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It used to be easy to get people to sign up for your app. Now — not so much. Markets are saturated. In this post, I’ll share how we got our first four hundred beta testers which helped us learn invaluable lessons.
We didn’t start blogging from day one because we wanted a beautiful blog that would appeal to our visitors. Because of that, we spent an inordinate amount of time designing and developing a custom WordPress theme. It turned out alright, but we lost months going back and forth on design decisions and squashing bugs that came up. It was worth it but we should’ve started blogging from the beginning even while the theme was being designed. We would’ve been further along in terms of organic traffic and social footprint. You win some and lose some — right? From that point on, we focused on creating in-depth posts that helped the people we would one day call our customers. We focused on topics like this one about , this one , and this one about . Since it was a new domain and we didn’t have any backlinks, audience, or social footprint, I used my own mailing list and social accounts to promote our posts. From there, we derived our first trickle of traffic and aggressively promoted our mailing list. A few people would click through to our homepage and sign up to be notified of our beta launch. Once the mailing list started to grow, we were able to promote posts directly to them. It was a self-reinforcing cycle that paid off. About 25% (100) of our beta users came from people who interacted with our .
2. We used Ahrefs to backlink opportunities
If you’re not familiar with Ahrefs, it’s an SEO and competitive analysis tool. We’d type in the URL of websites that were in a similar space but weren’t competing with us directly. This gave us a bunch of websites that were linking around in our niche and had a similar audience demographic. We did this with about ten websites and added them to our spreadsheet.3. Used guest blog compilation articles
Up until this point, we were looking at guest post opportunities that weren’t obvious. Most of them weren’t actively looking for guest post authors. After we exhausted that route, we went the obvious path and typed in variations of “list of guest blogging websites niche” in Google. That brought back quite a few opportunities and filled out our spreadsheet.We got down to the serious business of pitching these websites. Here’s the pitch we used:
Hey first name,
My name is (your name) from (your company/website). I was on your website reading (name of article) and like how (point or perspective you liked).
I’m reaching out to see if you’d be interested in a few guest post ideas I think your audience would find valuable.
Idea 1
Idea 2
and Idea 3
If you choose any of them, I’d use relevant imagery and reputable references to support the points I make. Here are links to some articles I’ve written in the past:
Link one
Link two
You can also find me on social media
Twitter handle
Other social handle.
I’m looking forward to hearing back from you.
Thank you,
Your name
This lets the editor/owner of the website know you’ve taken time to read their content so are familiar with their style. It also gives them a few ideas to choose from if they don’t like the first one. You also show them where you’ve written before so they can see if they like your writing. I was surprised because some of these websites would message us back and tell us we’d have to pay for the guest post slot. I’ve never paid for a guest post and I don’t plan on starting. A few of them were cool and we landed guest post slots like this one on . Looking back, we should’ve spent more time on guest posting but there’s always the future right? Roughly fifty users signed up for our beta test through guest blogging.The essence of a Quora strategy is as follows:
Apart from a product page on Indie Hackers, this the only place I mention KyLeads unless someone asks me a direct relevant question. We get a few visitors every week from the forum. They’re quick to share feedback and let you know if there are any bugs or strange design issues. We only got a few beta testers (about 20) from here but they’re super engaged one so it was definitely a win.
is a curation website that connects interested beta testers with the people who need them. There’s not much difference between them and BetaList except there’s no paid option on betabound. The website is created and maintained by — a company that provides different types of testing for high growth startups (read funded) and enterprise companies. We submitted to betabound and got a reply in a few days and were on the homepage within a week. Our performance on the website left a lot to be desired. It may be because their audience found no interest in our product. In the end, we got 34 referral visits from betabound and a few turned into beta testers for KyLeads.
The one on our company account got 100 views. Together, they sent fifty people back to KyLeads. Frankly, I was shocked it sent us that much referral traffic. Beginners luck? Anyways, of those fifty people, ten decided to sign up to be beta testers and pad out our numbers. Again, I was shocked at the level of engagement we were getting from SlideShare. This is something we plan on revisiting in the future when we can dedicate enough energy to the design of the content.
I’ve been aware of Haro for years but never used it to its full potential. It’s not until I listened to an episode of that I decided to revisit it. I sent the episode to everyone and told them to sign up for Haro. Every single night, I’d sit down and scroll through the thrice daily emails. I’d find at least one request I could answer every day. To make sure everyone was following up, I’d ping them in the morning to send me requests and their response so I could help them out if it needed polishing. We got quite a few placements through this route. Though the direct referral traffic wasn’t much to talk about, it had a positive effect on our search traffic which started to increase during this period. It’s not easy to analyze the traffic from these sources because not all them told us when our content went live (or if they accepted the pitch). We had to and our analytics to spot them. By hacking the data together, we found out 50+ people signed up for our beta from the referral traffic generated by HARO.
Originally published at