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Question 1
I'm Girish Kotte (gkotte) - I've spent about twelve years building software for small businesses, and I keep coming back to the same kind of problem: operators drowning in tools that don't talk to each other. I like untangling that mess, especially the gap between marketing and sales where leads get generated but nobody can trace them back to revenue.
Question 2
Right now I'm building Wysera - one AI agent that runs the marketing, sales, and ops side of a small business instead of the usual eight-plus disconnected tools. It's two connected surfaces sharing one brain: PostWyse handles content, SEO, and distribution, and OpsWyse runs the sales pipeline and revenue. Leads generated on the content side get handed straight to sales, and the resulting revenue gets credited back.
Question 3
After years building software for small-business clients, I kept watching the same pattern: teams paying for HubSpot, Mailchimp, Sales Navigator, Zapier, and half a dozen other tools, plus someone on payroll just to stitch them all together by hand. That stitching cost, in dollars and in a person's time, is what actually pushed me to build Wysera instead of just complaining about it.
Question 4
I assumed the hard part would be the AI itself, getting an agent to draft good content or good outreach. It turned out the harder problem was trust: getting operators comfortable letting an agent act on their behalf. That's why approval-by-default and a full audit trail ended up being as central to the product as the AI.
Question 5
Seeing the handoff loop actually produce numbers, not just work in theory: leads flowing from the content side into the pipeline, and closed revenue getting credited back to the content that produced it. Watching that loop close with real leads and real dollars attached is what made it stop feeling like a demo.
Question 6
Pricing and packaging, honestly. We're still free during beta, and figuring out plain, flat pricing that doesn't punish small teams with a per-seat tax, while still making sense for larger rollouts, is something I'm actively working through.
Question 7
Don't wait for the product to be finished before you start showing it to the people you built it for. I spent years around small-business operators before writing a line of Wysera's code, and that time talking to them, not building, shaped the product more than anything that came after.