
Lablio
A project-aware link-in-bio page for makers that turns shipped work into a polished profile.
Tagline
One link for everything you ship
The link-in-bio for people who ship products, not just social links.
A better Linktree for founders who need credibility, not buttons.
Keep your founder page synced with what you’re actually building.
The link-in-bio for people who ship products, not just social links.
The page is built around projects, statuses, and founder context, which is a sharper category than generic creator link pages.
A better alternative to Linktree for founders who need credibility, not a button list.
The content model includes bio, location, project cards, and social proofs like GitHub/X, so it supports a professional narrative instead of a traffic hub.
The fastest way to keep your public founder page aligned with what you're actually building.
The key pain is constant change: projects move from soon to beta to live, and Lablio's template switching plus auto-built cards reduce maintenance friction.
Primary user
Solo indie founders and makers who need a cleaner public profile than a generic link-in-bio page
ICP #1
Indie SaaS founder with 2-6 active products and an audience on X
Pain
Their public presence is fragmented across X, Product Hunt, personal site, and multiple product URLs, so visitors cannot quickly understand what they are shipping right now.
Why this solves
Lablio bundles bio, current status, and multiple project cards into one page, making it obvious what they are working on today and giving each project a clean outbound card.
ICP #2
Solo maker using a generic link-in-bio tool like Linktree or Beacons
Pain
Their current page looks like a social menu, not a founder portfolio, so it fails to communicate credibility, product depth, or shipping momentum.
Why this solves
Lablio is explicitly project-aware and presents products as rich cards with labels like live, beta, and soon, which is much better for showing off actual work than a list of links.
ICP #3
Developer writing in public while launching side projects
Pain
They need a page they can update fast as projects change status, but they do not want to manage a custom personal website or redesign every few weeks.
Why this solves
The page is no-code, handle-based, and template-switchable, so they can keep one canonical page and change the look whenever they want without rebuilding the content structure.
Strengths
- +The headline is memorably specific: "one link · everything you've shipped" instantly frames the product around shipping output.
- +The live template previews do an excellent job showing real variance in style, from "Dense Dashboard" to "Bubblegum" to "Mono / Brutalist."
- +The sample profile feels concrete and credible because it shows actual project states like live, beta, and soon.
Weaknesses
- −The page is visually repetitive and long; it keeps re-showing the same Devin Sato profile across many templates, which blunts the impact after the first few examples.
- −The value proposition is still a little fuzzy between link-in-bio, personal site, and portfolio page; it needs a sharper enemy and a clearer job-to-be-done.
- −The CTA is weak and generic: "Claim your handle" and "Use the template" do not explain what happens next or why signing in is worth it.
- −There is no obvious proof of adoption, retention, or time saved, so the product currently reads like a nice demo rather than a must-have tool.
- −Pricing is present in navigation, but the actual offer, limits, and free-plan constraints are not surfaced in a convincing way on the page.
Fix these
- Rewrite the hero to explicitly contrast Lablio with Linktree/Beacons for founders, not creators.
- Collapse the template showcase into a tighter interactive gallery with before/after switching so users can feel the one-click transformation.
- Add trust signals: number of handles claimed, examples from real users, or a visible gallery of actual founder pages.
- Make the CTA outcome-oriented, such as "Build your founder page in 2 minutes" instead of "Claim your handle."
- Add a short section that explains the content model: bio, current status, projects, and social links, so the product feels structured rather than just aesthetic.
Drop-in replacement copy
Headline
One link for shipped work
A project-aware profile page for founders, makers, and people who actually build things.
Show what you’ve shipped
Your page is built around projects, not button clutter. Visitors can see your bio, location, current status, and the work you’ve actually put into the world.
Paste links, get cards
Drop in a project URL and Lablio turns it into a clean project card automatically. No more manually rebuilding the same profile every time you launch something new.
Change the look without rebuilding
Pick from 20 templates and switch styles whenever you want. Your content stays put, so you can update the vibe without re-entering anything.
Look credible at your handle
Publish at lablio.app/yourname and give people one clean place to understand your work. It feels like a founder page, not a generic social menu.
FAQ
Is Lablio just another Linktree clone?
No. Linktree is mainly for lists of links. Lablio is built for founders and makers, so it highlights projects, statuses, and the work you’ve shipped.
Do I need to code anything?
No. Lablio is no-code. You can set up a page, add projects, and publish it without touching code.
Can I switch templates later?
Yes. You can switch between 20 visual templates without re-entering your content or rebuilding your page.
What happens when I paste a project link?
Lablio reads the link and builds a project card for you. You can then adjust the title, status, and presentation if you want.
Is there a free plan?
Yes. You can start free, claim your handle, and build your page before deciding if you want to upgrade.
Linktree makes founders look generic. If you ship products, your bio should show projects, status, and proof. That’s what Lablio does: one page, your handle, your current work, live/beta/soon labels. Not a button pile. A founder profile.
Your bio should show shipped work. Lablio turns your links into a project-aware profile page. Paste a project URL, it builds the card. Switch between 20 templates without rebuilding anything. Claim your handle and look like someone who ships.
Paste one project link. Lablio turns it into a polished project card with status, title, and link. Then switch the whole page from clean to brutalist to bubblegum in one click. Same content. Different taste.
I kept seeing the same problem: founders had products, but their public page looked like a menu. So I built Lablio. Bio, location, current work, project cards, socials, handle-based publishing. Basically: one page that says what you’re shipping right now.
People do not want another generic link page. They want a page that says: here’s who I am, here’s what I’ve shipped, here’s what’s live. That’s the difference. Lablio is for makers who want credibility without building a custom site.
Your projects are scattered everywhere. X bio, Product Hunt, GitHub, personal site, old launch posts. Lablio puts the whole story in one place so people can see what you’re working on without detective work.
20 templates. Same content. That’s the whole point. You should be able to change the look of your founder page without re-entering anything or rebuilding your profile from scratch. Lablio keeps the structure, you change the vibe.
This is a portfolio page. For founders. Not a list of links. Not a tiny personal site. Not another beige template. Bio + location + current status + shipped projects + social links. One link · everything you’ve shipped.
I wanted a page that moves with the work. Today: beta. Next week: live. Next month: something new. Lablio lets me update status labels and swap templates without touching the structure. That’s the kind of boring magic founders actually use.
If you ship side projects, your profile should show momentum. Lablio is built for makers with multiple products, not people with one generic link tree. Make the page say: I build things, and they are real.
Angle: founder credibility over button lists
Most link-in-bio pages are built for creators who need a menu. Founders need something else. They need a page that explains who they are, what they’re building now, and what they’ve already shipped. That’s why I built Lablio. It’s a project-aware link-in-bio page for makers. You paste in your project links and it turns them into clean cards. Your bio, location, current status, social links, and shipped work all live on one page. The goal is simple: when someone clicks your profile, they should understand your work in 5 seconds. Not “here are my links.” “Here is the stuff I build.” If you’re an indie founder, a solo maker, or someone who ships in public, this is for you. I’d rather help you look like a builder than another generic profile.
Angle: the anti-rebuild workflow
The annoying part of having a personal page is not making it once. It’s keeping it current. Projects change status. New launches happen. Old experiments should disappear. Your public page needs to reflect that without turning into a weekend redesign project. Lablio was built around that problem. Paste a project URL and it builds the card automatically. Switch between 20 visual templates without re-entering content. Update your status from soon to beta to live. Same information structure. Different look. That matters more than people think. Most founders don’t need more design work. They need less maintenance. If your page gets stale every time you ship, it’s not helping you. Lablio is my attempt at making the founder page easy to keep alive.
Angle: linktree for people who ship
I’m seeing a clear split in public profiles: 1. People who need a list of links. 2. People who need proof they actually build things. Those are not the same product. Lablio is for the second group. It gives you a handle-based page with bio, location, current work, and project cards that actually show what you’ve shipped. It’s cleaner than a personal site for people who don’t want to maintain one, and more credible than a standard link-in-bio page. I think that’s the real category here: Not “link in bio.” Not “portfolio.” A public founder page. If you’re shipping multiple products, your profile should make that obvious. That’s the job Lablio is doing.
No visuals for this kit yet.
Tagline
Project-aware link-in-bio for makers
Description
Turn your shipped work into a polished founder profile. Paste project links, get auto-built cards, switch templates instantly, and publish at yourname.lablio.app.
Maker's first comment
I built Lablio because I kept seeing the same mismatch online: founders had real products, but their public pages looked like a list of random buttons. If you’re shipping multiple things, you need a page that says who you are, what you’re building now, and what you’ve already shipped. I wanted something that felt made for makers, not creators. So Lablio became a project-aware profile page: bio, location, current status, project cards, X/GitHub/site links, and handle-based publishing. You paste a project URL and it builds the card automatically, which saves a ton of time when you’re constantly adding, removing, or updating projects. The big thing I wanted was zero rebuild pain. You can switch between 20 templates without re-entering content, so the structure stays intact while the look changes. I’d love feedback on two things: whether the page immediately feels more credible than Linktree/Beacons, and whether the content model makes sense for people who ship often.
Pinned maker comment
Would love feedback on whether the product feels clearly different from a generic link-in-bio page, and whether the current CTA and template gallery make the value obvious fast.
Meta
Founders need more than buttons.
Hypothesis: indie founders and solo makers want a public page that shows shipped work, not a link list. Lablio turns project links into a polished founder profile with bio, status labels, and 20 templates.
Google Search
Linktree alternative for founders
Hypothesis: searchers comparing Linktree, Beacons, and Carrd for personal branding will click a product built for shipping output. Lablio lets makers publish a project-aware profile at yourname.lablio.app.
Reddit Promoted
Your side projects deserve a real page.
Hypothesis: indie hackers and makers in public want a faster way to show current work than a custom site. Lablio auto-builds project cards from links and keeps your founder page current as you ship.
Subreddits
r/SideProject
Show the before/after: generic link page versus project-aware founder page, with a short build story and live demo.
Rules: No blatant self-promo; share the problem, the build process, and what you learned. Keep the post useful and visual.
r/indiehackers
Share how you turned scattered product links into one founder profile, and ask if others would use a page like this.
Rules: Lead with a lesson or observation. Avoid pure launch posts without context or numbers.
r/microsaas
Target solo founders with multiple products who need one public page for all active projects.
Rules: Focus on utility for micro-SaaS founders. Don’t spam links; show the use case and invite feedback.
r/EntrepreneurRideAlong
Document the launch and iteration of a better founder profile page, including what you changed after feedback.
Rules: Story-driven updates do better than sales posts. Be transparent and interactive.
r/webdev
Share the content model and template-switching idea as a frontend/product design pattern for personal pages.
Rules: Must be technical enough to be interesting. Avoid marketing language and keep it educational.
Communities
Post a build log, not a pitch. Comment on other founders’ profile and launch posts, then share your page only when someone asks how you present your own work.
Launch with a technical angle: project-aware profiles, template switching, and why founders need a different public page than creators. Keep the title plain and the discussion honest.
Share no-code setup tips and use cases for people who want a public page without building a site. Help first, link second.
Cold outreach template
Hey {firstName} - saw {context} and thought of Lablio. It’s a project-aware profile page for founders, so your bio, current work, and shipped products live in one place. If you want, I can set up a page from your existing links and send you the result. No pitch, just thought it might save you a bunch of profile cleanup.
Product Hunt timing
Launch on Tuesday at 12:01 AM Pacific Time. Tuesday gives you a full weekday run without competing with Monday catch-up chaos, and Pacific timing catches both US morning and EU afternoon traffic while giving founders time to share their own pages throughout the day.
Indie Hackers post ideas
- 01I stopped using a generic link-in-bio page and built one for shipped products instead
- 02How I turned 1 project link into a full founder profile in under 2 minutes
- 03What I learned after making 20 templates for the same content model
Competitor alternatives
Current tone of voice
Playful, maker-first, and design-aware; it sounds like a product built for taste, not enterprise admin, with lines like "one link · everything you've shipped" and "pick a look that feels like you, not a template everyone else uses."
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7 more X posts · 2 LinkedIn · Product Hunt copy · ad hooks · 100-user playbook · landing critique
