Lovable Ai Business Setup – FULL WALKTHRU

CLICK HERE TO GET YOUR LOVABLE ACCT

My next trainings will be about how to use lovable to make simple desktop apps
the $25 plan will do just fine – you can create tons of stuff with it.

CLICK HERE TO JOIN MY DESKTOP TOOLS TRAINING

USE COUPON CODE LOVEABLE TO SAVE $200 THIS IS A COURSE YOU DON’T WANT TO MISS BECAUSE WE WILL BE CREATING FULL BUSINESS WITH YOU… YES EVERYONE WILL WALK AWAY WITH A SELLABLE TOOL THEY CAN PROFIT WITH.

Want my prompts, my templates, and my exact process instead of trying to piece it together yourself? Elite members get everything I use, plus the stuff I do not share publicly. If you are serious about doing this for real, this is the shortcut.

Elite members get the unfair advantage: the exact prompts and resources from today’s training will be inside the Elite members area. Everyone else has to take notes and hope they got it all.

Upgrade To AI Profit Scoop Elite »Get the prompts, templates, and my full process

Full Detailed Video Notes

Quick Summary

The video explains a business method based on building small, single-purpose software tools with AI. The presenter calls this idea micro software. Instead of attempting to create a huge platform with many features, the goal is to find one recurring problem, build a focused utility that solves it, and connect that utility to a sensible business model.

The tool could be sold for a one-time fee, offered through a subscription, used as a freemium product, licensed to other businesses, monetized with affiliate offers, or given away to build a targeted email list. The presenter demonstrates how tools such as Ahrefs, Google, YouTube, Similarweb, ChatGPT, Claude, Lovable, Electron, and the Gemini API can support the research and creation process.1

The central lesson of the entire video is: “Solve one problem.”

The presenter also gives an important reality check. Building software with AI may be faster than traditional coding, but it is still a real business. It requires research, testing, troubleshooting, marketing, persistence, and ongoing improvement. There is no guarantee that an app will make money simply because AI helped create it.1

The Main Business Idea: Micro Software

Micro software is a small program that performs one useful task exceptionally well. It is not intended to compete with an enormous enterprise platform. It is designed to remove one frustration, automate one repetitive task, convert one type of file, organize one kind of information, or make one part of a workflow faster.

The presenter uses ordinary tools such as Notepad, calculators, text utilities, formatters, converters, and simple whiteboards to illustrate the concept. These products may not look exciting, but people continue to use and buy them because they save time or solve an immediate problem.1

He gives a simple revenue illustration:

Example Calculation Gross revenue illustration
Small audience $17 × 500 buyers $8,500
Larger audience $17 × 5,000 buyers $85,000

These figures are examples, not income promises. The larger lesson is that a product does not need to become a billion-dollar company to be worthwhile. A modestly priced utility can produce meaningful revenue if it solves a clear problem for enough people.1

Full Chronological Notes

00:00–02:00 — Introduction and the “Solve One Problem” Principle

The presenter opens by discussing the large number of online videos that claim people can use AI to build a business and make money very quickly. He says this information can become overwhelming because viewers are shown many tools, complicated systems, and ambitious ideas without a clear starting point.

His answer is written on his whiteboard: solve one problem. He argues that many aspiring builders make the mistake of trying to create an all-in-one AI application. That usually adds unnecessary complexity before the basic idea has been validated.

The better approach is to identify one specific problem and create the smallest useful tool that solves it. A focused utility is easier to describe, easier to build, easier to test, and usually easier to market because potential customers immediately understand what it does.1

02:00–03:18 — Reality Check: This Is Still a Real Business

The presenter says that business advice should be supported by real examples, actual tools, and visible data rather than vague motivational claims. He warns that most people who watch “make money online” content do not earn money from it.

AI reduces the technical barrier, but it does not remove the need for work. A useful product still requires:

  • A real problem worth solving.
  • Evidence that people care about the problem.
  • A working product rather than an unfinished demonstration.
  • Testing with realistic files and workflows.
  • A way to reach the intended audience.
  • A clear offer or monetization plan.
  • Patience when errors and failed versions appear.

The presenter makes clear that there are no guarantees and that things can go wrong. The method should be viewed as a practical business process, not an instant-income shortcut.1

03:18–04:50 — What Counts as Micro Software?

Micro software is presented as a small desktop program or online utility that performs a narrow function. The presenter refers to familiar programs such as Notepad, calculators, Microsoft Word, and a simple whiteboard tool. Each succeeds because users can quickly understand its purpose.

A strong micro-software idea can usually be explained in one sentence. Examples include:

  • Save and organize everything copied to a computer’s clipboard.
  • Convert an Excel spreadsheet into a PDF or HTML file.
  • Find and replace text across multiple files.
  • Format or repair JSON code.
  • Organize useful AI prompts and copy them with one click.
  • Manage a particular repetitive WordPress task.

The product does not need to be visually impressive. It needs to be reliable, easy to use, and valuable to a defined group of users.1

04:50–06:09 — The Presenter’s 2002 Floppy-Disk Example

The presenter tells a story from 2002 to explain how he first understood the economics of reusable digital products. He says he purchased packs of blank floppy disks at a very low unit cost. He then used Microsoft FrontPage to create a simple digital version of an Herbalife catalog, added PayPal links, and placed the HTML package on the disks.

He sold the disks to other Herbalife representatives for $500 each and says he made $7,000 in one night from roughly two hours of work. His main insight was not the specific disk or catalog. It was that a digital product could be created once and sold repeatedly without rebuilding the entire product for every buyer.1

The broader business lesson is that reusable digital assets can have low reproduction costs. Software applies the same principle: the initial build may require substantial effort, but distributing another copy can be relatively inexpensive.

06:09–08:28 — From Digital Files to Information Products

As the internet became more accessible, digital products such as ebooks, PDFs, courses, and downloadable files became easier to create. This also created a problem: when almost anyone can produce a basic PDF, its perceived value may decrease.

The presenter describes his 2008 product, Simple Sites Big Profits. It was initially offered through formats such as a PDF, a printable book, and a physical DVD. He says it produced one $247 sale during its first month.1

The example introduces an important distinction between the information itself and the way the information is packaged and delivered. Buyers may value the same material differently depending on whether it appears to be a loose collection of files or a structured tool that guides them through a process.

CLICK HERE TO GET YOUR LOVABLE ACCT

My next trainings will be about how to use lovable to make simple desktop apps
the $25 plan will do just fine – you can create tons of stuff with it.

CLICK HERE TO JOIN MY DESKTOP TOOLS TRAINING

08:28–09:59 — Packaging Information as a Tool

The presenter shows a dashboard version of Simple Sites Big Profits. The dashboard looks like software, although much of its purpose is to organize and link to videos, checklists, resources, and related tools.

This packaging made the product feel more organized and actionable. Instead of searching through separate documents and files, users could open one interface and follow the material from a central location.

The presenter’s lesson is that the word software or tool may carry greater perceived value than the words ebook or course, especially when the interface makes the information easier to use. He says the stronger software-style packaging helped turn a product in the approximate $200 range into an offer worth about $1,000.1

This does not mean a creator should misrepresent a collection of links as advanced technology. The ethical and practical point is to improve usability: create a real dashboard, workflow, organizer, generator, calculator, checklist system, or automation that helps the customer apply the information.

09:59–12:00 — Validate Demand by Studying Existing Utilities

The presenter demonstrates TextCrawler, a Windows utility that performs find-and-replace operations across text files. It is a good micro-software example because its core purpose is narrow and easy to understand.

He uses Ahrefs Keyword Explorer to look at search demand. The video shows approximately 12,000 monthly searches for “find replace” and around 30 monthly searches for “text crawler.” These figures illustrate why research should focus on the problem or action rather than only the name of one product.1

The presenter says he has purchased TextCrawler more than once over the years for about $100 because it reliably does what he needs. A focused tool can retain customers even if it is not fashionable.

He also recalls a product called Niche Finder, which helped users find ClickBank products and related domains. At the time, he wished he could make software like it but did not know how to code. His point is that AI coding tools now allow nontraditional developers to test ideas that previously required a programmer.

12:00–13:46 — Market Size and Monetization Options

The presenter displays a market estimate that values the Windows utility software market at approximately $5.1 billion in 2024, with a projected rise to about $9.15 billion by 2033. These figures are presented in the video and are not independently verified in these notes.1

He then describes several ways a utility can make money:

Model How it works Suitable situation
Freemium The basic version is free; advanced features require payment. Useful when the free version can attract a large audience.
Subscription Users pay monthly or annually for continued access, updates, storage, or AI usage. Suitable when the product delivers recurring value or has ongoing operating costs.
Perpetual license The customer pays once for continued use of a particular version. Appropriate for a simple desktop utility with limited ongoing costs.
OEM or white label Other companies license the software engine and apply their own branding. Useful when the technology can serve many businesses or niches.
Affiliate model The tool is free but recommends relevant products or services through affiliate links. Works when the recommendations naturally support the tool’s purpose.
Lead magnet or “intercept” model The tool is free or inexpensive and attracts people likely to need a larger related offer. Useful for building an email list and selling coaching, training, services, or advanced tools.

The business model should be selected based on the problem, customer expectations, ongoing costs, and the creator’s larger offer.1

13:46–15:14 — Large Companies Built Around Focused Software

The presenter briefly mentions companies and brands such as Gen Digital, Norton, Avast, and Malwarebytes. He then focuses on Wondershare and refers to products including Filmora, PDFelement, UniConverter, and Recoverit.

His argument is that many successful software businesses are built around understandable use cases: edit video, work with PDF files, convert media, or recover lost data. Even when these products eventually gain many features, their core value remains connected to a specific problem.1

The lesson is not that a beginner should immediately compete with a large established company. The lesson is to look at successful software categories, identify smaller unmet needs, and choose a narrow entry point.

15:14–18:23 — Finding and Validating a Clipboard-History Idea

The presenter uses Ahrefs to research the word clipboard. He finds that “clipboard history” receives approximately 23,000 searches per month in the data shown during the video.1

He then searches Google and finds an existing product called Clipboard History IO. The site offers a free version and a Pro plan shown at approximately $1.99 per month or $14.99 per year. Similarweb is used to estimate about 11,000 monthly visits to the site.1

This competitor does not automatically make the idea bad. It proves that:

  • People search for the problem.
  • A product already exists to solve it.
  • At least one company believes users may pay for additional features.
  • The market may contain room for a different audience, operating system, feature set, interface, or pricing strategy.

The presenter suggests using ChatGPT to extend the research with a prompt similar to this:

Find competitors and top earners with software like this: https://www.clipboardhistory.io/

He then demonstrates a direct building prompt for an AI coding assistant:

I want to make a clipboard history tool that saves everything copied as a file and has the items in a list. Make this a Windows desktop EXE.

The presenter notes that the prompt does not need perfect grammar. The AI needs a clear description of the problem, desired behavior, and target format.1

18:23–22:24 — The “Intercept” Business Model

The presenter introduces Personality Prompts, a tool containing categorized AI prompts for activities such as copywriting and branding. He shows both a web version and a desktop-style version. A user can select a prompt and copy it to the clipboard.1

He uses a whiteboard to explain the intercept model:

  1. A person is attempting to use AI.
  2. The person struggles to organize prompts or get consistent results.
  3. A free prompt-organizer tool solves that immediate problem.
  4. The user joins the creator’s mailing list or enters the creator’s ecosystem.
  5. The creator can later present a relevant advanced product, coaching offer, service, or training program.

The free tool is therefore not random. It intercepts people at a moment when they are already experiencing the exact problem connected to the creator’s paid offer.

A good intercept product should provide genuine value on its own. If the free tool is low quality, users will not trust the paid offer. The free utility should demonstrate the creator’s understanding of the customer’s problem.1

22:24–25:30 — Building a Windows App With Lovable

The presenter shows a prompt asking Lovable to create an Electron-based Windows EXE. The requested product is a Gemini-powered JSON editor, creator, and learning tool. It includes a notepad-style interface, the ability to view and change JSON, saving controls, a folder selection, and an admin/settings area where the user can enter a Gemini API key.1

The original prompt shown in the video is informal and contains spelling errors:

lets make a windows exe electron program that is like a super robust gemini api powered json editor creator learning tool with like a notepad where they can click and view what it does change it save it ect they enter thier gemini api to use the ai stuff on an admin page also choose folder to save in make it light color schmee

A clearer reusable version would be:

Build a light-colored Electron desktop application for Windows. The application should be a robust JSON editor, creator, and learning tool powered by the Gemini API. Include a notepad-style editor where users can open, view, edit, explain, and save JSON files. Add a settings page where users can enter and test their own Gemini API key. Let users select a default folder for saved files. Package the finished application as a Windows EXE.

The presenter’s broader point is that a rough idea can be turned into a starting version quickly. However, clear specifications normally reduce unnecessary revisions and credit usage.

He also shows a master app-idea table containing categories such as:

Category Example directions
Timer and focus tools Pomodoro timers, distraction blockers, meeting timers, or stage timers.
Meditation and wellness Guided routines, breathing timers, habit reminders, or focused audio utilities.
Pet applications Dog-calming music, pet schedules, feeding reminders, or training aids.
Productivity and AI workflow Email rewriters, prompt organizers, text processors, or file utilities.
Fun and novelty Joke generators, name generators, creative randomizers, or simple entertainment tools.

CLICK HERE TO GET YOUR LOVABLE ACCT

My next trainings will be about how to use lovable to make simple desktop apps
the $25 plan will do just fine – you can create tons of stuff with it.

CLICK HERE TO JOIN MY DESKTOP TOOLS TRAINING

 

25:30–29:06 — Keyword Research for Software Ideas

The presenter continues using Ahrefs to test possible software topics. Figures shown in the video include the following approximate monthly search volumes:1

Keyword Approximate search volume shown
timer app for Windows 350
prompts 6,800
AI prompt 5,500
HTML editor 13,000
format 24,000
resume format 19,000
JSON format 90,000

For “timer app for Windows,” he reviews Google results such as Free Timer App, StageTimer, and Clockify. The purpose is to see what already ranks, how competitors position their tools, and whether users want a desktop application, browser utility, mobile application, or specialized version.1

For “JSON formatter,” he finds multiple online tools. He also searches YouTube and sees JSON-related videos with very large view counts. Search-engine demand and video views can provide two different signals that people want help understanding or manipulating the format.

Keyword volume alone is not enough. A useful validation process asks:

  • What exactly is the searcher trying to accomplish?
  • Are current tools free, paid, outdated, complicated, or missing a feature?
  • Does the search indicate a one-time question or a recurring workflow?
  • Can the intended user be reached economically?
  • Is there a reason to choose a desktop app instead of a free website?
  • Can a small first version produce a noticeably better result?

29:06–32:25 — Use “Trigger Words” to Generate App Ideas

The presenter uses a file called software_trigger_words.txt. It contains action-oriented words that describe common software functions. He combines these words with markets, file types, professions, and recurring tasks to discover possible app ideas.1

Examples include:

Trigger word Possible product direction
Replacer Replace text, code, links, names, tags, or values across many files.
Summarizer Summarize documents, meeting notes, articles, transcripts, or reports.
Expander Expand outlines, abbreviations, snippets, or short descriptions.
Formatter Format JSON, resumes, citations, code, text, spreadsheets, or documents.
Minify Reduce the size of code, images, scripts, or data files.
Prettifier Improve the visual structure of code or hard-to-read data.
Rewriter Rewrite sentences, emails, descriptions, headlines, or specialized documents.
Humanizer Change AI-sounding text into a more natural style.
Bulk Process multiple files, images, URLs, keywords, or records at once.

The video shows approximately 63,000 searches for “rewriter,” 41,000 for “sentence rewriter,” and 146,000 for “humanizer.” The presenter describes AI humanizer software as a potentially large opportunity. These numbers can change and should be rechecked before making a product decision.1

A practical formula for brainstorming is:

Audience or file type + recurring problem + trigger word = possible micro-software idea

Examples:

  • Real-estate description rewriter.
  • Bulk image-name replacer.
  • JSON formatter for beginners.
  • Meeting-note summarizer for sales teams.
  • WordPress title and meta-description rewriter.
  • Resume-format checker for a particular profession.

The niche version may have less total search volume than the broad term, but it can be easier to explain and market to a specific audience.

32:25–35:05 — Testing and Debugging the JSON Tool

The presenter returns to Lovable after the JSON application has been generated. He downloads a ZIP archive, extracts it, and launches the Windows EXE. The application opens as a JSON Code Tool.1

He visits the application’s settings area, enters a Gemini API key, and tests the connection. The AI-powered feature works. He then tries to open a JSON file and receives an “unexpected token” error.

Instead of attempting to diagnose every line manually, he copies the error message and gives it back to the AI builder for correction. This demonstrates an important AI-development loop:

  1. Build the smallest working version.
  2. Run it locally.
  3. Test a real user action.
  4. Capture the exact error message.
  5. Give the error and relevant context back to the AI.
  6. Ask for a targeted fix.
  7. Rebuild and test again.

AI-generated code should not be assumed to work perfectly on the first attempt. Error messages, screenshots, sample files, and exact reproduction steps help the AI make better corrections.

Security note: An API key should not be hard-coded into an application or exposed to other users. If users supply their own key, it should be stored securely and the app should explain what data is sent to the external AI service.

35:05–38:09 — Live Build: Excel-to-PDF Converter

CLICK HERE TO GET YOUR LOVABLE ACCT

My next trainings will be about how to use lovable to make simple desktop apps
the $25 plan will do just fine – you can create tons of stuff with it.

CLICK HERE TO JOIN MY DESKTOP TOOLS TRAINING

The presenter asks Lovable to make a simple Electron EXE that converts Excel files into several formats. The original prompt is:

lets make a simple electron exe that converts excel to various file types including pdf html ect drag and drop simple

A clearer reusable version would be:

Build a simple Electron desktop app for Windows that converts Excel spreadsheets into PDF, HTML, and other useful formats. Use a clean drag-and-drop interface. Let the user select the desired output format and output folder. Show clear progress, success, and error messages. Package the finished app as a Windows EXE.

Lovable generates the app. The presenter downloads and extracts the ZIP archive, opens the Excel Converter EXE, drags in a spreadsheet, selects PDF, and successfully creates a PDF.1

He then adds a new feature with another prompt:

how to password protect an excel file lets add a password protect element too

Lovable updates the interface to include a Password protect toggle and a password field.1

This demonstration shows how AI development can be iterative. A creator can first confirm that the main conversion function works and then add a related feature. The warning is to avoid adding so many features that the product loses its original simplicity.

38:09–40:00 — Blog Profit Network Command Center

The presenter briefly shows another application called the Blog Profit Network Command Center. It is described as an FTP-based tool for managing multiple WordPress blogs from one dashboard.1

He says the tool is intentionally given away to attract users to his AI Profit Scoop program. This is another intercept-model example:

  • The free tool attracts people who manage WordPress sites.
  • Those users are interested in automation, content, traffic, or online revenue.
  • The audience is therefore relevant to a larger AI-focused program.

The tool may be more valuable as a targeted customer-acquisition asset than as a small one-time sale. A creator should compare the expected value of a direct software sale with the long-term value of a qualified email subscriber or customer relationship.

40:00–45:05 — Costs, Time, and Final Advice

The presenter states that the JSON tool took less than three hours and used roughly $50 in AI credits. He attributes some of that cost to experimenting, making mistakes, and submitting many revisions while learning. He says the simpler clipboard tool cost approximately $20 to generate.1

These amounts are examples from his process, not fixed prices. Actual cost depends on the builder, plan, complexity, number of revisions, external APIs, testing needs, code quality, and distribution method.

His closing recommendation is to start with a small productivity bottleneck in one’s own daily work. The viewer should identify one tiny frustration, open Claude or Lovable, describe the desired tool, and attempt a focused first version.

He directs viewers to downloadmynotes.com for his notes, trigger-word list, and software examples.1

The Complete Method in Simple Steps

Step 1: Notice a Repeated Problem

Pay attention to tasks that cause friction every day or every week. Good starting problems often involve repetitive copying, renaming, formatting, converting, organizing, checking, summarizing, or moving data.

Write the problem in one sentence:

I repeatedly need to _, but the current process is slow because _.

Step 2: Define One Clear Outcome

Describe the tool without listing dozens of features:

This tool helps [specific user] turn [input] into [desired output] in [simple method].

Example:

This tool helps a WordPress publisher convert a spreadsheet of draft titles into organized post-planning cards through a drag-and-drop desktop interface.

Step 3: Research the Language People Use

Use a keyword tool, Google autocomplete, related searches, forums, YouTube, software marketplaces, review sites, and competitor pages. Search for the problem, desired result, file type, job role, and action words.

Do not search only for the name you want to give the app. Customers usually search for their problem before they know a particular product name.

Step 4: Examine Existing Products

Find at least three alternatives. Record:

Question What to examine
What is the promise? The headline and primary use case.
Who is the user? General consumers, creators, developers, agencies, or a specialized profession.
How is it priced? Free, freemium, one-time, monthly, annual, or enterprise.
What do reviews praise? Reliability, speed, simplicity, integrations, support, or design.
What do reviews criticize? Missing features, confusing setup, poor output, privacy concerns, or high price.
What is the narrow opportunity? A specialized audience, simpler workflow, desktop version, privacy-first version, bulk processing, or better onboarding.

Competition is usually proof that the problem exists. The task is to find a realistic reason for users to choose a new version.

Step 5: Define the Minimum Useful Version

The first version should complete one full workflow. For a converter, that may be:

  1. Select or drag in a file.
  2. Choose an output format.
  3. Choose an output folder.
  4. Convert the file.
  5. Show a useful success or error message.

Features such as accounts, cloud syncing, team permissions, analytics, templates, and advanced AI should be delayed unless they are essential to the first result.

Step 6: Give the AI a Better Build Prompt

A strong prompt should state:

  • The target user.
  • The central problem.
  • The required input and output.
  • The operating environment, such as web or Windows desktop.
  • The minimum screens and controls.
  • Where data should be stored.
  • Whether an external API is required.
  • The desired visual style.
  • Expected error handling.
  • The packaging or deployment requirement.

Reusable prompt template:

Build a [web/Windows/macOS/mobile] application for [target user]. Its primary purpose is to [single outcome]. Users will provide [input], and the app will produce [output]. The minimum workflow is: [steps]. Include [essential controls only]. Store data [location/method]. If an API is needed, add a secure settings screen where the user can enter and test a key. Use a [visual style] interface. Add clear validation, progress, success, and error messages. Package the result as [desired format]. Do not add unrelated features.

Step 7: Test With Real Examples

Do not judge the product only by whether the interface opens. Test normal files, empty files, large files, unusual characters, incorrect formats, missing settings, invalid API keys, and repeated actions.

Keep a simple test log:

Test Expected result Actual result Fix needed
Valid input Correct output file
Empty input Clear warning
Invalid format Helpful error
Missing API key Setup guidance
Large file Completes or warns about limits

Step 8: Debug Through Short Feedback Loops

When an error occurs, provide the AI with:

  • The exact error message.
  • The action performed immediately before the error.
  • The operating system and app version.
  • A sample input, with private data removed.
  • What should have happened instead.

Ask the AI to identify the likely cause, change only the relevant portion, explain the fix, and preserve working features.

Step 9: Choose the Business Model

Use a one-time license when the tool is simple and ongoing costs are low. Use a subscription when users receive continuing value, cloud services, storage, new content, or ongoing AI processing. Use freemium when a useful free version can attract many people and advanced users have a clear reason to upgrade.

Use the intercept model when the software naturally attracts the same audience that needs a larger product or service. The free tool must be genuinely useful and the later offer must be directly relevant.

Step 10: Launch Small and Learn

A first launch can involve a small email list, niche community, existing clients, beta group, or direct outreach to people who clearly experience the problem. Measure whether users complete the core workflow, return to the app, request the same missing feature, and recommend it to others.

Avoid interpreting downloads alone as success. Useful signals include completed actions, repeat usage, activation rate, upgrades, support requests, refunds, referrals, and willingness to pay.

Important Lessons From the Video

Lesson Practical meaning
Solve one problem A narrow promise improves clarity, development speed, and marketing.
Research before building Search activity, existing products, traffic estimates, reviews, and pricing reveal whether the problem has commercial value.
Competition can validate demand An existing paid tool proves that at least some users may pay, although it does not guarantee room for a new entrant.
Packaging matters A dashboard or working utility can make information easier to use and therefore more valuable.
AI removes part of the coding barrier Nonprogrammers can create prototypes, but testing, security, distribution, and maintenance still matter.
Start with the core workflow Confirm the main function before adding secondary features.
Expect debugging Copy exact error messages and use short build-test-fix cycles.
Select monetization deliberately Direct sales, subscriptions, licensing, affiliate offers, and lead generation serve different goals.
A free tool should lead somewhere relevant Intercept products work when the user’s immediate problem connects naturally to the backend offer.
Real businesses require work Tools, prompts, and AI credits do not replace customer research or execution.

Practical Warnings

Do not treat the search volumes as permanent. The figures in the video are snapshots from the presenter’s research. Recheck them with current data before committing time or money.

Do not assume demand guarantees sales. A large keyword may be informational, dominated by free tools, difficult to rank for, or poorly matched to a paid desktop app.

Do not expose API keys. Use secure storage and clear privacy practices. Never publish a private key in source code or a public repository.

Do not distribute untested AI-generated software. Generated code may contain errors, security weaknesses, licensing issues, or behavior that fails with real data.

Do not overbuild the first version. Every extra feature increases development time, testing requirements, support needs, and possible failure points.

Do not make unsupported income promises. The presenter’s historical revenue examples and cost estimates describe his reported experience. Results vary by market, execution, pricing, reach, and product quality.1

Final Action Checklist

  • [ ] Write down one recurring problem.
  • [ ] Define one user and one desired outcome.
  • [ ] Research the problem using the language customers use.
  • [ ] Find at least three competing or substitute products.
  • [ ] Compare features, pricing, positioning, and reviews.
  • [ ] Select one differentiating angle.
  • [ ] Define the minimum useful workflow.
  • [ ] Create a clear first build prompt.
  • [ ] Generate and run the initial version.
  • [ ] Test it with realistic inputs.
  • [ ] Copy exact errors back into the AI builder.
  • [ ] Fix the core function before adding features.
  • [ ] Choose a direct-sale, subscription, freemium, licensing, affiliate, or intercept model.
  • [ ] Explain how the app handles files, personal data, and API keys.
  • [ ] Launch to a small relevant audience.
  • [ ] Track real usage and repeated feedback.
  • [ ] Improve only the features users actually need.

Final Takeaway

The fastest path proposed in the video is not “ask AI for a random app and hope it makes money.” It is a disciplined sequence:

Find one recurring problem → verify that people care → build the smallest useful solution → test it with real inputs → fix errors → connect it to a clear business model.

Lovable, Claude, and other AI tools can make the building stage faster, but the strongest opportunity still comes from understanding the user and choosing the right problem. A small utility with a clear purpose can be more practical and profitable than an ambitious platform that never becomes reliable or reaches the right audience.

CLICK HERE TO GET YOUR LOVABLE ACCT

My next trainings will be about how to use lovable to make simple desktop apps
the $25 plan will do just fine – you can create tons of stuff with it.

CLICK HERE TO JOIN MY DESKTOP TOOLS TRAINING

250 Software Trigger Words for Finding Micro-Software Ideas

Purpose: Use these trigger words in Ahrefs, Semrush, Google Keyword Planner, Keywords Everywhere, Ubersuggest, Google Trends, YouTube, app stores, software marketplaces, and ordinary Google searches to uncover small software opportunities.

Core formula: Niche, audience, file type, or task + trigger word = possible software idea.

Examples include real estate + calculatorWordPress + bulk editorresume + formatterpodcast + summarizerExcel + cleaner, and photographer + invoice generator.

How to Use the List

Start with a seed topic such as a profession, hobby, file type, platform, business task, or pain point. Combine that seed with each trigger word in both orders. For example, test PDF compressor and compress PDF, or email extractor and extract emails. Then add modifiers that reveal a narrower commercial angle.

Modifier type Examples
Audience for lawyers, for teachers, for agencies, for beginners
Platform for Windows, for Mac, for WordPress, Chrome extension
Workflow bulk, batch, automatic, offline, desktop, drag and drop
Commercial intent software, tool, app, download, pricing, alternative, lifetime deal
Problem or quality faster, private, secure, no login, local, simple, free, professional

A keyword with high volume is not automatically a good business. Check the search intent, competing products, pricing, reviews, traffic, difficulty, recurring use, and whether a focused tool can offer a clear advantage.

Text and Content Transformation

No. Trigger word Example keyword combination
1 Rewriter [seed topic] rewriter
2 Replacer [seed topic] replacer
3 Summarizer [seed topic] summarizer
4 Expander [seed topic] expander
5 Formatter [seed topic] formatter
6 Paraphraser [seed topic] paraphraser
7 Shortener [seed topic] shortener
8 Simplifier [seed topic] simplifier
9 Humanizer [seed topic] humanizer
10 Formalizer [seed topic] formalizer
11 Casualizer [seed topic] casualizer
12 Translator [seed topic] translator
13 Transcriber [seed topic] transcriber
14 Proofreader [seed topic] proofreader
15 Spellchecker [seed topic] spellchecker
16 Punctuation Fixer [seed topic] punctuation fixer
17 Capitalizer [seed topic] capitalizer
18 Decapitalizer [seed topic] decapitalizer
19 Case Converter [seed topic] case converter
20 Sentence Splitter [seed topic] sentence splitter
21 Text Merger [seed topic] text merger
22 Text Cleaner [seed topic] text cleaner
23 Text Extractor [seed topic] text extractor
24 Readability Analyzer [seed topic] readability analyzer
25 Tone Changer [seed topic] tone changer

File and Format Utilities

No. Trigger word Example keyword combination
26 File Converter [seed topic] file converter
27 Format Converter [seed topic] format converter
28 PDF Converter [seed topic] pdf converter
29 Image Converter [seed topic] image converter
30 Video Converter [seed topic] video converter
31 Audio Converter [seed topic] audio converter
32 Document Converter [seed topic] document converter
33 Spreadsheet Converter [seed topic] spreadsheet converter
34 Archive Converter [seed topic] archive converter
35 Encoder [seed topic] encoder
36 Decoder [seed topic] decoder
37 Compressor [seed topic] compressor
38 Decompressor [seed topic] decompressor
39 Zipper [seed topic] zipper
40 Unzipper [seed topic] unzipper
41 File Merger [seed topic] file merger
42 File Splitter [seed topic] file splitter
43 File Flattener [seed topic] file flattener
44 File Normalizer [seed topic] file normalizer
45 File Optimizer [seed topic] file optimizer
46 File Repairer [seed topic] file repairer
47 File Viewer [seed topic] file viewer
48 File Previewer [seed topic] file previewer
49 File Opener [seed topic] file opener
50 File Exporter [seed topic] file exporter

Data, Code, and Developer Tools

No. Trigger word Example keyword combination
51 JSON Formatter [seed topic] json formatter
52 XML Formatter [seed topic] xml formatter
53 CSV Cleaner [seed topic] csv cleaner
54 SQL Formatter [seed topic] sql formatter
55 Code Beautifier [seed topic] code beautifier
56 Minify [seed topic] minify
57 Prettifier [seed topic] prettifier
58 Linter [seed topic] linter
59 Validator [seed topic] validator
60 Syntax Checker [seed topic] syntax checker
61 Schema Generator [seed topic] schema generator
62 Regex Tester [seed topic] regex tester
63 API Tester [seed topic] api tester
64 Endpoint Monitor [seed topic] endpoint monitor
65 Webhook Tester [seed topic] webhook tester
66 Log Analyzer [seed topic] log analyzer
67 Query Builder [seed topic] query builder
68 Query Optimizer [seed topic] query optimizer
69 Code Converter [seed topic] code converter
70 Code Generator [seed topic] code generator
71 Code Explainer [seed topic] code explainer
72 Code Reviewer [seed topic] code reviewer
73 Dependency Checker [seed topic] dependency checker
74 Package Manager [seed topic] package manager
75 Environment Manager [seed topic] environment manager

Search, Extraction, and Discovery

No. Trigger word Example keyword combination
76 Finder [seed topic] finder
77 Searcher [seed topic] searcher
78 Locator [seed topic] locator
79 Scanner [seed topic] scanner
80 Crawler [seed topic] crawler
81 Scraper [seed topic] scraper
82 Harvester [seed topic] harvester
83 Extractor [seed topic] extractor
84 Parser [seed topic] parser
85 Detector [seed topic] detector
86 Recognizer [seed topic] recognizer
87 Identifier [seed topic] identifier
88 Classifier [seed topic] classifier
89 Tagger [seed topic] tagger
90 Indexer [seed topic] indexer
91 Filter [seed topic] filter
92 Sorter [seed topic] sorter
93 Grouper [seed topic] grouper
94 Matcher [seed topic] matcher
95 Deduplicator [seed topic] deduplicator
96 Link Checker [seed topic] link checker
97 Broken Link Finder [seed topic] broken link finder
98 Email Extractor [seed topic] email extractor
99 Keyword Extractor [seed topic] keyword extractor
100 Metadata Extractor [seed topic] metadata extractor

Bulk Productivity and Automation

No. Trigger word Example keyword combination
101 Bulk [seed topic] bulk
102 Bulk Editor [seed topic] bulk editor
103 Batch Processor [seed topic] batch processor
104 Automator [seed topic] automator
105 Scheduler [seed topic] scheduler
106 Reminder [seed topic] reminder
107 Timer [seed topic] timer
108 Stopwatch [seed topic] stopwatch
109 Countdown [seed topic] countdown
110 Tracker [seed topic] tracker
111 Logger [seed topic] logger
112 Recorder [seed topic] recorder
113 Clipboard Manager [seed topic] clipboard manager
114 Snippet Manager [seed topic] snippet manager
115 Template Manager [seed topic] template manager
116 Shortcut Manager [seed topic] shortcut manager
117 Hotkey Manager [seed topic] hotkey manager
118 Macro Recorder [seed topic] macro recorder
119 Auto Clicker [seed topic] auto clicker
120 Auto Filler [seed topic] auto filler
121 Form Filler [seed topic] form filler
122 Auto Responder [seed topic] auto responder
123 Notification Manager [seed topic] notification manager
124 Workflow Builder [seed topic] workflow builder
125 Task Manager [seed topic] task manager

Organization and Business Administration

No. Trigger word Example keyword combination
126 Organizer [seed topic] organizer
127 Dashboard [seed topic] dashboard
128 Planner [seed topic] planner
129 Calendar [seed topic] calendar
130 Checklist [seed topic] checklist
131 Form Builder [seed topic] form builder
132 Kanban Board [seed topic] kanban board
133 Whiteboard [seed topic] whiteboard
134 Mind Mapper [seed topic] mind mapper
135 Note Taker [seed topic] note taker
136 Bookmark Manager [seed topic] bookmark manager
137 Inventory Manager [seed topic] inventory manager
138 Asset Manager [seed topic] asset manager
139 Contact Manager [seed topic] contact manager
140 CRM [seed topic] crm
141 Invoice Generator [seed topic] invoice generator
142 Quote Generator [seed topic] quote generator
143 Receipt Generator [seed topic] receipt generator
144 Expense Tracker [seed topic] expense tracker
145 Budget Planner [seed topic] budget planner
146 Time Tracker [seed topic] time tracker
147 Attendance Tracker [seed topic] attendance tracker
148 Shift Scheduler [seed topic] shift scheduler
149 Appointment Booker [seed topic] appointment booker
150 Reservation Manager [seed topic] reservation manager

Calculators, Estimators, and Decision Tools

No. Trigger word Example keyword combination
151 Calculator [seed topic] calculator
152 Estimator [seed topic] estimator
153 Forecaster [seed topic] forecaster
154 Predictor [seed topic] predictor
155 Simulator [seed topic] simulator
156 Modeler [seed topic] modeler
157 Scorer [seed topic] scorer
158 Grader [seed topic] grader
159 Ranker [seed topic] ranker
160 Comparator [seed topic] comparator
161 Comparison Tool [seed topic] comparison tool
162 Cost Calculator [seed topic] cost calculator
163 ROI Calculator [seed topic] roi calculator
164 Profit Calculator [seed topic] profit calculator
165 Pricing Calculator [seed topic] pricing calculator
166 Margin Calculator [seed topic] margin calculator
167 Break-even Calculator [seed topic] break-even calculator
168 Tax Calculator [seed topic] tax calculator
169 Loan Calculator [seed topic] loan calculator
170 Savings Calculator [seed topic] savings calculator
171 Conversion Calculator [seed topic] conversion calculator
172 Unit Converter [seed topic] unit converter
173 Size Calculator [seed topic] size calculator
174 Duration Calculator [seed topic] duration calculator
175 Capacity Planner [seed topic] capacity planner

Media, Design, and Creative Utilities

No. Trigger word Example keyword combination
176 Image Editor [seed topic] image editor
177 Photo Enhancer [seed topic] photo enhancer
178 Background Remover [seed topic] background remover
179 Object Remover [seed topic] object remover
180 Watermark Remover [seed topic] watermark remover
181 Watermark Maker [seed topic] watermark maker
182 Thumbnail Maker [seed topic] thumbnail maker
183 Logo Maker [seed topic] logo maker
184 Icon Generator [seed topic] icon generator
185 Mockup Generator [seed topic] mockup generator
186 Meme Generator [seed topic] meme generator
187 Collage Maker [seed topic] collage maker
188 Screenshot Tool [seed topic] screenshot tool
189 Screen Recorder [seed topic] screen recorder
190 GIF Maker [seed topic] gif maker
191 Video Trimmer [seed topic] video trimmer
192 Video Resizer [seed topic] video resizer
193 Video Captioner [seed topic] video captioner
194 Audio Trimmer [seed topic] audio trimmer
195 Audio Normalizer [seed topic] audio normalizer
196 Noise Remover [seed topic] noise remover
197 Voice Changer [seed topic] voice changer
198 Subtitle Generator [seed topic] subtitle generator
199 Color Picker [seed topic] color picker
200 Palette Generator [seed topic] palette generator

Security, Privacy, Recovery, and System Tools

No. Trigger word Example keyword combination
201 Password Generator [seed topic] password generator
202 Password Manager [seed topic] password manager
203 Password Auditor [seed topic] password auditor
204 Encryption Tool [seed topic] encryption tool
205 Decryption Tool [seed topic] decryption tool
206 File Shredder [seed topic] file shredder
207 Data Masker [seed topic] data masker
208 Redactor [seed topic] redactor
209 Anonymizer [seed topic] anonymizer
210 Privacy Scanner [seed topic] privacy scanner
211 Permission Auditor [seed topic] permission auditor
212 Vulnerability Scanner [seed topic] vulnerability scanner
213 Port Scanner [seed topic] port scanner
214 Network Monitor [seed topic] network monitor
215 Uptime Monitor [seed topic] uptime monitor
216 Backup Tool [seed topic] backup tool
217 Restore Tool [seed topic] restore tool
218 Recovery Tool [seed topic] recovery tool
219 Undelete Tool [seed topic] undelete tool
220 Duplicate File Finder [seed topic] duplicate file finder
221 Disk Cleaner [seed topic] disk cleaner
222 Storage Analyzer [seed topic] storage analyzer
223 Startup Manager [seed topic] startup manager
224 Process Monitor [seed topic] process monitor
225 System Optimizer [seed topic] system optimizer

AI, Marketing, and Web Builders

No. Trigger word Example keyword combination
226 AI Generator [seed topic] ai generator
227 Prompt Generator [seed topic] prompt generator
228 Prompt Organizer [seed topic] prompt organizer
229 Chatbot Builder [seed topic] chatbot builder
230 Agent Builder [seed topic] agent builder
231 Content Generator [seed topic] content generator
232 Title Generator [seed topic] title generator
233 Headline Generator [seed topic] headline generator
234 Name Generator [seed topic] name generator
235 Idea Generator [seed topic] idea generator
236 Question Generator [seed topic] question generator
237 Quiz Maker [seed topic] quiz maker
238 Survey Builder [seed topic] survey builder
239 Landing Page Builder [seed topic] landing page builder
240 Website Builder [seed topic] website builder
241 Sitemap Generator [seed topic] sitemap generator
242 SEO Analyzer [seed topic] seo analyzer
243 Keyword Generator [seed topic] keyword generator
244 Keyword Clustering Tool [seed topic] keyword clustering tool
245 SERP Tracker [seed topic] serp tracker
246 Rank Tracker [seed topic] rank tracker
247 Ad Generator [seed topic] ad generator
248 Email Generator [seed topic] email generator
249 Product Description Generator [seed topic] product description generator
250 Social Post Generator [seed topic] social post generator

Fast Keyword Research Formulas

Formula Example
[Niche] + [trigger word] real estate profit calculator
[File type] + [trigger word] CSV cleaner
[Platform] + [trigger word] WordPress broken link finder
[Audience] + [trigger word] teacher lesson planner
[Task] + [trigger word] invoice reminder automator
Bulk + [object] + [action] bulk image resizer
[Competitor] + alternative TextCrawler alternative
Best + [tool] + for + [audience] best time tracker for freelancers
[Tool] + for Windows/Mac clipboard manager for Windows
Offline/private/local + [tool] offline PDF converter

Recommended Validation Process

  1. Enter a broad seed topic into the keyword tool.
  2. Combine it with 10–25 trigger words from the most relevant category.
  3. Export related keywords and questions.
  4. Look for recurring problems, meaningful search demand, and commercial language.
  5. Search Google, YouTube, app stores, Product Hunt, GitHub, and software marketplaces for existing solutions.
  6. Compare pricing, reviews, complaints, missing features, and target audiences.
  7. Select one narrow problem that can be solved by a minimum useful product.
  8. Build and test the smallest version before adding unrelated features.

Important Note

This is an idea-discovery list, not a list of validated businesses. Every idea still requires current keyword research, competition analysis, product testing, security review, and a realistic distribution plan.

CLICK HERE TO GET YOUR LOVABLE ACCT

My next trainings will be about how to use lovable to make simple desktop apps
the $25 plan will do just fine – you can create tons of stuff with it.

CLICK HERE TO JOIN MY DESKTOP TOOLS TRAINING

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *