for open source maintainers

great code doesn't promote itself

You maintain an open source project that deserves more stars, contributors, and users. But you'd rather write code than marketing posts. Ravah turns your releases, commits, and community activity into content that grows your project's visibility.

The problem

You'd rather write code than tweets

Every minute spent on Twitter promoting your project is a minute not spent fixing bugs or shipping features. Marketing feels like a distraction from the real work.

Release announcements are boring

You push a release, tweet 'v2.3.0 is out,' and get 5 likes. The changelog is detailed but nobody reads it. Your releases deserve better storytelling.

Contributors are hard to attract

You have 'good first issues' tagged. Nobody picks them up. The project looks inactive from the outside because you don't communicate progress publicly.

You compete with well-funded OSS companies

Projects backed by companies have DevRel teams, content marketers, and conference budgets. You have yourself and maybe a part-time maintainer.

How Ravah helps

GitHub → social content pipeline

Connect your repository. Ravah turns your releases, significant PRs, and milestones into compelling social content. Your code activity becomes your content calendar.

Release storytelling

Instead of tweeting a changelog link, Ravah generates a story about what changed, why it matters, and who benefits. Releases become engagement moments.

Contributor recruitment content

Ravah generates posts that highlight interesting open issues, explain your architecture, and make potential contributors excited to get involved.

Community celebration posts

New contributor? Star milestone? Adoption by a notable company? Ravah turns these moments into thank-you posts and celebration content that strengthens your community.

Example output

X (Twitter) An open source maintainer just released v3.0 with a major performance improvement

v3.0 is out. the big number: 5x faster cold starts. we rewrote the initialization layer from scratch. what used to take 2.3 seconds now takes 0.4 seconds. this was the #1 requested improvement from our community survey (87% of respondents mentioned startup time). huge thanks to @contributor1 and @contributor2 who did most of the heavy lifting on the new lazy-loading system. upgrade guide: [link] if you've been waiting for better performance to adopt [project], now's the time.

Frequently asked questions

Does Ravah work with GitHub releases? +

Yes. Ravah integrates with GitHub and can generate social content from your releases, notable PRs, and repository milestones. Your shipping activity becomes your content source.

Can Ravah help attract contributors? +

Yes. Ravah generates content that highlights interesting open issues, explains your project's architecture, and communicates what makes contributing to your project rewarding.

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