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Show HN: I made a toast that shows what visitors are doing in real-time

Show HN: I made a toast that shows what visitors are doing in real-time

24 comments

·May 2, 2025

Hey HN, A couple years ago, I switched from my corporate 9 to 5 job to become a Tech Educator. Starting with little social proof was tough, I only had testimonials from past colleagues.

Existing social proof tools were charging $75/month i.e. ($900/year) and were too complex to use.

This is why my partner and I built ProofyBubble for my Next.js Course Early Access Launch.

We saw a real jump in revenue the moment we added ProofyBubble to show off our website traffic, waitlist signups, incoming sales, and past sales.

I've since used ProofyBubble in all my products - my newsletter subscribers grew, sales increased, and I launched my course with tons of social proof.

I hope it helps you as much as it helped me. Would love your feedback please.

barbazoo

Whenever I see these pop up I basically never believe them. They are even worse when made up scarcity is involved.

I want to go one step further and say this is actually a dark pattern.

Phreaker00

I agree. As a programmer I never believe this is actual interaction of people but instead random events programmed to show up to spoof activity. There's no way to verify the truthfulness of the data. As a consequence I distrust the website and make an effort to find a different seller.

hnuser123456

Yes, but we're not typical customers.

barbazoo

Makes it even worse if they find actual people to deceive.

kulkarniankita

what would make you trust us? I am asking so I can show more legitimacy as I'm also a programmer and I agree with you

ramoz

These are all dark patterns used in the SaaS community and it takes zero effort to create. Two valid alternatives to this product: (1) lie (2) average out whatever proof throughput you get and simulate the events

aledalgrande

Not just the SaaS community, unfortunately.

hnlmorg

Agreed. I’ve actually ended purchasing from alternative places because of these things.

If I feel like a site is trying to pressure or rush me into a sale then I usually end up feeling negatively towards that site and thus shop elsewhere.

subpixel

Exactly, like the bubble/up-sell in the Uber app that claims 'busier than usual' circumstances can only be remedied by paying a little more for a quicker pickup.

laweijfmvo

Agree, super ironic that they’re apparently called “Social Proof” haha

kulkarniankita

Oh really? This helped to show actual social proof vs fake it. Users that sign up can't really fake it

beAbU

I've seen similar 'innovations' on other e-commerce sites. There is zero reason for me to believe that the statistic it's showing is real, and my first reaction is always to try and dismiss/remove it because it's distracting.

I'm slowly developing a new form of banner-blindness for all things present in a website's "gadget layer" - that place where all 3rd party add-ons go that actually hurt the user's experience. I'm talking about the social tab thing that we sometimes see, the Intercom chat bubble in the lower right, etc.

Sorry OP, it looks like a nice implementation of a truly terrible new e-commerce trend :(

kulkarniankita

thank you for your feedback! It does connect to real integrations though so wanted to ask you what can we do to build your trust? It genuinely helps show live momentum.

sparrish

I came just to find out what a 'toast' is in this context. I'm understanding it's a 'little popup'... is that right?

echoangle

Yes, named that way because they pop up (mostly) from the bottom like the bread when a toaster is finished.

https://web.dev/articles/building/a-toast-component

barbazoo

The difference being that the toast is real

beAbU

A 'toast message' is a little popup that contains information for the user.

For some weird reason a lot of standard UX patterns are named after food. Hamburger menu, kebab menu, toast message, chips/pills, snackbar etc etc

the__alchemist

I attempted to explain this using the existing definitions, and they didn't quite fit!

coolio1232

I thought this was going to be a camera that prints onto pieces of toast in real time.

maxcomperatore

people can easily made a fake one + no one is gonna believe it, tho sometimes it does work

kulkarniankita

No one can fake it though as they have to integrate with real services and we monitor it actively. That's the whole point of using a 3rd party. But curious to known why you thought it would be fake?

jjj123

The op meant someone can make their own component that’s fake. Not that they’d send fake data to your service.

And there’s no way to distinguish a component that uses your real social proof from someone else’s fake social proof.

satisfice

It feels creepy and scary.

When I see stuff like this I assume it’s all faked anyway.

kulkarniankita

I see, curious to learn why? Even though viewers integrate with 3rd party?