Hi Team, Aumadi is software service provider and we have been building mobile apps for 7+ years now. Our biggest app has 5mn+ users and featured in Shark Tank India. We are also a certified Flutterflow agency helping entrepreneurs launch apps in weeks without breaking the bank. We have been receiving good reviews and focus on providing high quality outcomes. I myself has 15 years in the industry with an MBA and experience in Product Management, Account Management and Engineering. The company was started by PJ who has a PhD in Machine Learning from Florida Atlantic University and overall 15 years in the industry as well. I believe we would be able to help the budding entrepreneurs answer some of their questions on how to get started, how much it might cost, what is the best approach etc. Let me know if you have any specific ideas that we can talk about on the interview. Looking forward. Best Shiv
I'd love to join your YouTube live stream and podcast to share how we build, launch, and scale mobile apps for healthcare, education, and commerce in emerging markets like Sri Lanka, where constraints around payments, connectivity, and regulation are very real for founders. As CTO at Yarl Ventures, I lead end-to-end product and engineering for multiple apps, from Flutter front ends to Node/Laravel/Python back ends on AWS and Azure, with CI/CD, observability, and DevSecOps baked in from day one. For your audience, I can go deep on: How to validate and ship a v1 app quickly without sacrificing reliability or security, including concrete release cadences, logging/monitoring basics, and how to avoid the "rewrite trap". Practical growth loops for early-stage apps when you do not have a big ad budget: using in-product referrals, lifecycle messaging, and localized onboarding to improve activation and retention. Building apps for complex, regulated domains (telehealth, e-learning) and turning those capabilities into reusable modules that can power multiple products. I'm comfortable doing live teardowns of app architecture, onboarding, or metrics, and can bring examples from apps we've launched that hit strong reliability targets and real revenue in small markets. Time-zone wise, I can join your Friday 9 pm PST slot without issues. If this aligns with what you are planning for upcoming episodes, I'm happy to share a short outline or do a quick pre-call to tailor the session around the biggest challenges you see indie and startup founders facing right now.
Hi, I'm Amanda, PR Manager at Carepatron. I'm pitching our founder and CEO Jamie Frew and our company Carepatron for your podcast. Carepatron (https://www.carepatron.com/) is a comprehensive healthcare practice management software that enables field professionals to engage clients, manage appointments, and automate payments seamlessly in one workspace. It's the only platform in the market today that has taken this technology and mission on a global scale, intending to further bridge the gap between healthcare practitioners and patients in the most convenient, efficient, and effective way possible. Our CEO, Jamie Frew, has a background in psychology, product development, strategy, tech, management, and general healthcare, which allows him to provide amazing and unique insights that will add more flair and credibility to your future articles. We're also proud to say that since we launched our platform, there has been a steady increase in growth when it comes to users, as well as patrons of our free, accessible, and educational health resources, fuelling our passion for our advocacy and business. As for our work culture, we're a 100% global remote team. We know that talented people live across all corners of our wonderful planet. We unlock these unique humans to contribute from wherever they choose. We also don't believe in strict clocking in and out --- we trust our team members to work through their hours at their convenience, all while delivering exceptional work across different time zones. We hope this short insight into our company will pique your interest in showcasing us in your podcast. If you want to connect with Jamie or Carepatron further, feel free to connect with me or send us a message through my email, amanda@carepatron.com
As the founder of WhatAreTheBest.com, I've evaluated thousands of apps and SaaS tools across more than 300 categories, and I'd be happy to join the App Masters livestream. My work sits at the intersection of product quality, user-behavior data, and growth strategy — especially as it relates to how apps compete in crowded markets. One micro-detail: in 2025 alone, our internal scoring system processed over 1.4 million data points from app performance reviews, feature matrices, and user-retention benchmarks. On the show, I can share the patterns I've seen across the highest-performing apps — where they invest first, how they reduce onboarding friction, and why some tools scale to millions of installs while similar competitors stall. I'm also comfortable breaking down live audience submissions; app teardowns are one of the things I do daily when comparing products for our rankings. "Every breakout app shares one DNA strand: ruthless clarity about the user's first 90 seconds." If you'd like a guest who understands the app ecosystem from a data, UX, and competitive-landscape perspective — and can explain it simply — I'm available for Friday livestreams. — Albert Richer, Founder, WhatAreTheBest.com.
When it comes to app marketing, I've learned that visibility is everything — and it starts long before the app is launched. I've helped clients take apps from zero downloads to thousands by focusing on app store optimization (ASO) and early buzz. One project that stands out was a fitness app we promoted through influencer collaborations and keyword-focused ASO. Within weeks of launch, it climbed to the top 10 in its category, not because of a massive ad budget, but because we nailed organic visibility and community engagement. If I were speaking on the App Masters podcast, I'd share that app success isn't just about downloads — it's about retention. You can have the best launch strategy in the world, but if your onboarding process or user experience falls flat, users won't stick around. My advice to app entrepreneurs is to treat your app like a living product: test constantly, listen to user feedback, and adjust based on behavior analytics. The best marketing comes from creating something people genuinely love — then amplifying that story across channels.
If you're a successful mobile app entrepreneur looking to share your insights and experiences, our #1 App Marketing Podcast is a perfect platform for you. With a dedicated audience of over 70,000 subscribers on YouTube and additional reach through our podcast, we provide an engaging environment for thoughtful conversations about app development, marketing strategies, and industry trends. Our live streams are designed to be conversational, allowing you to connect with fellow entrepreneurs and app enthusiasts while showcasing your expertise. We host our interviews every Friday at 9 AM PST, featuring a podcast-like format where you can share your journey, discuss your successes (and failures), and inspire our global audience of over 200 countries. Plus, the interactive nature of the live stream allows viewers to ask questions, making it a dynamic experience for everyone involved. If you're interested in being a guest, we'd love to connect and promote your story to an engaged community eager for knowledge from industry leaders like yourself. https://vitalforce.me
I'm Patrice Williams-Lindo, CEO of Career Nomadtm and a Future-of-Work Strategist who has advised Fortune 100 companies on digital adoption, AI integration, user experience, and workforce transformation for more than two decades. My lens sits at the intersection of behavioral psychology, workforce readiness, and product adoption — which is exactly where most app founders lose traction. On your show, I can break down why the most successful apps win not because of features, but because they solve for human friction: digital overwhelm, lack of trust, poor onboarding experiences, and unclear value articulation. I help leaders translate complex tech into human-centered design and sticky user journeys — whether it's AI upskilling apps, career transformation tools, or productivity platforms. I'm also happy to join live, answer app-growth questions, analyze audience submissions, and yes — I can match you corny joke for corny joke.
I've managed app launches and growth strategies for clients across 47 industries, working with teams spending anywhere from $10K to multi-million dollar monthly budgets. One pattern I've seen consistently: the apps that scale profitably nail their positioning and conversion architecture before they pour money into user acquisition. Most app founders I work with struggle with the same bottleneck--they've built a great product but their messaging is unclear, so their install-to-activation rate sits around 15-20% when it should be 40%+. I recently helped a SaaS mobile app client rebuild their onboarding flow and first-run messaging, which took their Day 1 retention from 22% to 51% without changing a single product feature. That's purely message clarity and user journey design. I'd be happy to join your stream and talk through what I've seen work across different app categories--especially around pre-launch positioning, funnel optimization for paid acquisition, and how to structure your creative testing when you're managing significant ad spend across Meta and Google. I can also give practical feedback on apps in real-time since I analyze user flows and conversion friction points daily. The corny jokes might be a stretch, but I'll do my best.
We'd love to be featured on your podcast. What are the guidelines? We are a York based digital marketing agency with plenty of interesting view points and amazing case studies. While we focus mainly on websites we do a lot of CRO, user journeys, UX and work with clients who use apps.
I'm a licensed therapist and entrepreneur who has spent the last decade working at the intersection of high performance, burnout, and business growth. I left a long-term, high-status role inside a state prison system to build a modern, sustainable private practice and education business from the ground up. That decision forced me to rethink every narrative we sell founders about hustle, scale, and "pushing through." What I bring to your audience is the part of app growth most founders ignore until it costs them their health, their team, or the business itself. I work with founders, marketers, and product leaders who are quietly burning out while still posting growth numbers. I see how constant urgency, metrics pressure, and poorly designed systems fry decision-making, creativity, and retention long before churn shows up in analytics. Most app problems that look like marketing or UX issues are actually regulation and leadership problems in disguise. I'm candid about the things people don't like to say out loud. Hustle culture is not neutral. Burnout is not a personal failure. If your app requires everyone to stay dysregulated to succeed, you don't have a growth problem, you have a systems problem. On the show, I'd be a strong fit for: Talking about why founders become the bottleneck without realizing it Helping audiences spot when growth tactics are actually masking deeper issues Giving practical feedback that connects product decisions to human behavior Answering live questions without therapy jargon or fluff And yes, tolerating corny jokes just fine I'm comfortable on live video, enjoy unscripted conversations, and do my best work when the questions are honest and a little uncomfortable. If this sounds aligned, I'd be glad to connect further and see if it's a good fit.
I'm in. I've spent the past few years deep in the mobile app world, from shaping launch plans to fixing messy post-install funnels, and I've seen apps crawl along at a few hundred users a day and later take off with tens of thousands of organic installs. I've also tripped over plenty of the usual hurdles myself -- including the brilliant idea to launch on a Friday night in July -- so I'm happy to talk through the wins and the misfires. Friday at 9 am PST works for me. Send over whatever I should look at beforehand, and I'll show up with coffee and a couple of questionable jokes.
As a real estate investor in Ontario, I've scaled a home-buying company through disciplined marketing and lean operations, which mirrors the startup mentality in the app world. On your show I could share how we use targeted PPC, SEO and conversion-optimised landing pages to find motivated sellers in a crowded market. We constantly test messaging, track metrics and iterate quickly, just like app developers refine their user acquisition funnels. I can also discuss consumer psychology, negotiation strategies and team leadership from the perspective of a flipper who has managed dozens of projects. The core lesson is that systems, data and discipline beat luck—whether you're shipping code or renovating houses. I'm happy to answer audience questions, provide feedback, and even embrace the corny jokes.
I'm not the classic "built an app, scaled it, sold it" founder, but I do spend my days fixing growth problems for app and SaaS teams, so I'd come on as a strategist rather than a war-story guest. Where I'm most useful on a live show is unpacking why an app isn't growing the way the founder hoped, then walking through levers they can pull next. On positioning, I focus on turning fuzzy ideas like "productivity" into a sharp promise that a tired user can grasp in a few seconds on the store page. That usually means clear who/what/result language, not feature lists. On funnels and monetisation, I map the full path: ad or store impression - install - first key action - paywall - subscription. I look for drop-offs and mismatch. For example, an ad that sells "quick mood tracking" but an onboarding that pushes community features first will tank conversion. On retention, I look at D1, D7 and D30 and tie them back to the first session. Most apps either ask for too much upfront or don't build any habit loop (trigger - action - reward). Small shifts in first-week prompts and push messages often move retention enough to make paid traffic viable. For analytics, I help non-data founders track a small set of events and build simple dashboards so they can answer questions like "which channel brings users who stay 30 days and pay". On creative testing, I focus on fast iteration of store screenshots and short videos, aligned with the core value prop, to bring CPI down and improve paying user quality. I'm comfortable doing all of that live: answering audience questions, giving direct feedback on store listings, onboarding flows or paywalls, and keeping it practical. Corny jokes are fine too.
Hello, StaffDNA's CEO, Sheldon Arora, would be happy to be a guest in your show. StaffDNA is an app for healthcare professionals seeking a job as as well as hiring managers at hospitals nationwide. The app, which has been downloaded over 2 million times, connects job seekers and employers in real-time and has many useful features like document storage, AI job matching based on profile and work preferences and more. Let me know if you'd like to interview Sheldon Arora. He is a successful entrepreneur that has started several privately held companies and has a background in software engineering and computer science.