Use cases

The calls that keep you up at night.

Heygrixy isn't for trivia. It's for the four-figure, three-month, hard-to-undo decisions — with real questions and the verdict you'd get back.

Startup mode

Validate before you burn three months.

Ideas feel obvious at midnight and shaky by morning. Heygrixy pressure-tests the upside, the killer assumption, and the cheapest way to find out if it's real.

  • Is this idea differentiated enough to charge for?
  • Should I niche down or stay broad at launch?
  • Is now the moment, or am I early?
“Is my $49 lifetime AI tool a real business or a treadmill?”
Grixy's verdict

Lifetime pricing caps upside and front-loads support. Test a monthly tier with 10 users first.

Reframe the model
Product mode

Decide what ships and what waits.

Scope creep is a thousand reasonable yeses. Heygrixy forces the trade-off open: what earns the launch, what's a distraction, and what you can cut without flinching.

  • One hero feature or a fuller first release?
  • Do we build it or fake it to test demand?
  • Which request actually moves retention?
“Launch with one feature or wait for the dashboard?”
Grixy's verdict

Launch the one feature. Prove the pain is real before you spend six weeks on a dashboard nobody asked for.

Ship the wedge
Technical mode

Catch the risk that bites in six months.

The scary part of a technical call is the cost you can't see yet. Heygrixy hunts the lock-in, the scaling cliff, and the dependency you'll regret.

  • Will this architecture scale or trap us?
  • Build in-house or lean on a vendor?
  • Is this dependency safe to bet on?
“Should we go all-in on a brand-new framework for v1?”
Grixy's verdict

Not for the core. Use it on one non-critical surface first; you keep optionality and learn the sharp edges cheaply.

Contain the bet
Marketing mode

Sharpen the message before you spend.

Most positioning is too safe to remember. Heygrixy checks whether your angle earns trust, where it leaks attention, and the one test that tells you if it lands.

  • Does this landing page actually earn trust?
  • Which audience should we lead with?
  • Is this hook differentiated or generic?
“Does my landing page message feel trustworthy?”
Grixy's verdict

The promise is strong but unproven. Add one concrete proof point above the fold and cut two adjectives.

Prove the claim

Your call doesn't fit a box?

Good — those are the ones worth a committee. Pick the closest mode, add your context, and let Grixy commit.