Getting Your First 100 SaaS Users: Proven tactics from Stripe, Zapier, Convertkit

Alexander Isora 🦄
46 replies
So you made an app or a SaaS and struggling to find your first users. Understandable! The first 100 is the hardest one. I gathered the tactics of the most notable SaaS companies. Here is the list of concrete actions. Enjoy! Acquiring early-stage customers is doing things that don't scale. The key error in the beginning is thinking too much about the future. I see it often. Founders want virality and scalability. They want it huge and they want it quick. But living in a dream distracts from what really matters. In reality, a beginning founder must focus on understanding who is their customer. To do the research you don't need many users, just a few people is enough and it's easier to get the first dozens of users by doing manual actions. By doing things that don't scale. And now let's finally have a look at the examples of such manual actions. Massive following people on Twitter This tactic helped Suhail to kickstart Mixpanel the analytics tool. The quote: "earn on own I wrote a Twitter script to follow a person's followers. That person often blogged about the problem we were trying to solve. We found hundreds of customers this way." Remember that you can follow up to 400 persons per day. Source: https://twitter.com/Suhail/status/1009454402048937986 Start with an email newsletter The idea is to build a list of people, who like reading your content, and then launch a product using the audience as a ramp. my favorite story of applying this trick. 10 years ago, Rayan Hoover started to send daily email newsletter with interesting startups, he found. Soon, he made a list of 170 highly engaging people. These people started responding to Rayan and telling them how much they enjoyed his digests. This is how he came up with the idea to build a product. He launched this website, the notorious Product Hunt. With the help of this small initial audience, the new website quickly took off. Soon it became the coolest social network for startup people. "The Collinson Installation" Paul Graham writes: "At YC, we use the term Collinson installation for the technique they invented. More diffident founders asked: 'will you try our beta?'. And if the answer is yes, they say 'great! We will send you the link'. But Collinson brothers weren't going to wait. When anyone agreed to try Stripe, we would say 'right then, give me your laptop!'. And set them on the spot." Source: http://paulgraham.com/ds.html (must read btw) Product forums Zapier is a tool that connects one another. For example, Salesforce with MailChimp. Dropbox with Google Drive, et cetera. So who is the user of Zapier? Right. It's a user of these apps. And where are you can find users of Salesforce, MailChimp and other apps. On their product forums. And you can imagine the plan now. Zapier's CEO used to go to the product forums of companies like Dropbox, Salesforce, Evernote, and find posts like: "I love MailChimp! It would be awesome if you had. Wufoo Integration!" Then he just offered his solution, Zapier. He got 10 visits from each of those links, not a lot of traffic, but he knew he was onboarding the right customers 50% of visitors would sign up for the beta. It's a half! Takeaway: targeted outreach is the way to go. You don't need a thousand customers to get started. You just need the right 10. Source: https://read.first1000.co/p/zapier Direct sales "Content marketing doesn't work nearly as well for a new product. Direct sales killed it." says Nathan Barry, the founder of ConvertKit. We all hate spam, but I must admit it just works. If done right. If you do diligent research before reaching a potential client, you will be able to make an offer that way. Compare these two offers. First one. Hello, dear sir/madam! Your company has a decent website, but it could be better. Please buy my professional website speedometer tool. And here's the second one: Hello, Alex. I learned about your company while watching your latest, podcast show with James. You were speaking about the website's performance. a lot. Out of curiosity, I tested your website on my website speedometer tool, and it, only scores, 18 out of 100. Wanna what exactly needs to be improved? You see the difference, right? And another one from the founder of ConvertKit. It's called "concierge migrations". Nathan writes: "The biggest objection in the sales process for us has always been. 'But it's so much work to switch!'So we did the ultimate thing that doesn't scale and offered to switch them out of their ConvertKit. Totally for free. Yes. It costs us a lot of time and money, but the referrals and ongoing revenue give an incredible ROI." Great tactic that works for the type of products, that are hard to move from. For example, a website builder (my case 🙂). Source: https://nathanbarry.com/2015-review/ Keyword in domain name The next one is pure genius. I am surprised that people are not using it anymore. It's from 2013. The folks from Doordash launched a landing page. They wanted to validate the problem of quick food delivery. But they didn't have resources for marketing. They decided to target people from Palo Alto, searching for food delivery in Google. Doordash chose the domain name, "PaloAltoDelivery.com" they expected the domain to appear on the top search positions in Google for the keywords "Palo Alto delivery". So the keyword is the domain name. And it worked! Source: https://read.first1000.co/p/case-study-doordash I used the strategy too. And it worked for me as well. My side project uigenerator.org brought me over $20,000 of profit since 2022. The traffic mostly comes from Google. You can guess the keyword. Also, a couple of weeks ago my friend used the same tactic to get free traffic from Google. He made a website allgpts.co which ranks at the top for the "all gpts" keyword. So yes, the 'keyword in domain" trick is still viable. This post was originally an 𝕏 thread which then was flavored with memes and turned into a YouTube video: https://twitter.com/alexanderisorax/status/1727617186523463903

Replies

Daxeel Soni
This is amazing. Thanks for putting all this together. I will use a couple of points for my current product.
Great tips. Thanks for taking the time to post this
Kath Mitrich
Thanks for this post. But regarding direct sales, this simply is not working anymore. I got tons of similar emails where people tell me how buggy and slow my website is and that they checked it just "out of curiosity". This worked in the time when Stripe, Zappier, and ConvertKit started that is about 10 years ago but now it's instantly recognized as a sales and ignored. Other things still work, I believe.
Alexander Isora 🦄
@seacat I think direct sales work but requires more creativity now. Send a video with your face, not just text. Just be engaged and show it somehow. When I needed to reach famous persons I sent them an email with my photo and their name hand-written on a whiteboard by marker. I got a 100% response rate.
Vlad Zivkovic
Always great tips from Indie legend Alex!
Nico Spijker
These are sooo good, thanks for sharing :)
John Rush
do you think email newsletter is still a thing? My concern 1) people don't read emails and don't use them as much today and this will drop even more tomorrow 2) spam is an enemy. I get many newsletters that land in spam. This means if you're unlucky, your whole newsletter will go to spam for everyone. I'm thinking of starting one, but got these concerns.
Alexander Isora 🦄
@johnrushx I think emails will stay for the current generation.
Alexander Isora 🦄
@johnrushx To avoid getting into the spam folder, you should ask to add you to the contacts book or reply to you after signing up. It's manageable.
Kane
Thanks for sharing.
Bren Kinfa 💎 SaaS Gems
These are great tips. Thanks for sharing, Alexander!
K John
these are so good
Sunil Ayar
Thanks for helping us
Jayden Jameson
Amazing! Thanks a lot for sharing this knowledge.
Crishelle Nase
Love the 'keyword in domain name' strategy. Simple yet effective. Any other unconventional tactics like this that you've seen or tried for getting that initial traction?
Alexander Isora 🦄
@crishellenase of course! many of them. i share such growth tips on 𝕏 https://twitter.com/alexanderiso... Most of them come from my own experience.
George Aleesu
Helpful. Thanks for sharing
Karl Wang
Thank you for the tips.
Huudle AI Project Assistant
very insightful and encouraging, thanks for sharing!
Cedric Mathias
Beautiful Insights, Thank you for sharing
Jaden Hong
Thanks a lot for sharing great tips!