SaaS Pain Point Hunting with Runner H
Arjun Vijay Prakash

Arjun Vijay Prakash @arjuncodess

About: I'm a 15-year-old full-stack developer, aspiring writer and student who loves to design & build stuff.

Location:
India
Joined:
May 25, 2022

SaaS Pain Point Hunting with Runner H

Publish Date: Jun 16
60 12

This is a submission for the Runner H "AI Agent Prompting" Challenge

Introduction

Every builder hits that wall: "What should I build next?"

You scroll Twitter. You stalk indie hackers. You even ask ChatGPT for ideas, but nothing feels real. Nothing feels urgent.

That's the gap I wanted to close.

Instead of pulling ideas out of thin air, I made a system to go where the real problems are: inside user comments on Product Hunt.

Because let's be honest - launch pages lie. Comments don't.

People drop gold when they're frustrated. That's where the pain lives.
And pain = opportunity.

So I built a workflow with Runner H that finds those pain points fast, organises them clearly, and gives you actual SaaS ideas backed by real user frustration.


What I Built

I made a simple but powerful workflow to find real problems people face with new SaaS tools.

I used Runner H to build a step-by-step process that scrapes through Product Hunt comments - but only looks at the top launches of this year.

The goal is simple. To spot pain points, complaints, and problems that show up again and again - and use those to find new SaaS ideas.

Demo

Run link:

Document it generated:


How I Used Runner H

I created a workflow inside Runner H that does this:

  1. It opens a Google Doc and names it based on today's date.
  2. It searches Product Hunt's top SaaS launches from this year.
  3. It is included in each product's comments.
  4. It pulls out only critical feedback, comments that discuss what's broken, missing, confusing, or annoying.
  5. For each pain point, write down:
  • Product Name
  • Type of tool
  • The actual complaint or quote
  • A link to the comment
  • Upvotes on that comment (if there are any)

    1. It keeps going until it has 5 real pain points from different products.
    2. At the end, it writes a summary showing:
  • Common patterns across comments

  • What users are struggling with

  • 2-3 solid product ideas you could build from this

All of it goes into a clean Google Doc.
No spreadsheets. No code. No scraping tools.
Just data, sorted by hand, with Runner H as the assistant.

Prompt

You are a SaaS Idea Hunter. Your job is to read through *Product Hunt's top SaaS launches of this year*, and collect *real user pain points* from the comment sections. These pain points must come from critical, constructive feedback, not vague complaints or shallow praise.

You must then *analyse each pain point* and explain why it could become the seed of a good SaaS idea.

*Workflow:*

1. Open a new Google Doc titled:
   `SaaS Pain Points from Product Hunt`

2. Visit Product Hunt and find the *top SaaS products launched this year*. Filter by date. URL: https://www.producthunt.com/leaderboard/yearly/2025

3. For each product, go through all user comments and reviews.

4. Extract only comments that include clear *negative feedback* or *constructive criticism*. Skip low-effort, generic, or praise-only comments.

5. For every useful pain point you find, add it to the Doc as a bullet point in this format:

   - *Product Name:*
   - *Category (if known):*
   - *Pain Point (exact excerpt or a clean summary):*
   - *Link to the original comment:*
   - *Upvotes on the comment (if visible):*
   - *Why this is a solid SaaS idea (your reasoning):*

6. Repeat for at least *5 unique, useful* pain points from different products.

7. After all bullets, write a short *300-word summary* including:

   - Common themes or recurring issues across comments
   - What this says about where SaaS still sucks
   - 2–3 idea directions founders could explore

*Rules:*

- Use *Google Docs only*. No spreadsheets, no tools, no automation.
- Focus on being *data-heavy, insight-rich*.
- Don't overgeneralize. Stay specific.
- Your final output should be so useful that a founder could open it and start building tomorrow.
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Use Case & Impact

If you're a builder, solo founder, or just someone with an itch to launch something new, this helps you find ideas that already have demand.

Instead of building something no one needs, you're finding:

  • What annoys real users
  • What current tools fail to do
  • What people are asking for, over and over again

This saves time. It sharpens your focus.
And it gives you a real chance to build something useful, not just another clone.

Imagine finding your next startup idea just by reading through what real people hate about a tool like Notion, Linear, or some new AI tool. This is that - but on autopilot.


Final Thoughts

This isn't magic. It's just smart, focused listening.

Too many founders chase trends. This workflow helps you chase the truth.

What people really need.
What tools actually suck.
What gaps are wide open.

You don't need a billion-dollar vision.
You need one sharp idea that solves one sharp pain.
This workflow gives you 5.

Run it. Read the doc. Sit with the pain.
And then? Build the fix.
You'll be 10 steps ahead of everyone still guessing.

Let's stop building noise. Let's build what matters.

Thanks for reading.
Made with ❤️ by @arjuncodess for the DEV.to Runner H "AI Agent Prompting" Challenge.

Comments 12 total

  • Arjun Vijay Prakash
    Arjun Vijay PrakashJun 16, 2025

    Update: I improved the prompt after recording to make the workflow slightly cleaner, but the core idea, steps, and value remain the same. The demo is still 100% valid.

  • Andre
    AndreJun 16, 2025

    Love this! I’ve been stuck in that loop of trying to figure out what to build next. I get really frustrated when I have the itch to build something meaningful, but I don’t have a clear pain point to anchor it to. I saw RunnerH launch the other week, so it's super cool to see a use case for it that resonates with me. I’m a big believer that the best products start with solving a real pain, and this feels like a great way to shortcut the discovery process. Have you identified any pain points so far with its runs that stand out for your next product?

    • Arjun Vijay Prakash
      Arjun Vijay PrakashJun 16, 2025

      Thanks, Andre, and yeah, I know that loop way too well.
      That's exactly what pushed me to build this workflow.

      And btw I got some ideas already: AI tools with clunky onboarding, collaboration tools that don’t support async well, and "simple" apps that still overcomplicate UI.

      Lots of gaps are hiding in plain sight.
      Might build something around this.

      Anyways, thanks for the comment!

  • Nick K
    Nick KJun 16, 2025

    Amazing post!

  • Alex Carter
    Alex CarterJun 16, 2025

    Hello

  • Chirag Aggarwal
    Chirag AggarwalJun 16, 2025

    Great one 🔥

    • Arjun Vijay Prakash
      Arjun Vijay PrakashJun 16, 2025

      Appreciate it 🔥
      Checked out your submission too, confirmed banger

  • Nevo David
    Nevo DavidJun 16, 2025

    been cool seeing steady progress - it adds up. you think the hardest part’s actually finding the pain or sticking with it long enough to fix it?

    • Arjun Vijay Prakash
      Arjun Vijay PrakashJun 17, 2025

      That’s a great question, and honestly, it's both, but in just different ways
      One requires attention, and the other requires obsession, kind of, to me personally.

      Finding the pain means slowing down enough to really listen to people, to try to fix their problems from their perspective.
      That's hard. And I'm not even talking about the surface-level problem-solving.

      Fixing it is the long game. And I know that's the thing that's gonna make you successful or a loser in the end.

      What do you think?

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