i was hesitating to answer because i did not know what was the product - now i know.
it looks like a niche product for developer community.
what i would try:
* write content around how to create web form in different language + add to each article reason why they should use your saas instead
* create a youtube video that would show how to use the product, focus on researched keywords, e.g. how to make a secured web form
* join slack and facebook group communities
* try to promote your tool on producthunt, not because of the sales - but to gather the feedback
* there are many great products out there and some of them have better product market fit + marketing = what i want to say it is more like a marathon than a sprint
Congrats!
You have made something of value that people appreciate.
Getting the first paid user is usually the hardest.
I would not sell the project at this stage as you would sell it for not a big value. You would need a couple more paying users to prove your concept.
Once you have a few hundred paying users, you would see interesting data. Like how many months they keep paying? How many of them churn? How much can I afford to pay for acquiring a paying user?
I mean, there's a big difference between not being comfortable with a class of investment vehicles and something not being investing. Any asset whose value has the potential to appreciate can be considered an investment. For example, buying/selling businesses, physical gold, art and even rare pokemon cards are all forms of investment, albeit not mainstream ones. Stocks themselves can be just as speculative as crypto (GME comes to mind).
Besides, the OP is presumably interested in actively learning about the fundamentals of diversification, not merely asking for low-maintenance safe-ish portfolio options (in which case, buying an ETF would suffice). I'm just laying out different options across the entire spectrum. Personally, no one told me about virtually any of these options when I was starting out (presumably because they were similarly making assumptions about my risk tolerance level), but I wish they had. For example, reading about industry sectors is fine and dandy, but there's a subclass of stocks called dividend stocks that aren't a sector per se, but can be an investment strategy of its own. Index funds come up a lot in this type of discussions, but REITs do not, despite being pretty decent options as well. For crypto specifically, what almost no one mentions is that bitcoin is actually one of the more conservative crypto options compared to upstart altcoins. Etc. There's a lot of reading one can do across the board.
I'm very specific that crypto is not for everyone, but neither are things like shorting stocks, even though one might be more inclined to call shorting "real investing", whatever that means.
thanks for an interesting observation with the back button, we will take a look at it.
i think there are still no flights to/from ukraine because of the war.