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Ben Spak
Ben Spak

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I Spent 12 Hours Submitting My Product to Directories. Here's What I Built to Never Do That Again.

Every founder who's launched a product knows the drill. You've built something you're proud of. You're ready to share it with the world. And then you discover you need to submit it to Product Hunt, BetaList, Peerlist, and about fifty other directories if you want any chance of getting noticed.

So you open your first submission form. You copy your tagline from your notes app. You paste it. You upload your logo. You fill in your description. Then you open the next directory. And you do it all again. And again. And again.

After my last launch, I calculated that I'd spent nearly twelve hours just on directory submissions. Twelve hours of copying the same tagline, pasting the same description, uploading the same screenshots. It was mind-numbing work that pulled me away from the things that actually mattered, like talking to users and iterating on feedback.

I knew there had to be a better way.

That's why I built AutoSubmit.to. It's a simple idea: save your launch information once, and let it autofill everywhere you need to submit.

The problem with product launches isn't the strategy or the timing or even the product itself. It's the operational overhead. Most founders underestimate how tedious the submission process becomes when you're trying to maximize visibility. Each directory has slightly different fields. Some want a short description, others want a long one. Some ask for your Twitter handle, others want your LinkedIn. Some require specific image dimensions.

This variability means you can't just copy and paste blindly. You need to adjust your content for each platform, which adds cognitive load to an already repetitive task. By the tenth submission, you're making mistakes. By the twentieth, you're wondering if any of this is even worth it.

AutoSubmit.to approaches this problem with a two-part system that's designed to be both simple and powerful.

First, you create a launch profile on the platform. This is your single source of truth. You enter your product name, tagline, descriptions of varying lengths, links to your website and social profiles, media assets like logos and screenshots, and any other relevant information. You do this once, and you're done with data entry.

Second, you install the Chrome extension. This becomes your autofill assistant. When you visit any supported directory to submit your product, the extension recognizes the submission form and can automatically populate it with the appropriate information from your saved profile.

What makes this especially useful is the intelligent mapping. Different directories have different field names and requirements, but AutoSubmit.to handles these variations automatically. It knows that when Product Hunt asks for a tagline, it should pull from the same field that Peerlist calls a subtitle. It ensures your information appears correctly regardless of how each platform structures its forms.

The dashboard gives you a clear overview of your launch progress. You can see which directories you've already submitted to and which ones still need attention. During a launch, when you're juggling user feedback, bug fixes, and promotional activities, this tracking functionality keeps you organized and ensures nothing falls through the cracks.

I built AutoSubmit.to specifically for indie hackers, startup founders, and product teams who are launching new products or significant updates. If you're a solo founder working on a side project, you probably don't have time to waste on repetitive administrative tasks. If you're part of a small team, you'd rather have everyone focused on building and marketing, not data entry.

The tool is designed to turn what used to be hours or even days of manual work into a quick, automated process. Instead of spending an entire afternoon copying and pasting, you can complete your directory submissions in a fraction of the time and redirect that energy toward activities that actually move the needle.

There's a free tier available, which was important to me because I remember being a bootstrapped founder watching every dollar. You shouldn't need to pay just to save yourself from tedious work. The platform should be accessible whether you're launching your first side project or your tenth startup.

Looking back at my last launch, I think about all the things I could have done with those twelve hours. I could have onboarded more users personally. I could have written content explaining my product's value proposition. I could have fixed bugs or shipped new features. Instead, I was filling out forms.

That's the hidden cost of manual directory submissions. It's not just the time itself. It's the opportunity cost of what you're not doing while you're stuck in repetitive tasks.

If you're preparing for a product launch, I'd encourage you to think about your process. How will you handle directory submissions? How many platforms do you plan to target? How much time are you willing to spend on data entry versus actually engaging with your audience?

AutoSubmit.to exists to give you that time back. One launch profile. Autofill everywhere. It's a simple promise, but it's one that can change how you approach your launch.

You can learn more and get started at https://autosubmit.to/

The next time you launch, don't spend your day copying and pasting. Spend it building something that matters.

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