How I Tried to Handle Customer Support in Telegram and Ended Up Building a Tool for It
This didn’t start as a startup idea. I wasn’t trying to build a SaaS product. I just needed a simple way to handle customer support for my own projects without exposing my personal Telegram account...

Source: DEV Community
This didn’t start as a startup idea. I wasn’t trying to build a SaaS product. I just needed a simple way to handle customer support for my own projects without exposing my personal Telegram account or dealing with complex tools. At first, Telegram felt perfect. Everyone already uses it, there’s no onboarding, no friction, no extra accounts. A client just sends a message and you reply. It’s fast, natural, and works out of the box. And for a while, it really does work. The problems don’t show up immediately. In the beginning, you have a few conversations per day, everything is manageable, and you can keep context in your head. Then you launch another project. Then another. Messages start coming in at different times, from different people, about different things. You reply from your personal account, then maybe create a separate work account, then start forwarding messages to yourself or teammates. Over time, Telegram turns into a mix of personal chats, client conversations, and random f