We ingest thousands of tech community posts every day and compress them into structured intelligence in the like of signals, keyword trends, and persona-specific reports.
01 — The problem
Every product launch, backlash, and emerging tool surfaces in community posts. No team has the capacity to read thousands of them daily to organise them, let alone extract what actually matters.
02 — The gap
There are tools in the space. Bloomberg tracks stock prices. Google Trends tracks search volume. But nobody drills down on different subcultures, like tech, to understand the reactions, the debates, the early signals.
03 — What we built
Two years of raw tech discourse, stored and structured. Every company, tool, framework, and topic tracked daily across the top platforms. Compressed into persona-specific intelligence you can act on.
Collecting tech community posts and comments since 2023. Signals can be tuned to any company, technology, or topic with more than two years of history.
Monthly signals
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Full keyword intelligence →Priority access
Newsletters are written by editors making judgment calls about what matters. Safron processes thousands of actual tech community posts daily: the raw discourse, not curation. You also get momentum graphs showing how any company, tool, or person has moved over time.
VCs tracking which technologies and companies are gaining or losing community ground. CxOs who need to brief a board without a research team. Investors watching market-moving signals before they surface in press coverage. Product and strategy teams who need to know what's actually happening in tech.
Yes. If you need to track specific technologies, competitors, or product categories, get in touch. Works well for product, strategy, and DevRel teams.
Hacker News, Reddit, GitHub, X, Substack, Discord, YouTube, ArXiv, RSS. The places where tech gets argued about, adopted, and criticized before it goes anywhere else.
Yes. Keywords, time-series graphs, sentiment, connected keywords, and source links. Public endpoints are free. Private access (longer time ranges, full history) requires an API key.