Why I started
I was running multiple products and sites at once — PetCare AI, FAXTR, and several news and company sites — and noticed I was doing the same thing every week. Take a press release. Rewrite it into an article. Cut it into card news. Turn it into a short video. Post it everywhere. Wait, repeat. Every piece of that chain already had a tool, but nothing stitched them together. So most of the effort was just moving text between tabs.
The moment it clicked
In late 2025, I tried to hand off the pipeline to an agency. They quoted the kind of monthly fee that only makes sense if you already have a large audience, and they still needed me to write the source material. That is when it became obvious: the bottleneck is not distribution. The bottleneck is the gap between a raw press release and a post ready to publish. AI can close that gap, but every existing SaaS was picking one narrow slice of it.
What BlinkHub is trying to fix
One pipeline. Press release in, everything out. Article, card news, short-form video with narration, social posts, and automated distribution to publisher CMSes and the five major social platforms. Not another scheduler. Not another ChatGPT wrapper. The generation and the distribution live in the same product on purpose, because that is where the real time savings are.
Why solo, for now
No co-founder. No design agency. No outsourced dev shop. The upside of a one-person team is that the loop between a user request and a shipped change is hours, not sprints. The downside is obvious: I cannot work on everything at once. So I pick the one thing this week that most users are hitting, ship it, and move on. If something is broken, you can email me directly and I am the one reading it.
What I am deliberately not building
A billion features. An enterprise sales motion. A bloated admin dashboard. A "community" that is really a support queue. Every feature request gets filtered through one question — does this save a press-release-to-post minute for someone? If not, it waits.
Where it is going
BlinkHub is currently powering content for our own products (PetCare AI, FAXTR) and a growing list of news, company, and personal sites — plus external beta teams. The next milestones are a transparent public pricing page, a publisher-specific workflow, and language coverage beyond Korean and English. The goal is a self-serve global SaaS that a two-person marketing team can run as if they were ten.