DEV Community

Cover image for 50+ FREE Tools to Ace & Launch your Side Projects
hrishikesh1990
hrishikesh1990

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at remote.tools

50+ FREE Tools to Ace & Launch your Side Projects

Hey everyone,

We’re always working on awesome side projects at Flexiple, and I know a lot of you are too 🙂.

So, I’ve compiled a list of TOP, mostly FREE, or at least AFFORDABLE tools that will come in handy for each stage of your side project, right from inception to launch, and beyond.

I've tagged free-forever tools a [Free]. I've also tagged some tools under [Free version] and [Free trial].

You can navigate between sections here:


Phase 1: Getting the idea

Phase 2: Marketing front

Phase 3: Design the product

Phase 4: Building the product

Phase 5: Launch

Phase 6: Product feedback

Other useful tools/resources


Do check out my projects here:

  1. Flexiple
  2. Remote Tools
  3. Remote Clan
  4. Scale

Phase 1: Getting the idea

A great idea can make or break a product, but to build great products, you shouldn't force-fit ideas. You should instead focus on making a list of problems that need solving and then try to think of ways to solve them.

1. Ideation tools

Miro [Free version]

Alt Text
Miro's whiteboard toolkit is great for jotting down ideas, organising them, and sharing them with others for feedback.

A Web Whiteboard [Free]

Alt Text
A Web Whiteboard is a touch-friendly and very simple-to-use web browser-based tool that can be used for drawing sketches, brainstorming visually and collaborating with others.

Milanote [Free version]

Alt Text
Milanote is excellent for organising your ideas and projects into visual "moodboards". You can use it for gathering inspiration, collating your ideas, and exploring creative possibilities.

Notion [Free version]

Alt Text
Notion is a jack-of-all-trades note-taking app with a clean and pleasant UI. It is free to use, highly flexible, and is perfect for writing down ideas in a structured manner and linking between notes.

2. Feedback platforms

Indie Hackers [Free]

Alt Text
Indie Hackers is a great community for entrepreneurs, which focuses on helping founders and side-project makers turn their businesses profitable and grow sustainably.

r/Entrepreneur and r/SideProject [Free]

Alt Text
These two subreddits will help you find great advice from genuine entrepreneurs, gather initial users, ask for feedback, and promote your product.


Phase 2: Marketing front

While you're building your product, it makes sense to gather your beta users. For that, you can make a simple marketing website and share it to collect leads.

1. Marketing website

Unicorn [Free version]

Alt Text
Unicorn Platform is an easy-to-use, no-code landing page builder that works great, and offers everything you need to create simple websites, apps, and SaaS products.

Carrd [Free version]

Alt Text
Carrd is a free tool that you can use to build simple and responsive one-page sites. It has some really beautiful templates to choose from.

2. Email marketing

Hunter [Free version]

Alt Text
Hunter helps you find verified email addresses of people (potential customers!) or even the email addresses of all employees of a particular company.

Norbert [Free trial]

Alt Text
With Norbert, you can find verified email addresses of people via their business domain. The tool offers a range of useful integrations and a handy chrome extension.

Snovio [Free version]

Alt Text
Snovio is a great, free tool that helps you find email addresses, verify them, and run drip campaigns within the app. It has several 3rd-party integrations and even offers an API. Snovio also has a great email tracker for Gmail.

Phantombuster [Free version]

Alt Text
Phantombuster is a must-have tool for all indie makers. It is free, and lets you automatically scrape crucial data about potential customers, competitors, and social media following from just about anywhere - LinkedIn, Twitter, Quora, and many more.

Mailtrack [Free version]

Alt Text
Mailtrack integrates into your Gmail and lets you know when your emails are opened, clicked on. It has a free Chrome extension.

3. Capturing users

Optinmonster [Free trial]

Alt Text
Optinmonster is a powerful lead generation tool that helps you convert users who land on your page, via customisable popups, floating bars, gamified wheels, and more.

Poptin [Free version]

Alt Text
With Poptin, you can capture site visitors by creating engaging popups. You can also use it to conduct surveys, get feedback from visitors, gather email subscribers,
and reduce shopping cart abandonment.


Phase 3: Design the product

It is very important to design a great user experience into your product, while at the same time have a good-looking and attractive interface.

1. For Design inspiration

Dribbble [Free]

Alt Text
Dribbble is great for seeking design inspiration. It is a self-promotion and networking site for digital designers and creatives where you can browse thousands of designs based on a keyword.

Behance [Free]

Alt Text
Behance is like Dribbble but caters to a host of other design domains in addition to UI/ UX and visual design, such as industrial, print, branding, and fashion design.

Awwards [Free]

Alt Text
Another site to get design inspiration from. You'll be able to find some of the best, most radical, and crazy website designs here, as voted on by the design community.

2. Design tools

Mockplus [Free version]

Alt Text
Mockplus is a one-stop online design collaboration platform that helps you accomplish everything from prototyping to developer handoff.

Marvel [Free version]

Alt Text
Marvel is a holistic platform that enables designers to transform ideas into digital products by providing them with an environment to create, test, iterate as well as gather feedback.

Coolors [Free]

Alt Text
Coolors is a fast, simple tool for generating great-looking colour palettes and gradients. It also offers an iOS app and Chrome extension.

Brandbuilder [Free]

Alt Text
With Brandbuilder, you can create a professional-looking brand within minutes. You can start from scratch to generate basic elements of your visual identity such as logo, colour, typography, pattern, and photography.

3. Free design resources

Scale [Free]

Alt Text
Scale offers over a hundred attribution-free, high-quality illustrations crafted by professional designers. You can customise them to suit the colours of your website, product, or app. One new illustration is added every day.

Undraw [Free]

Alt Text
Undraw is another website where you can find open-source, customisable illustrations that can be downloaded or embedded directly into your website.

Itmeo [Free version]

Alt Text
Itmeo is a subscription-based marketplace to buy design products, templates, UI kits, graphic elements, and logos. It also has a reasonable amount of free-to-use resources.


Phase 4: Building the product

If you're a developer, you'll probably know the best way to build your product. If you're not, there are a host of no-code tools that you can use to create simple and even complex software products. Even if you are a developer, it makes sense to save time by creating simple products using no-code.

1. Simple products, try NoCode

Webflow [Free version]

Alt Text
Webflow allows designers and non-coders to build customised and professional-looking websites in a completely visual canvas.

Sheet2Site [Free trial]

Alt Text
With Sheet2Site, you can create your own, fully-functional website complete with pictures, text, filters, and links all using only Google Sheets.

Airtable [Free version]

Alt Text
Airtable is an excellent alternative to Google Sheets, it but goes much beyond. You can use it to form a 'backbone' of your project, be it populating no-code websites or automating operations.

Bubble [Free version]

Alt Text
With Bubble, you can create interactive and responsive multi-user web apps. It includes all the features you need to build simple or complex sites, and comes with a database management system.

Zapier [Free version]

Alt Text
Zapier is an easy-to-use tool that helps you automate repetitive tasks between web apps, so you can focus on the more important stuff. It offers support for a vast selection of apps.

Integromat [Free version]

Alt Text
Integromat is an automation platform that offers more features and more tasks than Zapier, and a host of integrations.

2. More nuanced products

2a. Cloud IDE & Virtual Desktops

AWS Cloud9 [Free trial]

Alt Text
Cloud9 is a cloud-based IDE (integrated development environment) by AWS that you can use to write, run, and debug code within a browser browser.

Codenvy [Free Trial]

Alt Text
Codenvy is a cloud-based environment for coding, building, and debugging apps, and works on all major browsers. You can develop code with portable Docker runtimes, and collaborate with team members.

2b. Code Collaboration

JSFiddle [Free]

Alt Text
JSFiddle is an online community that lets you test and showcase your HTML, CSS, and JavaScript code snippets ("fiddles"). It has an amazing UI and responsive editor.

CodePen [Free]

Alt Text
CodePen is an online code editor and open-source social development environment for front-end designers and developers.

2c. Launch & Deploy

DigitalOcean App Platform [Free version]

Alt Text
App Platform is a Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) that lets you publish code directly from GitHub, GitLab, or public Git repositories to DigitalOcean servers so you don't have to worry about the underlying infrastructure.

Netlify [Free version]

Alt Text
Netlify is a website hosting platform that helps you host sites in a secure and scalable way. It promises to multiply productivity and 10x your product shipping speed.

Phase 5: Launch

A successful product launch is often downplayed but it shouldn't be. If you do it right, you can get a major boost by reaching a lot of potential customers via your product launch.

1. Launch platforms

Product Hunt [Free]

Alt Text
Product Hunt is a platform for sharing and discovering new products. It the go-to place for launching your product, getting initial users, or marketing an already existing product.

BetaList [Free]

Alt Text
BetaList is a great platform for launching your product, getting early adopters, and generating user feedback. You can also discover and get early access to products and spark connections.

Betafy [Free]

Alt Text
Betafy is a place for founders to meet other founders, showcase their products, and get relevant, high-quality feedback from the community.

Remote Tools [Free]

Alt Text
Remote Tools is the best place on the web to discover and launch new remote-first tech products. It also has a community of remote workers, The Remote Clan.

Show HN [Free]

Alt Text
Show HN (Hacker News) is a subpage in Y Combinator's Hacker News site that startup founders use to showcase their tech products. It can be pretty hard to get on the first page though.

Submit Juice [Free version]

Alt Text
Submit Juice is a service that helps you promote your product and generate PR by submitting your startup or product to over 150 directories and websites.

2. Promotion

Loom [Free version]

Alt Text
Loom is a simple tool that you can use to instantly record yourself performing actions on screen, and present ideas and workflows. You can use it to record your product launch video and share it with others.

Screencastify [Free version]

Alt Text
Screencastify is a handy Chrome plugin that can be used to record, edit, and share videos. You can capture your tab, whole screen, or webcam while you narrate via your microphone.

3. Social media tools

Lempod [Free trial]

Alt Text
Lempod helps you increase views and engagement on your LinkedIn posts by joining 'pods' where people engage with your content to give it initial traction. You can also create your own pods and automate the entire process.

Buffer [Free version]

Alt Text
Buffer offers a suite of simple tools that help you boost your social media presence, and handles publishing, analytics, and engagement.


Phase 6: Product feedback

You need to get as much feedback as possible before you even launch your product. However, even after launch, you should strive to reach out to your users for gathering real-life feedback.

UserTesting [Free trial]

Alt Text
UserTesting is a platform where you can get customer feedback from real people who test your product - be it a website, app, or any other product/experience - and send audio and video recordings of them trying it out and speaking their thoughts.

HelpStack [Free]

Alt Text
If your product is an iOS or Android app, you can use the open-source HelpStack to interact with your users, provide in-app customer support, solve bugs and get feedback.

Typeform [Free version]

Alt Text
You can use Typeform to build and seamlessly integrate interactive forms for gathering customer details or collecting user feedback.

Hotjar [Free version]

Alt Text
Hotjar is an analytics tool for websites that helps you gauge how visitors are actually using your site via heatmaps, and collect user feedback.


Other useful tools/resources

Prioritize [Free]

Alt Text
Prioritize is essentially a 2-axis chart that helps you create, visualise, and prioritise tasks on a drag and drop interface with different priority boards or matrixes.

nTask [Free version]

Alt Text
nTask is a comprehensive project and task management tool that offers collaboration, task management, meeting scheduling, project planning, and more.

Failory [Free]

Alt Text
Failory is a site where you can read about previous mistakes of entrepreneurs and gather insights for your business.

Accessily [Free version]

Alt Text
Accessily helps you find guest posting opportunities from high-quality websites in your niche.

Entrepreneur's Musings [Free]

Alt Text
This is a great newsletter that shares real, relatable stories of entrepreneurship, and actionable insights on how to create and grow a bootstrapped company.

Failory "Creating a Side Project" [Free]

Alt Text
This is a practical and comprehensive guide on how to build side projects, from getting ideas to building the product to marketing, and monetisation.

Top comments (10)

Collapse
 
jakobbouchard profile image
Jakob Bouchard

No idea if you’ll be able to answer that, but I just had an idea for a side-project that I might want to expand at some point to have some paid features, should I already register a business or something? Or should I keep everything under my name until it starts getting pretty big?

Collapse
 
karthik2206 profile image
karthik2206

Typically at the idea stage, I wouldn't waste time registering the business. Start working on it, build the product, get some beta users and when you want to charge them, maybe consider registering the company.

Collapse
 
jakobbouchard profile image
Jakob Bouchard

Alright, thanks! That’s what I was going to do:)

Thread Thread
 
karthik2206 profile image
karthik2206

Super - all the best!

Collapse
 
alex24409331 profile image
alex24409331 • Edited

awesome article, thank you so much!! I also would like to share some alternative from my side))
ifttt.com a great alternative to zapier
todoist.com (almost simple todolist) a great alternative to notion
e-scraper.com a great data extraction provider

Collapse
 
edydeyemi profile image
Edydeyemi

+1 for IFTTT.

Collapse
 
varghesejose2020 profile image
Varghese Jose

Awesome one

Collapse
 
nbblk profile image
nbblk

It helped me a lot. Thank u so much

Collapse
 
hrishikesh1990 profile image
hrishikesh1990

Cheers :)

Collapse
 
andrewbaisden profile image
Andrew Baisden

Great list thanks for sharing.