Ask HN: How did you find your early adopters?
edit (from comment I posted): Some friends and I had trouble getting leads on who to "sell" our prototype to, and we had the thought that this may be an even more legitimate problem than the one we were previously trying to solve.
Is this a problem that other startups have faced, trying to find specific (with contact information) customers to talk to and become the first users?
[+] [-] akg_67|13 years ago|reply
By the time, I launched MVP, influentials in the domain were aware of me. In a few months since launch, I gained several hundred registered users through these activities ... not a single penny spent on ads or to generate traffic.
Now I am working on figuring out how to generate revenue ...
[+] [-] smartial_arts|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] chewxy|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] moot|13 years ago|reply
You owe me new boxers, sir. And some burn cream.
[+] [-] MatthewB|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] hayksaakian|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mgkimsal|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ibudiallo|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] auston|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] LeFever|13 years ago|reply
If I was doing it again I'd follow a similar path, but I'd also approach some of the more influential people in our target market and ask them directly for their help and feedback. We've done that with various features since and it's worked out great.
[+] [-] jaddison|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] boyter|13 years ago|reply
I got a lot of initial traction by being one of the first people to work on DuckDuckGo's ZeroClick info (donated a lot of the programming documentation) which provided some initial back-links and referral traffic. Kept this going by adding more things through DuckDuckHack.
Everything from there has been posting on comments (where relevant), posting in StackOverflow, building relationships with those using it and improving things. There is quite a bit of SEO mixed in there but mostly I just keep pushing and making something I want to use.
A few larger blog posts seemed to work too. Some of the more in depth ones that took quite a while to write helped quite a bit. This was more about adding discover ability and SEO value though.
EDIT - Also a lot of directly targeting people complaining about lack of code search over twitter. This was especially effective when Google Code Search shut down and Koders.com hadn't got its act together. I had planned for this, but it was not as effective as I would have expected.
[+] [-] bilus|13 years ago|reply
What have you written it in if it's not a secret? PHP?
[+] [-] infogaufire|13 years ago|reply
2. I made sure that I use write set of words and language to provoke few early users to share my beta website with their network - It was all about wordings.
3. The tweets and facebook messages that went out had similarly provoking wordings that made posts viral.
4. I launched beta version with very basic feature but started rolling out new things every 48-72 hours.
5. I used a real bad logo initially, people made fun of that logo on twitter - i used that as an opportunity to ask for help from twitter world - got 19 logo designs (some from designers at big ad agency, TV network) in my inbox in 24 hours or so.
6. I was super super quick in support - people were wow'ed by the speed at which me and my small team replied to support mails.
1 month later, we were @ 100K users and got acquired in 4th month of launch.
Hope this helps.
[+] [-] crindy|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] olegp|13 years ago|reply
One thing that dramatically improved the conversion rate was a blog post giving the background on what problem the service solves: http://www.arcticstartup.com/2013/03/11/starthq-targets-and-...
[+] [-] adidahiya|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] plam|13 years ago|reply
I sold a product for business users. I presented myself as an expert in the field and became active in the field. Although the product actually came after the fact as I figured I might as well monetise on my publicity.
My first paying client contacted me days after I posted an open for beta landing page without any marketing.
Edit: after the first few customers, I failed to keep momentum and my business flopped. I folded it a year after.
[+] [-] dhirajbajaj|13 years ago|reply
More the links, more clicks, and thus you get some visitors.
Now turning that visitor into adopters is Selling part. If there is something for visitors they will use it, else not.
P.S. I am also doing such experiments for my project: http://feedbacker.51stacks.com
and blog a few things at http://blog.51stacks.com
[+] [-] volandovengo|13 years ago|reply
About press - you need to pitch people. Start with smaller blogs and work your way up from there. Guess reporter's email addresses and try to find a way in by being helpful first.
That's how I got my first customers for http://www.artsumo.com.
[+] [-] louhong|13 years ago|reply
Although I love HN, the challenge I've found with places like Show HN, reddit/r/startup, betalist is that its sometimes not related to the product I'm selling so a)I'm trying to sell a product to the wrong target market and b)tech sites can often times be an echo chamber and the data you get isn't necessarily quantitative.
[+] [-] maxua|13 years ago|reply
Think about why you're doing what you're doing. What kind of problem it solves? Who has this problem? Once you understand the problem it takes some trial-and-error to find actual people that have it. The good thing if you're right about the problem people will be willing to talk to you, since you might have a solution they are looking for.
it takes time to really learn your users. I've built a community site for developers (DOU.ua) and it took me five years to figure out the most pressing problem my customers have. May be I wasn't listening hard enough but it still takes time.
[+] [-] ihaveajob|13 years ago|reply
I realize this doesn't apply to everyone, but if you can use it, it's great. Zynga is the master of this, but network effects work at all levels. Even if you don't have another product, think of what other social circles you can tap into. Chances are you talk to potential early adopters on a regular basis.
[+] [-] Backerbase|13 years ago|reply
The first thing to do is hypothesize/define as narrowly as possible who your early adopters will be and then start looking for where they're hanging out together online. (They will be hanging out together because early adopters are obsessives.)
Once you've found where they are you can approach them directly at that online hangout or launch a simple email marketing. (Hint: People's online handles are strongly correlated with their email addresses. Another hint: There are lots of taskrabbits who are good at finding email addresses.)
Pitch your value props and invite them to become early users.
[+] [-] timjahn|13 years ago|reply
When we launched matchist (http://matchist.com/talent) a few months ago, we wanted to get developers on board first. And since we knew a lot of quality developers hang out here on HN, we posted here.
About a month later, we wanted to started marketing to clients. We pitched at an in person event in Chicago, as well as started using a relevant existing newsletter from another business we run to reach potential clients for matchist.
Once you start getting a few initial customers using your product, talk to them constantly and get feedback.
[+] [-] yesimahuman|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pwingo|13 years ago|reply
Can you comment more on the sell process to individual users with HN and Twitter: did you find and go after people that tweeted or posted about related topics to your products, or look for people that might want your products, or did you let them come to you through your posts or tweets?
[+] [-] sideproject|13 years ago|reply
They are good starting points. I think Reddit also has a sub-reddit regarding startups.
As a shameless plug, would you like to post your project on SideProjectors? :) I'm doing a private beta testing at the moment with a handful of users. It's a showcase/discovery too for side projects.
[+] [-] ibudiallo|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] boyter|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] chewxy|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mattgray|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] brianr|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] marcofucci|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] meerita|13 years ago|reply