u/Defiant-Plastic-1438

Startup Distribution For Dummies

Startup Distribution For Dummies

First time founders obsess over product. Second time founders obsess over distribution.

If you want your startup to succeed in this current era, you are going to have to think deeply about distribution.

Below, I'm listing the distribution tips to help you succeed:

  1. Bake growth mechanics into the product. Not just tacked on, but a core functionality of the product. You are playing on hard mode if you don't do this.
  2. Timing matters. Use tools to find your customers in the heat of the moment when they are experiencing their problem. This will significantly improve conversions.
  3. Go deep and niche. The more specific your product or ICP is, the easier it is to find qualified leads and sell to. You can always expand your TAM later.
  4. Do things that don't scale. Getting your first customers will be a manual effort where you spend time to get your first batch of customers. This is the hardest part of the journey.
  5. Leverage your existing network. The warmer the better.
  6. Make it dumb to say no. Offer so much value upfront at such little cost that there is no real reason to say no. Also employ risk reversals.
  7. Think deeply about your startup. The more intimately you understand your business, brand, positioning, etc., the better your distribution endeavors will be.

Things that compound but no gain short term:

  1. Consider content. If you have a loyal audience, you are playing startup distribution on easy mode. However cultivating an audience is much more difficult than expected. Might be worth starting now.
  2. Consider GEO. It is worth being intentional about how AIs experience your project, making sure your website is crawlable, and creating tons of blog posts or content for AI to intake.
  3. Consider SEO. Takes a long time to kick in but compounds like crazy.

Cold email template I am using for my startup:

  1. Hey [Name],
  2. [Personalization]
  3. [Why my product is good for you]
  4. [CTA]
  5. [Link]
  6. [PS: (Emphasize CTA; feels more personal)]
  7. -- [Name]

Here is the actual cold email template I am using on creators for reference:

  1. Hey [Name],
  2. [Personalization]
  3. Recently, I launched a feedback tool/startup for creators: lumeforms. The core loop is that you create intentional spaces for your audience to drop honest, blunt feedback and receive tailored actionable analysis that drives better metrics, better content, and sustained growth for your channel. Also, it ensures you are in constant conversation with your audience and helps signal to them that you are serious about the quality of your work.
  4. If this resonates with you, because I am still validating the idea for creators, I'd be happy to give you a month free in exchange for your honest feedback on the tool. No strings attached, and if you’d like, I'll work with you closely and make sure you get value. I think it would be a good fit for you.
  5. Website: https://www.lumeforms.com/content-creators
  6. PS: Check out the free creator audit I made that gives you a tailored starting point for your channel specifically. Just type in channel details and get results in less than 10 seconds. No email or account required.
  7. -- Akhil
u/Defiant-Plastic-1438 — 9 hours ago
Startup Distribution For Dummies

Startup Distribution For Dummies

First time founders obsess over product. Second time founders obsess over distribution.

If you want your startup to succeed in this current era, you are going to have to think deeply about distribution.

Below, I'm listing the distribution tips to help you succeed:

  1. Bake growth mechanics into the product. Not just tacked on, but a core functionality of the product. You are playing on hard mode if you don't do this.
  2. Timing matters. Use tools to find your customers in the heat of the moment when they are experiencing their problem. This will significantly improve conversions.
  3. Go deep and niche. The more specific your product or ICP is, the easier it is to find qualified leads and sell to. You can always expand your TAM later.
  4. Do things that don't scale. Getting your first customers will be a manual effort where you spend time to get your first batch of customers. This is the hardest part of the journey.
  5. Leverage your existing network. The warmer the better.
  6. Make it dumb to say no. Offer so much value upfront at such little cost that there is no real reason to say no. Also employ risk reversals.
  7. Think deeply about your startup. The more intimately you understand your business, brand, positioning, etc., the better your distribution endeavors will be.

Things that compound but no gain short term:

  1. Consider content. If you have a loyal audience, you are playing startup distribution on easy mode. However cultivating an audience is much more difficult than expected. Might be worth starting now.
  2. Consider GEO. It is worth being intentional about how AIs experience your project, making sure your website is crawlable, and creating tons of blog posts or content for AI to intake.
  3. Consider SEO. Takes a long time to kick in but compounds like crazy.

Cold email template I am using for my startup:

  1. Hey [Name],
  2. [Personalization]
  3. [Why my product is good for you]
  4. [CTA]
  5. [Link]
  6. [PS: (Emphasize CTA; feels more personal)]
  7. -- [Name]

Here is the actual cold email template I am using on creators for reference:

  1. Hey [Name],
  2. [Personalization]
  3. Recently, I launched a feedback tool/startup for creators: lumeforms. The core loop is that you create intentional spaces for your audience to drop honest, blunt feedback and receive tailored actionable analysis that drives better metrics, better content, and sustained growth for your channel. Also, it ensures you are in constant conversation with your audience and helps signal to them that you are serious about the quality of your work.
  4. If this resonates with you, because I am still validating the idea for creators, I'd be happy to give you a month free in exchange for your honest feedback on the tool. No strings attached, and if you’d like, I'll work with you closely and make sure you get value. I think it would be a good fit for you.
  5. Website: https://www.lumeforms.com/content-creators
  6. PS: Check out the free creator audit I made that gives you a tailored starting point for your channel specifically. Just type in channel details and get results in less than 10 seconds. No email or account required.
  7. -- Akhil
u/Defiant-Plastic-1438 — 9 hours ago
Startup Distribution For Dummies
▲ 8 r/SaaS+6 crossposts

Startup Distribution For Dummies

First time founders obsess over product. Second time founders obsess over distribution.

If you want your startup to succeed in this current era, you are going to have to think deeply about distribution.

Below, I'm listing the distribution tips to help you succeed:

  1. Bake growth mechanics into the product. Not just tacked on, but a core functionality of the product. You are playing on hard mode if you don't do this.
  2. Timing matters. Use tools to find your customers in the heat of the moment when they are experiencing their problem. This will significantly improve conversions.
  3. Go deep and niche. The more specific your product or ICP is, the easier it is to find qualified leads and sell to. You can always expand your TAM later.
  4. Do things that don't scale. Getting your first customers will be a manual effort where you spend time to get your first batch of customers. This is the hardest part of the journey.
  5. Leverage your existing network. The warmer the better.
  6. Make it dumb to say no. Offer so much value upfront at such little cost that there is no real reason to say no. Also employ risk reversals.
  7. Think deeply about your startup. The more intimately you understand your business, brand, positioning, etc., the better your distribution endeavors will be.

Things that compound but no gain short term:

  1. Consider content. If you have a loyal audience, you are playing startup distribution on easy mode. However cultivating an audience is much more difficult than expected. Might be worth starting now.
  2. Consider GEO. It is worth being intentional about how AIs experience your project, making sure your website is crawlable, and creating tons of blog posts or content for AI to intake.
  3. Consider SEO. Takes a long time to kick in but compounds like crazy.

Cold email template I am using for my startup:

  1. Hey [Name],
  2. [Personalization]
  3. [Why my product is good for you]
  4. [CTA]
  5. [Link]
  6. [PS: (Emphasize CTA; feels more personal)]
  7. -- [Name]

Here is the actual cold email template I am using on creators for reference:

  1. Hey [Name],
  2. [Personalization]
  3. Recently, I launched a feedback tool/startup for creators: lumeforms. The core loop is that you create intentional spaces for your audience to drop honest, blunt feedback and receive tailored actionable analysis that drives better metrics, better content, and sustained growth for your channel. Also, it ensures you are in constant conversation with your audience and helps signal to them that you are serious about the quality of your work.
  4. If this resonates with you, because I am still validating the idea for creators, I'd be happy to give you a month free in exchange for your honest feedback on the tool. No strings attached, and if you’d like, I'll work with you closely and make sure you get value. I think it would be a good fit for you.
  5. Website: https://www.lumeforms.com/content-creators
  6. PS: Check out the free creator audit I made that gives you a tailored starting point for your channel specifically. Just type in channel details and get results in less than 10 seconds. No email or account required.
  7. -- Akhil
u/Defiant-Plastic-1438 — 10 hours ago

Built a census survey for r/aiforsmallbusiness. Lets get a proper understanding of this community.

Never seen this done before, but I wanted to try running a census survey to help better understand the profile of this community. So much of tech is still mystified, and we could use this knowledge to guide our future projects. Interesting results rely on high completion rates, so please fill it out! 5 questions only and takes probably less than a minute!

Link: form link

(Accidentally wrote 'Results will be made public. Refrain from adding any personal information.' twice lol whoops)

reddit.com
u/Defiant-Plastic-1438 — 15 hours ago
What ai-native software are you actually using for your startup?

What ai-native software are you actually using for your startup?

Feel like most the stuff coming out today is pure slop, or doomed to fail. Are there any tools out there that are actually use ai cleverly and provide huge unlocks in value or leverage?

Here is what I am using right now:

  1. Cursor.com for code
  2. Claude.ai for chat
  3. lumeforms.com for feedback tool
  4. leadverse.ai for Reddit outreach (not too good results tbh)
u/Defiant-Plastic-1438 — 2 days ago