Last updated April 2026
A Bookmarking Tool Built for Founders
Save This One is a bookmarking tool for founders who collect links everywhere but find them nowhere. It gives you one calm place for competitor research, investor decks, hiring posts, and product references, with notes so you remember the context.
Sound familiar?
You bookmarked a competitor's pricing page last month. Now it is lost in a Slack thread, a browser tab, or a note you cannot find. Founders collect links across ten apps. Save This One puts them in one place.
How Save This One helps
One searchable place for research
Competitor analysis, market research, product references, and investor materials. Stop scattering links across Slack, Notion, and browser tabs.
Remember why you saved it
Add a note like 'good onboarding flow to copy' when you save. Come back three weeks later and still know the context.
Save in seconds, not minutes
Paste a URL and go. No folder decisions, no setup wizard. Use the browser extension or Raycast when you want even more speed.
Save fast. Find fast. Move on.
Three steps. No folders to babysit.
Save a link
Paste a URL, use the browser extension, or send from your phone. It takes a second.
Leave a breadcrumb
Add a tag or a short note so future-you knows why this link mattered.
Come back later
Search, skim, and reopen what you need without digging through old tabs.
Keep the link. Keep the context.
A saved link is only half the job. The other half is remembering why you saved it.
Tags that help
Keep related links together without making a big filing system.
Good example for the launch page hero.
ycombinator.com
Notes that explain
Write one short line so the next visit starts with context.
Search that works
Find by title, source, or the clue you left for yourself.
Common questions
That is one of the most common problems founders have. When you spot a competitor page or a useful reference in Slack, save the URL to Save This One with a note like 'competitor pricing, cheaper than us on starter tier'. Next time you need it, search 'competitor pricing' instead of scrolling through months of Slack history.




