"First world problem" seems like an understatement. More like "Silicon Valley problem"...
I just don't want all the overhead.
eg: On my Freshbooks/Chartbeat/Less Accounting/whatever dashboard, I put in "gareth+somerandomkey@saasly.com" as the billing address, then all mails from that service go directly to you - you may even be able to attempt to parse arbitrary services, looking for a "Total: $n.nn" type string in the e-mail, or set up per-service parsing.
Not sure why you wouldn't want to put that front and centre (instead of making me enter my email first).
We'll add a "how do we work" link that brings up this information directly on the landing page.
Also, we got a great suggestion from someone else about setting up inboxes for everyone so you can just sign up with services with [yourname]@saasly.com and then we just look at your bills instead of all your email.
Thanks, it's a great idea I'll be leveraging soon! :)
https://developers.google.com/chrome/web-store/docs/inline_i...
That said, seriously guys what is it with ending everything in -ly? It doesn't even really make sense... "in a manner resembling SaaS"? And you're saasly.com, not even saas.ly. SaaSmon, SaaSwatch, these sort of indicate what you're doing, at least, and are reasonably pronounceable too.
Recently, just for testing, I subscribed to multiple tools to measure site's performance, SEO, to help me navigate all the social media chatter, to help me alleviate emails ...etc.
The only ones I remember are SEOMoz and 37Signals product, because they charge a lot of money and that's kind of memorable. Everything that charges under 20 bucks is below radar until it accumulates.
If this tool could simply extract this bill information and remind me to unsubscribe in time, it would certainly be helpful!
People will hand over all kinds of data to save money.
(Not being snarky, I suspect there is a bigger business model for this)
You should build something that searches through my gmail for common bills though, I don't want to go through the process of sending you all my bills