Substly helps small and medium-sized companies reduce SaaS sprawl by providing an easily accessible overview and simplifying the processes around SaaS management.
The product offers enterprise-level features at an entry-level price; this tool provides insights into SaaS usage and helps identify user frustrations. It also helps optimize SaaS spending by providing alerts before renewals and eliminating spending on unused accounts. Additionally, it helps avoid unauthorized access to company data by improving employee off-boarding, allowing departments/teams to minimize SaaS sprawl and share an overview with other stakeholders.
Customers highlight the following four aspects of Substly’s product: - The overview and the control it leads to (regarding costs & who has access) - Great for showcasing status/costs internally - The simplicity of the system - Easy to get started (intuitive and short learning curve)
We have a ton of Saas tools. Before using Substly they were scattered around. Now everything is in one place which has made it much easier for us, especially when we are off-boarding someone. Easy to overview and great value for the money.
Overview - gather everything in one place have improved the visibility of all our subscriptions, quick implementation, improved cost control, User friendly,
Using Substly has given us a better understanding of how we use our SaaS-apps and improved our ability to manage software licenses, resulting in better decision-making and cost savings. Substly's overview feature has been particularly helpful in this regard. Additionally, the offboarding feature has streamlined the process of removing software access for departing employees.
Based on our record, Devdojo Wave seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 12 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Wave - Open source and based on Laravel. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
I knew it would require a membership management system, payment processor, etc, and despite thinking Wordpress is great for what it does and who it's for, I absolutely hate working in it with a passion. I also knew trying to build each of theses website functions (even with pre-made things to help) was going to take more time than I had to get going, so I ultimately ended up going with Wave, which is just a SaaS... Source: about 2 years ago
Google for related frameworks. Maybe these will help set up things faster. For example, https://devdojo.com/wave is a free Laravel-based SaaS setup that takes care of users, login, admin, basic pages, blog, etc. You can install that and begin building on top of that. Maybe there is a similar solution for your tech stack. Source: about 2 years ago
I'm using a pre-built thing called Wave that uses Laravel, and a few other things like Voyager to have a functioning member-ready site. It works really well, but something about it does not seem to jive with Cloudways, and my only thought is that it could be something about the database configuration or something, but I have no clue. I tried a brand new Wave install just to test, and it still happens on all fresh... Source: over 2 years ago
Side note - we are using Wave as a template for our app which has helped us with most of the backend so far with payment + user authentication, etc. Source: over 2 years ago
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