(from the latest issue of the Indie Hackers newsletter)
Does marketing ever feel like cheating?
Want to share something with over 95,000 indie hackers? Submit a section for us to include in a future newsletter. —Channing
Marketing sometimes means cheating. Exploiting loopholes in the system might seem controversial to some, but for others, it's a matter of resourcefulness. Check out how these companies used certain situations to their advantage. Do you agree with their methods?
Koum and Acton took the advantage of an early App Store bug: The “What's New” list saw WhatsApp as a brand new app whenever the creators changed its name on the App Store.
So, they kept changing it. That tactic brought in WhatsApp's first 1K users, because it stayed at the top of the “What's New” list until Apple fixed that bug.
Steve and Alexis struggled with getting their first users. To solve that, they created fake accounts and started faking traffic by posting links.
Reddit had no subreddits until real users began coming in. The fake accounts got phased out over time.
Jeff came up with the name “Amazon” because website listings like Yahoo (which was one of the hottest websites at the time) were organized alphabetically.
At first, he thought about “Cadabra.” But he decided to choose a name starting with “A” to appear sooner on the list.
When the team needed to stock, they ordered books from other stores. However, since the minimum number of books in one order was 10, it was too expensive at the time. They found a workaround.
They always ordered the book they wanted, plus nine copies of a book about lichens that was constantly out of stock. The store would send the particular book that they'd wanted, and a note apologizing for not being able to send the nine books about lichens.
When PayPal appeared on eBay, the team made bots targeting eBay Power Sellers, the top 20K merchants on the platform.
The bots were buying things, then insisting on paying via PayPal. eBay sellers got interested in the service because it looked like there was an increasing demand for it.
This marketing stunt turned into a 33% market share after just three months!
Airbnb created a bot that looked for room renting offers on Craigslist, then sent them emails asking them to include AirBed&Breakfast (the MVP version of Airbnb) in their posts.
When it got short on money, the company released "Obama O's" and "Cap'n McCain's" cereals during the 2008 US presidential election season. This got it featured on CNN.
Within a week, Obama O's and Cap’n McCain's had sold $30K worth of cereals, almost four times what the Airbnb core business had made previously.
In 2004, LinkedIn created a new feature: Aggressive contact importing through the use of email lists. The platform browsed through user contacts and sent invitations. The team has even built an Outlook plugin for that.
Networking got much easier. Later on, LinkedIn exploited the feature to the maximum. When it got access to a user's email contacts list, it spammed everyone in it multiple times. The company got even sued for that.
Check out the full version of this article here to read more about the MVPs of 42 billion dollar businesses, and how they got their first 1K customers!
Are these tactics resourceful or immoral? Share your thoughts below!
Discuss this story.
from the Volv newsletter by Priyanka Vazirani
💰 The ugly economics behind Apple’s new Pay Later system.
📉 Social media stocks are suffering, and it's partly TikTok's fault.
☎️ The mental health version of 911 is set to launch next month.
🤑 China is offering a $15K reward to snitches.
👀 You can buy Amazon's stock under $1K for the first time since 2017.
Check out Volv for more 9-second news digests.
from the Trends.vc newsletter by Dru Riley
B2B SaaS gives you a simple, secure, accessible way to solve business problems.
You can solve internal challenges either internally, by building tools and hiring, or externally, by outsourcing the problem.
But building your own tools can distract you from your core competency.
B2B SaaS helps you focus on your core competency, while reaping the benefits of improvements made by teams dedicated to specific problems.
B2B SaaS:
Communities:
Funds:
"Markets are crowded. How do I stand out?"
There's a marketing strategy for every taste. AJ from Carrd says that a massive market has room for many solutions. Canny got to $1M ARR in the crowded market of user feedback management. Ruth and Eric built and grew Reconvert to $120K MRR, competing with 750+ Shopify cross-sell and upsell apps.
"Sales will always have a place in B2B SaaS. Self-serve does not always work."
You're right. This is especially true when selling to governments and large organizations, such as hospitals. Self-serve, product-led models are increasingly effective with high lifetime value customers.
"Lifetime deals seem risky. What if I shut the product down?"
Lifetime refers to the lifetime of your product, not your lifetime. It's more like a pay-once-and-use-forever deal. Despite associated risks, some SaaS companies choose lifetime deals over subscriptions. Infinity ran a lifetime deal before official launch, and later decided to keep its pricing that way forever.
"Using open source tools means self-hosting and taking on other responsibilities."
There's no free lunch. That's the price of agency. Open source alternatives often offer hosted versions as well.
Go here to get the Trends Pro report. It contains 200% more insights. You also get access to the entire back catalog and the next 52 Pro Reports.
Subscribe to Trends.vc for more.
from the Marketing Examples newsletter by Harry Dry
Replace adjectives with numbers.
Go here for more short, sweet, practical marketing tips.
Subscribe to Marketing Examples for more.
from the Listen Up! IH newsletter by Ayush Chaturvedi
Your startup is not about you, it’s about your users. Despite knowing this, many founders avoid speaking to their target customers as much as possible. You cannot build the right product without talking to your users.
Customer conversations will help you recognize the right problems to solve, the right positioning, and the right pricing strategy. It’s a tough skill to master, but the only way to improve this skill is through practice.
Let’s look at three examples of indie hackers who shaped the right product through customer conversations!
Spencer built Podia, a platform that helps creators sell digital products, with extreme customer focus right from the start. Over time, he has had thousands of customers conversations. He even personally conducts one live product demo every week, in order to be close to his customers.
Spencer has built a solid framework for customer research. Back in 2015, he used to email 10 customers a day to request an interview. He sent these from his personal email address, including a personalized message to each customer. Once they got on a call, he would ask them about their experience using the platform.
Here are the four questions that gave him the most insight:
These questions hone in on the quickest “A-ha!” moments that you can give to your customers.
Read Spencer’s full story, or check out his episode on the Indie Hackers Podcast.
Marie and her partner Filip built Tally, a free online form builder, as a way to scratch their own itch. They got initial users initial through cold outreach.
Very early on, they created a private Slack group with their early users. This move helped them obtain quick user feedback and focus on the right features to build. Here’s how Marie describes it:
From design improvements to helping us out with integrations, or referring us to the right person, our users have a bigger network and a lot more knowledge than [our] small team of two.
The user community also helped them with their Product Hunt launch. Later on, when market leader Typeform raised its prices, Tally’s early users became staunch advocates of the product.
When users are part of the product building process from the beginning, they become your strongest ambassadors by the time the product matures.
Read [Tally’s full story](https://www.listenupih.com/tally/), or check out Marie's episode on the [Indie Hackers Podcast](https://www.indiehackers.com/podcast/229-marie-martens).
It took Samy three days to build a very basic MVP of Hypefury, a personal assistant that helps you grow and monetize your Twitter audience.
He started a private beta, and quickly got a few people from a private Telegram group to give him feedback. These users were interested in building businesses on Twitter, so Hypefury was the perfect tool for them.
Samy conducted 1:1 demos of the product with initial users, and everyone he met with introduced him to a few other people who would be ideal for the product:
Do the things that don't scale, speak with people. Reach out, cold email, cold DM. Ask for introductions. It's very powerful.
Initial user interviews helped Samy to understand the right product to build, and he was able to quickly start charging for Hypefury. Customer conversations helped Hypefury reach product market fit!
Read Hypefury’s full story, or listen to Samy's episode on the Indie Hackers Podcast.
Discuss this story, or subscribe to Listen Up! IH for more.
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Special thanks to Jay Avery for editing this issue, to Gabriella Federico for the illustrations, and to Michal Kankowski, Priyanka Vazirani, Dru Riley, Harry Dry, and Ayush Chaturvedi for contributing posts. —Channing