Distribution for people who ship alone.
Indie hackers are good at building and allergic to marketing, which is exactly why distribution decides who makes it. Burrow finds the communities where your specific buyer already posts, scores each one, and shows you recent threads so you can contribute something useful instead of dropping a link. It is the difference between launching into a void and launching into a room that already cares.
What gets in the way
- marketing feels like a tax on the part you enjoy
- you have one launch and cannot afford to waste it
- the same five subreddits are saturated with launches
- you cannot tell which small community is worth your time
Searches a indie hacker runs
Paste any of these into Burrow, or write your own.
Example reports
built for indie hackers
Pricing software for B2B SaaS founders
Pricing software for B2B SaaS founders doing $10k to $100k MRR.
A wishlist and launch toolkit for solo game devs
A wishlist and launch toolkit for solo indie game developers shipping their first Steam title.
Profit analytics for Shopify stores
Profit analytics for Shopify stores that shows true margin after ads, shipping, and fees.
Where Burrow looks first
Every search covers all eight platforms. For indie hackers, the strongest signal usually comes from these.
Questions from indie hackers.
A static list is written once and rots. Burrow scores every community against your exact positioning, ranks it for buyer fit, and attaches threads from the last seven days so you can confirm the room is still active before you spend time there. For indie hackers, the difference is showing up where marketing feels like a tax on the part you enjoy instead of guessing.