Pazi: Vibe Coding, But for Running the Business
Vibe coding solved making the thing. Nobody solved selling it.
Pazi took the number one spot on Product Hunt on July 14 with 546 upvotes by aiming straight at that gap. You describe the business — a book, a shop, an app, some skill you want to monetize — and it assembles a team of agents: growth strategist, content writer, researcher. They do not sit around waiting for prompts. They go build the site, run competitor research, draft a content calendar, execute outreach. The co-founder describes the intended feeling as coming back and finding that something has moved.
The number they cite is the interesting one. Roughly 75 percent of their users want help getting customers, not building product. That tracks with what the last two years actually produced: an enormous cohort of people who can now ship software and could not before, all of whom hit the same wall about a week after launch. Cursor does not get you users. Claude Code does not get you users.
Same day, ClawTeams took the number two slot with 495 upvotes, pitching a goal-driven proactive agent team for e-commerce. Two of the top three products on Product Hunt were proactive agent teams for business operations. That is not a coincidence, that is a category forming, and the operative word in both pitches is proactive — the agent that waits for instructions has stopped being interesting.
The obvious risk is that the output is content-shaped slop nobody reads and outreach that gets your domain flagged. Pazi keeps a human approving major strategic shifts, which is the right instinct. The test is not whether the agents look busy when you check in. It is whether any of it brought a customer.
https://www.producthunt.com/products/pazi
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Pazi took the number one spot on Product Hunt on July 14 with 546 upvotes by aiming straight at that gap. You describe the business — a book, a shop, an app, some skill you want to monetize — and it assembles a team of agents: growth strategist, content writer, researcher. They do not sit around waiting for prompts. They go build the site, run competitor research, draft a content calendar, execute outreach. The co-founder describes the intended feeling as coming back and finding that something has moved.
The number they cite is the interesting one. Roughly 75 percent of their users want help getting customers, not building product. That tracks with what the last two years actually produced: an enormous cohort of people who can now ship software and could not before, all of whom hit the same wall about a week after launch. Cursor does not get you users. Claude Code does not get you users.
Same day, ClawTeams took the number two slot with 495 upvotes, pitching a goal-driven proactive agent team for e-commerce. Two of the top three products on Product Hunt were proactive agent teams for business operations. That is not a coincidence, that is a category forming, and the operative word in both pitches is proactive — the agent that waits for instructions has stopped being interesting.
The obvious risk is that the output is content-shaped slop nobody reads and outreach that gets your domain flagged. Pazi keeps a human approving major strategic shifts, which is the right instinct. The test is not whether the agents look busy when you check in. It is whether any of it brought a customer.
https://www.producthunt.com/products/pazi
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