Hey Indie Hackers,
I come from architecture and interior design. When I transitioned into the creator economy to sell green architecture products, I faced a brutal reality: traffic came, but sales didn't.
Coming from a design background, I realized something: Our landing pages are like beautiful, empty stores.
Imagine walking into a stunning boutique. The products are great, but there’s no sales assistant. You have a quick question or a slight hesitation, you look around—nobody is there. So, you walk out.
That’s exactly what happens on our sites every day. Creators and founders are running "ghost towns" with no idea who is visiting or why they bounce.
So, I built Flow Era.
It’s not a chatbot or a CRM. It’s an AI Sales Brain that lives on your site 24/7. It analyzes lead behavior in real-time, detects hesitation or exit intent, and naturally steps in (with a relevant quote or question) to handle objections and guide them to checkout on autopilot.
Want it for free?
The system is live. I’m looking for 5–10 creators or e-commerce founders with active traffic to test it out 100% free.
All I ask for is your honest feedback and a testimonial if we help you increase conversions and make more sales.
Drop a comment with your website link or DM me, and let’s get a sales assistant into your store! 🚀
Supporter
The "beautiful empty store" framing is a great way to explain exit-intent AI to non-technical founders. Curious how you handle false positives on hesitation detection - someone reading carefully vs. actually about to bounce. That seems like the hard part of making this feel helpful instead of intrusive. Following to see how the beta testers numbers shake out.
That's exactly one of the biggest challenges I'm focusing on.
The goal isn't to react to every pause, but to recognize patterns that suggest genuine hesitation and respond only when it can actually help. The last thing I want is for it to feel intrusive.
Thanks for following along! If you have a landing page or digital product, I'd be happy to give you beta access and hear your feedback.
I like the framing because it shifts the conversation from "adding a chatbot" to "recovering buying moments."
The interesting question is whether hesitation is actually the dominant reason people leave. If the AI can distinguish uncertainty from simple lack of intent, that feels like the real advantage—not just starting more conversations.
That's exactly the challenge I'm trying to solve.
Not every visitor who leaves is a lost customer, and I don't want FlowEra to interrupt people who simply aren't interested. The real goal is to recognize genuine buying hesitation and step in only when it can make a meaningful difference.
I really appreciate your perspective—it's exactly the kind of feedback that's helping shape the product :)