Target user
Solo technical founders building their first or second SaaS while managing validation, landing copy, beta users, and build tasks alone.
Explore the read-only LaunchLedger example to see how one startup idea becomes a founder brief, MVP scope, landing copy, launch checklist, roadmap, and launch tasks.
A lightweight launch command center for solo SaaS founders who need to turn scattered validation notes into weekly launch actions.
Solo technical founders building their first or second SaaS while managing validation, landing copy, beta users, and build tasks alone.
Founders collect ideas, feedback, and to-do lists across docs, chats, and issue trackers, then lose the thread when deciding what to build or launch next.
AI tools make it easier to generate drafts, but founders still need a narrow operating plan that connects customer pain, MVP scope, launch copy, and next actions.
Notion docs, Linear boards, generic AI chat outputs, founder spreadsheets, and hand-written launch checklists.
Clarifies who LaunchLedger serves, what problem it solves, and the main validation assumption.
LaunchLedger turns scattered founder notes into one launch-ready operating plan.
Solo founders will trust a narrow planning workspace if it saves them from repeatedly reorganizing the same launch context.
Keeps V1 focused on intake, generated planning outputs, and task status instead of full project management.
Project intake, founder brief, MVP scope, landing copy, launch checklist, roadmap, and dashboard next action.
No team collaboration, deployment automation, CRM, marketplace, or deep analytics.
Positions the product as a calm founder workspace instead of a generic AI generator.
Turn your messy SaaS idea into a launch plan you can act on this week.
Ground every output in the same project context so the plan does not drift between prompts.
Converts the plan into concrete before-build, before-launch, launch-day, and first-week actions.
Interview five target founders and capture the repeated planning breakdowns they describe.
Publish the landing page, invite the first ten beta users, and track the first meaningful activation moment.
Turns the launch into four focused weeks: validation, MVP build, pre-launch, and feedback.
Confirm the narrow user segment and decide which workflow pain appears most often.
Ship the first beta, watch users complete one plan, and revise the next action model.
validation
Three repeated planning breakdowns are documented.
scope
Every feature maps to intake, output, task, or export.
launch
Each tester tries to create one launch-ready plan.