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Set Up and Customize Your Peerpitch Builder Profile

Your Peerpitch profile showcases what you're building, your posting streak, earned Peerpoints, and your project history to the builder community.

Your Peerpitch profile is your public builder identity — the page other founders, builders, and potential early adopters land on when they want to know who you are and what you're shipping. It shows your project tagline, posting streak, earned Peerpoints, and the full archive of your public updates. A well-maintained profile builds credibility over time: it signals that you ship consistently, engage with the community, and are serious about what you're building. The community can follow you directly from your profile, react to your posts, and leave comments that sharpen your thinking.

What appears on your profile

Your profile page surfaces all the key signals about your builder activity in one place:

  • Name and handle — your display name and your @handle, which forms your unique profile URL
  • Bio — your one or two sentence introduction to the community
  • What you're building — your current project name and tagline, so visitors immediately know what you're working on
  • Streak stats — your current posting streak (in days) and your longest streak ever, displayed with 🔥 to show consistency
  • Peerpoints — your total reputation score, earned through posting, upvoting, and reviewing other builders' products
  • Post history — a chronological archive of every public update you've posted, organized by post type

Keep your project description updated as your product evolves. Followers who discover you early will want to know what stage you're at and what you're shipping next. Stale descriptions ("building something in stealth 👀") signal inactivity even if your streak is strong.

How to edit your profile

To update any section of your profile, go to peerpitch.co/settings. From there you can edit your:

  • Display name and handle
  • Bio
  • Current project name and tagline
  • Build stage (idea / building / beta / launched)
  • Links (personal site, Twitter/X, GitHub, etc.)

Changes you save in settings appear immediately on your public profile — there's no review step.

Your profile URL

Your profile is publicly accessible at peerpitch.co/your-handle. For example, a builder with the handle priya.nair would have the profile URL:

Code
https://peerpitch.co/priya.nair

You can share this link anywhere — in your email footer, on social media, in your product's about page, or in cold outreach — to give people a live view of your building journey and earn new followers.

Choose a handle that matches how you show up elsewhere online. If your Twitter handle is @mayaships, use mayaships on Peerpitch too. Consistent handles make it easier for people who already know your work to find and follow you here.

Your posts and community engagement

Every update you post with the #show, #update, #discuss, #ask, #note, #learning, or #stuck post types becomes a permanent part of your public profile. Visitors to your profile can:

  • Follow you — to see your future posts in their Following feed
  • React to your posts — with upvotes and emoji reactions that signal community interest
  • Leave comments — to give feedback, ask follow-up questions, or add context

The more consistently you post, the richer your profile becomes as a record of your building journey. Builders who post daily build up an archive that doubles as social proof — showing potential users, investors, or collaborators exactly how you think and ship.

How Peerpoints work

Peerpoints are Peerpitch's reputation currency, and your total score appears prominently on your profile. You earn Peerpoints by:

  • Posting updates — each post to the feed earns points
  • Upvoting other builders' posts — contributing to the community adds to your score
  • Reviewing products in Buildspace — leaving substantive feedback on products earns bonus points

Your Peerpoints total contributes to your rank on the Builders Leaderboard, alongside your streak stats. High Peerpoints signal an engaged community member — not just someone who posts and disappears.

Peerpoints are not transferable and have no monetary value. They exist to surface the most active and generous members of the community so new builders know whose feedback and follows are worth the most.