teum.io turns a GitHub URL into a listed, translated, payable AI asset in five minutes.
The part nobody mentions about side projects
You spent a weekend building something useful — a prompt chain that actually works, a small agent that saves you forty minutes every morning, a plugin your whole team adopted. Then you pushed it to GitHub, tweeted about it once, and mostly forgot it existed.
That repo is already a product. It just never had a storefront.
What teum.io actually is
teum.io is a marketplace for AI software assets: prompts, bots, plugins, workflows, agents, toolkits. The things indie developers build on weekends and then leave sitting in repos.
You paste a GitHub URL — or upload a file directly — and the platform's AI writes the listing description for you. No copywriting, no translation work. Every listing goes live in nine languages automatically: English, Korean, Japanese, Chinese, German, French, Hebrew, Arabic, Hindi, and Dutch.
Payouts run through Stripe Connect across fourteen countries. You keep 80% of every sale by default. If you reach Verified or Elite tier, the commission drops further.
Why this matters right now
The market for AI software assets is real and growing fast. Developers who figured out a reliable way to prompt a model, or built a workflow that actually ships results, have something other developers will pay for.
The bottleneck has never been the quality of the work. It's distribution, discoverability, and the friction of setting up payments and translations yourself. A solo developer shouldn't need to become a localization team to sell something in Tokyo or Tel Aviv.
teum.io handles that layer so you can stay in the building role.
What it looks like in practice
Say you built a code-review agent — a workflow that takes a pull request diff, runs it through a structured prompt chain, and returns prioritized feedback. It lives in a public repo. You use it every day. You've never sold it because setting up a Gumroad page, writing a description, and figuring out international tax felt like a second project.
Here's the actual flow on teum.io:
- Go to teum.io/sell and paste the repo URL.
- The AI drafts a description — you read it, keep what fits, trim what doesn't.
- Set a price. The listing goes live in nine languages.
- When a buyer purchases, escrow holds the payment until they confirm the product works. Then it releases to you.
Five minutes of work. No payment infra to configure. No localization spreadsheet.
The escrow detail is worth noting: it means buyers trust the platform enough to actually pay, which keeps the whole ecosystem healthier than a race-to-free model.
What to do with this
Pull up your GitHub profile. Look at the repos you haven't touched in a month. If one of them solves a specific problem — even a narrow one — there's a chance someone else has that same problem and would pay a small amount to skip the build.
List what you have built. Keep 80%.
Paste your GitHub URL at teum.io/sell. The listing takes about five minutes. The description writes itself.
That repo is already a product. It just never had a storefront.