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The Leaderboard
May 16th, 2025
ditch the spreadsheet
close deals without the headache

gm legends and happy Friday! I hope you hit your goals this week and if you didn't, meh, there's always next week.

In todays newsletter, we're taking a quick peek at an AI email generator, a CRM that helps you close deals, and a visual tool for building LLM workflows.

P.S. Want your launch to be featured in this newsletter? Drop us a line with your pitch at editorial@producthunt.co 🫶

Prompt, click, inbox

Migma turns a plain text prompt into a polished, on-brand email. It grabs live content, whips up images, checks how everything renders, then lets you pick an audience and hit send—all in one dashboard, no template wrestling.

🔥 Our Take: Blank Mailchimp screens are a soul-suck. I dropped three lines into Migma and got back a newsletter that actually looked like ours,  images included. If your drafts folder is starting to look like a graveyard, this could finally clear the backlog.

Deals that don’t ghost

FirstQuadrant is an AI sales execution platform that plugs into your CRM, watches every pipeline stage, pings you for follow-ups, and surfaces hidden opportunities. Founders and reps get one dashboard where emails, tasks, and deal health live together, so no lead slips through the cracks.

🔥 Our Take: CRMs already feel like a nagging to-do list. FirstQuadrant trims the noise and taps you only when something’s actually going stale. Less spreadsheet archaeology, more “oh right, I owe Sam a call.”

Drag, run, refine

Flowise is an open-source canvas for building LLM workflows. Snap together prompt blocks, vector search, and API calls, hit Run right in the browser, then grab the auto-generated endpoint or drop-in widget. Spin it up on Flowise Cloud or self-host if you want full control.

🔥 Our Take: Writing a hundred lines of boilerplate just to test one prompt is a time sink. Flowise lets you sketch the logic, see if the idea clicks, and decide later if it deserves real code. Great for weekend hacks, quick demos, or proving a point in a meeting.

Bare websites worth bookmarking

Rajiv Ayyangar tossed a softball into the forums: Show me your favorite minimalist personal site.

Links flew in. Design nerds worshipped Bennet Feely’s slick type and big white space. Text-first purists shouted out Dan Luu and Paul Graham, all signal no chrome. Retro fans dropped Pieter.com, a full DOS box in the browser just for kicks. A handful pointed to tidy one-pagers like nat.org and swyx.io—straight content, nothing blinking.

Got a go-to site that strips out every distraction, or do you still crave a bit of flair?

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