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Side project born from a rickroll prank is making money. No clue how to scale it

★★ signal-medium   r/entrepreneur  ·  ↑ 50  ·  💬 48  ·  2026-02-10  ·  kw: any tool that  ·  open on reddit ↗
your rating:
Tool
none
Issue
QR code generator market dominated by subscription-based tools that route scans through third-party servers, creating privacy and cost barriers for B2B customers (lawyers, doctors, transport companies) unwilling to share sensitive business data with online platforms.
Cost
unstated
Recommendation
Cold outreach to museums and cultural institutions using case study playbook; referral programs with existing customers; consider licensing the generator tool as a product for enterprise/internal use; explore secondary schools/universities and Airbnb hosts as vertical expansion.
extracted with
anthropic/claude-haiku-4.5 · 2026-05-08

Body

Close friend runs a restaurant, and our friend group has this tradition of showing care through the dumbest pranks possible. So year ago, for his birthday dinner I made a set of QR codes for his tables. Custom graphic frame around each one, restaurant name, looked almost professional from a distance. The actual QR part was ugly basic white squares though. And every single one linked to Never Gonna Give You Up. We put them on every table. Guests scanning for the menu, getting rickrolled instead. Small group of friends, everyone cracking up. Job done. After the party the codes came down obviously, but the idea of having proper QR codes in that restaurant stuck with me. Started looking for generators that could actually produce something decent. Turns out most of them are ugly anyway, the better ones want monthly subscriptions, and almost all of them route scans through their own servers first. Since I wanted to learn Python for years already, this became my excuse. Wrote a basic generator for myself. Then every week I was modding or adding something new. Logo embedding, vCard support, batch CSV processing, looked for ways for NFC integration, SVG export. Classic case of a side project spiraling out of control, except this one turned out to be useful. Started showing it to people I know. Friends asked for codes for their businesses. Then friends of friends. Lawyers and doctors were the first surprise. They liked the idea of vCard QR codes (digital business cards) but absolutely refuse to put their phone numbers, emails and office details into random online generators. Makes sense, right? Good thing that my tool generates everything offline :D Few transport companies and waste management businesses came, mostly my current cooperators from main business (I produce steel packets for foundries). QR codes on their trucks and trailers linking to company website, turning every vehicle into a moving billboard. From there I managed to upsell a few NFC cards that look like regular business cards but actually collect Google reviews and have vCard QR on them. For the review links I made a custom scraper that pulls business ID from Google without having to check it manually by the owner. Customer taps their phone, review form opens, one scan of vCard and contact added, done. Then I hit an interesting niche. A national museum I visited had their collection digitized already, so I figured it's worth a shot to collect all the links and generate QRs for them. Built a scraper that pulled around 300 artworks from their website, then mass generated unique QR codes for each one. Foreign visitor scans the code next to a painting, gets the description in their own language. Two features in one pipeline. Sent them the offer by email and got nothing. Went to their offices in person and boom, suddenly they're interested since I took care of the problem from A to Z. After that it just kept going through word of mouth. Car detailers, dental clinics using review stands, real estate agents, an architecture firm needing vCards for their entire team. All from Poland. All through people who knew people. That's basically where I'm at now, a bit stuck. My network is tapped out. Everyone who could have needed codes from people I know already has them. Revenue is real but modest. This has been purely organic so far, zero marketing, not a single euro spent on ads or content. Now I'm thinking about whether Instagram and TikTok make sense for something like this. The visual side is there for sure, before and after of a generic pixelated code vs a branded one is satisfying content. But I'm one guy in Poland selling a niche B2B product. Not sure short form video is where my actual buyers spend their time. Has anyone here been at this exact crossroads? Is such a service still relevant in the current era of AI hype? Side project making money through network, network drying up, trying to figure out the next move. Especially curious if anyone used Instagram or TikTok to sell a niche B2B service, or if that's just making content for other marketers to watch. Would appreciate any honest thoughts. Not dropping business name or site because I want real feedback, instead of most posts these days that sell a fake story and guide you to their product. I can send you a QR for the rickroll though :D

Top comments (6)

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[score=12] WorkLoopie
I’d just reach out to the museum. But it’s kind of already a thing in larger museums world wide. So idk how much you travel, but I don’t think any big ones will bite. Maybe smaller ones.
[score=11] rjyo
The museum case is really interesting because that is a repeatable playbook, not just a one-off win. Every museum, gallery, historical site, and tourist attraction in Poland (and Europe) has the same problem: foreign visitors who cant read the local language. You already solved it end-to-end for one museum. Now you have a case study. For scaling beyond your network, I would skip Instagram and TikTok for now. Your buyers are operations managers and marketing directors at institutions, they are not scrolling reels. What actually works for niche B2B like this: 1. Cold outreach with the museum case study. Find 50 museums and cultural institutions in Poland, send a short email with before/after photos and the specific problem you solved. Keep it to 3 sentences plus a photo. In person follow-up worked for you once, it will work again. 2. Google My Business and local SEO. People search for things like "QR code kody firma Polska" or "NFC wizytowki". A simple landing page targeting those keywords in Polish could bring inbound leads without any ad spend. 3. Partner with print shops and sign makers. They already serve the exact businesses that need your product. Offer them a referral cut or white-label arrangement. One good partnership could replace your entire personal network. 4. The dental/medical niche is gold. Doctors care about privacy (your offline generation is a real differentiator here) and they talk to each other. One happy dentist in a professional group chat is worth more than 10k TikTok views. The rickroll origin story is genuinely great marketing material though. If you ever do content, lead with that. People remember stories like that way more than feature lists.
[score=3] COKeefe88
Come up with some referral offers and send that out to a batch of your current/past customers as a test. Iterate if necessary, then send referral offers to all your past customers. The museum route sounds promising, it got me wondering about secondary schools/universities putting QR codes in various places for students.
[score=3] Snoo23533
Air bnb hosts for wifi pw. Maybe do business postal mail with an example of how good it looks when you print the card. Also point out the privacy of your links to. Or you could start hosting your own qr code generator online.
[score=2] tntcoug
I may have missed it, but have you considered making the generator tool your product and license it? I could see companies wanting to generate their own custom codes using an offline tool (or internal to the org) and not having to share data with a third party. We see a need throughout or org for custom QR for all sorts internal materials (docs, signs, devices, etc) but I haven't personally investigated options and costs. You could certainly provide printing services or references to partners for customers that need it.