early stage and pre-launch startups. It's free to use but you may need to pay to skip the queue.

Insanely Cool Tools
This directory boasts 20,000 subscribers and if you get featured, you get a backlink. You'll also be featured in the newsletter. Insanely Cool Tools is free to use but you may need to pay if you want to skip the queue.

Tiny Startups
Tiny Startups is free to use but you need to pay a fee to skip the queue. It doesn’t matter whether you’re building a SaaS, marketplace, mobile app, productized service, newsletter or something else — all are welcome!

Product Hunt
Product Hunt is the biggest product directory there is. If you prepare your launch well, you can expect thousands of visitors and lots of backlinks from secondary services, blogs, and newspapers that scout Product Hunt for products.

MicroLaunch
MicroLaunch is a modern launch platform for early products: get feedback, traction and first customers over a month. Both ideas and product are scored separately. Your products get eventually roasted or boosted.

Uneed
Uneed is a platform where people can both discover new products and promote their own. It works a bit like Product Hunt, giving creators a way to get their products noticed. Every day at midnight PST, between 10 and 20 new products launch on the homepage. On launch day, products get prime visibility, but users can keep voting for them anytime afterward. Products are ranked daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly. The top three products in each ranking get badges—gold, silver, or bronze—displayed on their product pages. Popular products also get featured in Uneed’s weekly newsletter, which reaches over 9,100 subscribers. If you want to launch a product, you make an account and fill out the details. There are two ways to get your product live: wait in a free queue (and get assigned a random launch date) or pay $30 to skip the line and pick your date. Success comes from a strong launch day, keeping your page up-to-date, and encouraging people to vote. Adding special deals can also earn you a badge and keep interest alive. The community side of Uneed is built around upvoting products. The more you vote, the more power you gain. For example, a 5-day voting streak doubles your vote’s power, and a 100-day streak triples it while unlocking an avatar border. At 150 days, you get a free line skip; at 500 days, you get discounts on advertising; and at 1,000 days, your votes count as five. The platform covers categories like development, design, marketing, business, and personal life products. It’s just one person running Uneed, and you’re encouraged to vote for your own product. If you have questions, they’re easy to reach via email. In short, Uneed is a straightforward way to launch a product, gather feedback, and build an audience—without needing a massive following upfront.

TypingMind
Typing Mind is the most advanced Chat UI frontend for AI models like ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and open-source models. Created by Tony Dinh.

r/SaaS
This subreddit is all about SaaS (Software As a Service) companies. You can bring up your product as long as it's useful and relevant to the discussion. r/SaaS has 103k members and is among the top 2% of subreddits by size.

r/startups
r/startups is a subreddit for everything related to startups. Here is how they describe themselves: The community for ventures designed to scale rapidly. Welcome to /r/startups, the place to discuss startup problems and solutions. Startups are companies that are designed to grow and scale rapidly. r/startups has 1.6 million members and is among the top 1% of subreddits by size.

r/Entrepreneur
Subreddit description: A community of individuals who seek to solve problems, network professionally, collaborate on projects, and make the world a better place. Be professional, humble, and open to new ideas. Our community supports side hustles, small businesses, venture-backed startups, lemonade stands, 1-person-grinds, and most forms of revenue generation! However, no one cares about your blog. Please do not come here to self-promote your consulting, book, podcast, MLM, website, dropshipping guide, or $$$ scheme. r/Entrepreneur has 3.2 million members and is among the top 1% subreddits by size.

r/InternetIsBeautiful
r/InternetIsBeautiful is a large subreddit with over 17 million members. This subreddit is all about websites and everything internet so it's a great place to share your unique web project.

r/webdev
r/webdev is community dedicated to all things web development: both front-end and back-end. This subreddit has 2.1M and is within the top 1% of subreddits by size.

r/SmallBusiness
r/SmallBusiness explicitly does not condone advertising your own products. This is how they describe themselves: This sub is not for advertisements! Questions and answers about starting, owning, and growing a small business only. That said, if you have real questions or are able to provide value, you can probably still find some users or feedback there.

r/SideProject
r/SideProject is a subreddit for sharing and receiving constructive feedback on side projects. It has 148k members and is among the top 1% of subreddits by size.

AWS Cognito
Amazon Cognito is an identity platform for web and mobile apps. It’s a user directory, an authentication server, and an authorization service for OAuth 2.0 access tokens and AWS credentials. With Amazon Cognito, you can authenticate and authorize users from the built-in user directory, from your enterprise directory, and from consumer identity providers like Google and Facebook.

Remote Jobs
Remote Jobs is a simple job board that lets you filter jobs by time zone and salary range.

Built In
Built In is a large job board for remote and non-remote tech jobs at startups and leading companies. You can filter jobs base don its remote status, date posted, experience, company size etc.

NoDesk
NoDesk focuses on remote jobs at leading remote companies and startups. They add new jobs daily.

4 Day Week
The 4 Day Work Week job board is a site that lists jobs where you work fewer days—usually four—without losing pay. Most jobs are around 32 hours a week, giving people more free time while still earning the same salary. The main pitch is better work-life balance without sacrificing income. The site is pretty simple to navigate. You can browse jobs by categories like Customer Support, Engineering, Marketing, and Sales. Engineering seems to have the most listings. There are filters for remote work, location, seniority, and hours. Most of the jobs are remote and based in places like the USA, UK, Canada, and Europe. Companies offering these roles vary, but the listings show salary ranges and schedules (often "4 x 9hr days" or "4 x 8hr days"). Some roles are high-paying, especially in tech or product management, while others offer decent mid-range salaries. The job board also offers extras like free resume reviews and email alerts. There’s a big focus on helping you land a job faster, with things like AI tools for resumes and cover letters. They even have FAQs that cover common concerns—like whether benefits are the same (they usually are), or if working four days means you’re lazy (spoiler: no). Overall, it’s aimed at people who want to work smarter, not longer, without taking a pay cut.

Himalayas
Himalayas let's you filter jobs by time zone, visa, skills, company, salary, tech stack, and more. You can set up a profile and let companies discover you as well.

FlexJobs
FlexJobs is a paid job board. It starts at $2.95 for a two-week trial or $9.95/month for a 3-month full access. It boasts over 40,000 hand-screened remote jobs.

Remote.com
Remote.com has a simple job board where a couple dozen jobs are added each day. Most of the jobs are in tech and quite a few of them are engineering jobs.

Remote.io
Remote.io lets you browse thousands of remote job listings at startups and leading companies.

We Work Remotely
We Work Remotely (WWR) is an online job board dedicated exclusively to remote work opportunities. Since its launch in 2013, it has become one of the largest platforms of its kind, drawing around six million visitors each month and fostering a sizable global community centered around remote work. For employers, WWR provides a straightforward way to connect with remote talent. Posting a job costs $299, and the platform claims that over 90% of listings are successfully filled. Companies can expect a high volume of applications, with filtering tools available to streamline the hiring process. WWR also offers bundle packages for businesses looking to post multiple listings, and jobs posted on the platform are distributed to a network of partner sites, including Google Jobs and several niche job boards. Job seekers can explore thousands of listings across various industries, with a strong presence of technology, design, and marketing roles. The platform prides itself on hosting positions directly submitted by employers rather than pulling listings from other sources, ensuring that the jobs are current and relevant. At its core, WWR serves as a bridge between companies seeking remote talent and individuals looking for the flexibility that remote work offers. With over a decade of experience in the space, it has established itself as a go-to resource for both hiring managers and job seekers navigating the evolving landscape of remote work.