Velt (YC W22)

Velt (YC W22)

Technology, Information and Internet

San Francisco, CA 4,391 followers

Boost your product engagement and growth by adding powerful collaboration features!

About us

JS SDK to add powerful collaborative features into your product ridiculously fast! Popular features include: Figma-style comments, Notifications, Loom-style recording, Slack-style huddle, Webflow-style single editor mode and more. Some popular categories of apps that use us: * Creative tools: Video editing, website builders, where users want to review and collaborate on the designs, videos etc; * Analytics tools: Users want to discuss data together; * Project management tools: Users want to discuss progress, provide more insights on tasks inside the app itself and many more. What Stripe to Payments, Velt SDK is doing that to Collaboration. We’re a team of ex-Googlers. We've launched products like Augmented Reality in Google Search & Maps.

Website
https://velt.dev/
Industry
Technology, Information and Internet
Company size
11-50 employees
Headquarters
San Francisco, CA
Type
Privately Held
Founded
2020

Locations

Employees at Velt (YC W22)

Updates

  • Velt (YC W22) reposted this

    View profile for Rakesh Goyal, graphic

    Founder & CEO @Velt, Superflow (Y Combinator W22). X-Google

    Velt (YC W22) has shipped another feature that will automatically benefit our customers using default components, without any extra code required! Users want to know who has seen their comments, and when they saw them. This is why we have added the "seen by" feature to our SDK. This video shows the feature in action on our Tiptap comments demo!

  • Velt (YC W22) reposted this

    View profile for Rakesh Goyal, graphic

    Founder & CEO @Velt, Superflow (Y Combinator W22). X-Google

    Velt (YC W22) has shipped another feature that will automatically benefit our customers using default components, without any extra code required! Users want to know who has seen their comments, and when they saw them. This is why we have added the "seen by" feature to our SDK. This video shows the feature in action on our Tiptap comments demo!

  • Velt (YC W22) reposted this

    View profile for Rakesh Goyal, graphic

    Founder & CEO @Velt, Superflow (Y Combinator W22). X-Google

    In this clip from The Diary Of A CEO podcast, Brian Armstrong talks about how he finally found PMF with what is now Coinbase. He says that the most important thing that founders can do is talk to their customers and improve their product. I agree with this completely. This is why at Velt (YC W22), I have dedicated so much time to getting feedback from our customers and understanding what they need from our product. This also allows us to constantly ship improvements and new features, that matter to our customers.

  • View organization page for Velt (YC W22), graphic

    4,391 followers

    Our comments now have the ability save drafts when your users aren't ready to publish them! There isn't even any extra work needed by your developers, in order to add this functionality to your existing Velt comment integration!

  • Velt (YC W22) reposted this

    View profile for Rakesh Goyal, graphic

    Founder & CEO @Velt, Superflow (Y Combinator W22). X-Google

    In this clip, Jeff Bezos advises entrepreneurs to avoid chasing trends and instead build something they’re truly passionate about to align with future opportunities. At Velt (YC W22), we aren’t chasing the trends. We're focused on perfecting our SDK to enable the best collaborative experiences in the market. As more companies realize the value of built-in collaboration, we’ll be ready to provide the tools they need to deliver amazing collaborative experiences to their users.

  • Velt (YC W22) reposted this

    View profile for Rakesh Goyal, graphic

    Founder & CEO @Velt, Superflow (Y Combinator W22). X-Google

    This is how we got our first 10 paying customers at Velt (YC W22)👇 Most first time founders get this wrong. I did too. Early on, you're desperate: you'll take anyone who shows interest. After all, no one knows you exist. You have to drag them through the door. We wasted months chasing free users. Classic big tech thinking. We thought we'd figure out money later. Wrong. Here's what actually worked (B2B SaaS): We got picky. We only wanted users who: 1. Would pay (sounds obvious; most ignore this) 2. Love trying new things 3. Don't mind bugs Users who don’t meet the above criteria are worse than no users. Their feedback becomes a false compass when you're desperate for direction. Then we did something counterintuitive: we made our pitch narrower. So narrow that each prospect thought "this was built exactly for me." Our first 10 customers came from: • Y Combinator founders (they get it) • Cold emails (sent 100, worked surprisingly well) That's it. No growth hacks. No complicated strategies. The secret wasn't finding users. It was finding the right ones: people willing to pay for things that aren't finished. The rest was noise.

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