lgilchrist | 12 years ago | on: Ask HN: What'd you do to get your first 100 users?
lgilchrist's comments
lgilchrist | 12 years ago | on: Ask HN: How do you apply for a tech job?
He dove into the six different types of technical interviews (cultural fit, brain teasers, whiteboard coding, cs trivia, code questions, and pairing) and how to prepare for each of them.
https://speakerdeck.com/aviflombaum/mastering-the-technical-....
lgilchrist | 13 years ago | on: Ask HN: Recommendations for learning and improving UX/UI skills?
Also, Smashing Mag has occasional great articles on design patterns and ux.
lgilchrist | 13 years ago | on: How We Got 50 Women to Our Hackathon (And You Can, Too)
It seems there's only 2 ways to go when hosting an event -- open the floodgates or actively manage the attendee list. Because of space constraints, we had to go with the latter.
Managing attendees isn't just about restricting male signups, as you say -- it's also about making sure there are enough designers to developers, beginners to experienced coders, and yes, men to women.
lgilchrist | 13 years ago | on: How We Got 50 Women to Our Hackathon (And You Can, Too)
there's a learning curve to throwing good hackathons, just like with anything else. we talked to a ton of people before this event, including devs and other hackathon organizers, read every best practice we could find, and solicited a lot feedback from our attendees. sure, we made some mistakes (demos need to be queued up a la TC, peoples choice award needs to be fail-safe), but we'll fix them moving forward.
what would you have done differently?
lgilchrist | 13 years ago | on: How We Got 50 Women to Our Hackathon (And You Can, Too)
lgilchrist | 13 years ago | on: How We Got 50 Women to Our Hackathon (And You Can, Too)
Eventbrite made this pretty confusing, as you can't waitlist more than 1 type of ticket (e.g. we couldn't waitlist male and female tickets). We'll come up with a better system for the next one.
lgilchrist | 13 years ago | on: How We Got 50 Women to Our Hackathon (And You Can, Too)
We'll definitely consider an opt-in box for the next go-around.
I collected some thoughts on this that you might find helpful: http://lgilchrist.github.io/how_to_get_your_first_100_users/
TL:DR; - get a splash page up and start collecting emails - guest blog - particularly in places you know your would-be-users will read - organize an event - play around with paid marketing