A lot of SAAS would be considered one-off SAAS if you were not going to add new features. So anywhere you can get away with solving just one problem and not have to add more features to grow/retain users, would be ideal.
I have spent a lot of time to figure out such ideas, but they are very very rare, almost non-existent. Everything demands constant maintenance (Which can be little or huge). Such is the case of software.
Nice answer to the point. How can I forget, software requirements are never ending. But working on something for too long bores me personally. I guess I have to get used to it. I can limit features. That would be my one-off SAAS. But do people use a software/app which isn't updated for 2 years or more?
A lot of SAAS would be considered one-off SAAS if you were not going to add new features. So anywhere you can get away with solving just one problem and not have to add more features to grow/retain users, would be ideal.
I have spent a lot of time to figure out such ideas, but they are very very rare, almost non-existent. Everything demands constant maintenance (Which can be little or huge). Such is the case of software.
Nice answer to the point. How can I forget, software requirements are never ending. But working on something for too long bores me personally. I guess I have to get used to it. I can limit features. That would be my one-off SAAS. But do people use a software/app which isn't updated for 2 years or more?
If it keeps on solving that problem, sure, why not.
B2B always better than B2C.