I built an AI that tells creators who will watch their content — before they post - Indie Hackers
Join
Likes
Bookmarks
Comments
Report
Hey IH 👋
Creators spend hours making content, then post it blind — hoping the algorithm picks it up. Most of the time, it doesn't. Not because the content is bad, but because it was never positioned for the right audience.
I built Meteorra AI to fix that.
✦ Which markets will actually watch your content
✦ Audience segment + positioning advice
✦ Market-aware tags, hashtags & title ideas
✦ A discoverability score before you hit publish
3 name changes, 3 users, zero funding. Live at https://www.meteorra.ai/ — free to try, no signup needed.
Now I need your honest take:
→ Is the value prop clear?
→ Would a creator you know actually use this?
→ What's the one thing that's missing?
Every reply shapes what gets built next 🙏
PranayMahulikar
on May 5, 2026
Share
Say something nice to PranayMahulikar…
Post Comment
try new youtube analyser it does not just show metrics it shows you what cahnges you should make to make your video better https://www.meteorra.ai/youtube-analyser
PranayMahulikar
3 days ago
Reply
I made some recent update to Ui would be happy to receive feedback!
PranayMahulikar
16 days ago
Reply
The problem is real.
The current framing just makes it sound softer than it is.
“Who will watch your content” sounds like prediction.
Useful, but easy to dismiss.
The stronger value is actually:
“what audience this will miss before you waste the post.”
That is sharper.
Less vanity, more loss prevention.
Creators do not care about discoverability scores.
They care about not spending 3 hours making something for the wrong audience.
That is the real pain.
The product feels stronger when framed as pre-publish audience risk, not content prediction.
Also: Meteorra sounds polished, but still slightly vague for a tool this performance-driven.
If this leans harder into audience intelligence / positioning infrastructure, Xevoa.com is the stronger long-term name.
aryan_sinh
a month ago
Reply
This is genuinely one of the most useful pieces of feedback I’ve received so far.
You’re right that “predict reach” can sound abstract or overly optimistic. The stronger pain is actually avoiding the wrong audience / wrong positioning before investing time into the content.
That framing resonates much more with the direction I want Meteorra to evolve toward — less vanity metrics, more pre-publish audience intelligence.
Really appreciate this perspective.
PranayMahulikar
a month ago
Reply
Pranay, coming back to this because Meteorra was one of the clearer examples where the issue was not just copy.
The product had a real category decision underneath it.
“Predict reach” makes the tool sound useful, but optional.
“Avoid making content for the wrong audience before you publish” makes the pain feel expensive.
That difference affects the landing page, the buyer promise, the pricing logic, and even whether Meteorra is strong enough as the long-term name if the product becomes audience intelligence rather than a content prediction tool.
I’m now doing focused naming/positioning audits for early products around exactly this kind of problem: current name risk, category frame, first-line positioning, domain/name ceiling, and the stronger direction before more users or launch assets build around the current frame.
For Meteorra, I’d specifically audit whether the brand should stay around polished creator tooling, or move harder toward pre-publish audience-risk intelligence.
I’m doing a few at $99 while refining the format.
If useful, connect here and I can give you a sharp written breakdown:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/aryan-y-0163b0278/
aryan_sinh
13 days ago
Reply
Exactly.
That shift matters because “predict reach” feels optional.
“avoid making content for the wrong audience” feels expensive.
That is the stronger product.
But that also means the brand has to carry more weight.
Meteorra sounds polished, but it does not instantly tell me this is about audience risk, positioning, or pre-publish decision intelligence.
So the product is getting sharper than the name.
If you’re serious about moving toward audience intelligence, I’d pressure-test whether Meteorra can actually carry that category long term.
aryan_sinh
a month ago
Reply
"I'll start — the hardest part wasn't building it, it was finding a name that wasn't already taken 😅 Went through Search Pilot → CreatorReach AI → finally Meteorra AI. If you try it, even just once, I'd love to know what you think."
PranayMahulikar
a month ago
Reply
Trending on Indie Hackers
Your build-in-public audience is not your market. I learned the difference the slow way.
249 comments
Most founders don't have a product problem. They have a visibility problem
67 comments
Day 4: Why I Built a $199 Workspace Nobody Asked For
39 comments
How to automatically turn customer feedback into...