I am looking at strategies for gaining the first users to a startup and have made bullet points on several now well-known companies from the last couple of years. Would love your help at finding more examples of what companies have the best inspirational strategy..
Easier to read on blog, but copy/paste as of 04/02/13
The myth of “we had 25,000 users sign up on our first day” or the line “we told our friends and they told their friends,” are both likely to have been backed up by a smart strategy. I am still figuring out the plan with www.fabsie.com and researching other playbooks for inspiration. All of the startups below have a great product which is central to their success, but beyond that are some very important findings that led to their growth.
Instagram
The founders weren’t scared of letting people try it before launch. They just kept showing it to people and taking feedback.
They got everyone they talked to be a brand ambassador.
Early adopters used the product extensively.
Users posted their photos to twitter attracting new users, (many early adopters had ’000′s of followers.)
Early users became huge advocates and pushed it on blogs and in reviews on app store.
Showed it to influencers. (Robert Scoble, Kevin Rose, Leo Laporte and MG Siegler)
LinkedIn
Reid Hoffman seeded the product with successful friends and connections. (The company would have been doomed if there had been massive adoption of have-nots, instead of people who were hiring, recruiting etc.)
He refused to meet with potential investors until they adopted LinkedIn. Entrepreneurs and aspiring executives would follow their lead.
Deployed an Outlook contact uploader (very painful to build/support) to allow viral spread among professionals.
Deferred any features related to revenue or engagement until after the growth path was established, which took nearly 1.5 years.
Invitation reminders that expired after two weeks were another key feature.
Etsy
The original founders built forums and started reading through the conversations people were having. The overwhelming topic was, “I wish there was a place I could sell my crafts! Ebay sucks – it’s hard to use, doesn’t care about us, and charges high fees.”
Craftspeople buy crafts in other sectors than their own trade. Sellers were also buyers and brand advocates.
They told their friends at even larger crafting community forums about Etsy, which brought even more sellers.
Sellers previously had no e-commerce presence, so for them to accept any online transactions at all, they had to send customers to Etsy.
Airbnb
Spammed Craigslist. (See Blogpost by Dave Gooden)
Found spikes in demand and tried to cover those events (from SXSW to London Olympics.)
Pinterest
Email Marketing: “I think I personally wrote to the first 5,000 users.” Silbermann
Psychology of the invite-only beta.
Engaging and frequent notifications.
Design demographic = design blogs coverage.
Facebook
Emailed friends and sent emails to several mailing lists.
College Newspaper
Cross-school friends connections and artificial scarcity.
At a time when camera phones were just taking off.
Hub strategy, take on strongest competitors first (startup at Columbia), then expand to where no competition exists.
Aggressive use of email notifications to acquire, engage, and retain users. Defaulting users to receive comment updates was especially clever.
Dropbox
Posting demo video to Digg.com that moved from 5,000 to 75,000 signups.
Many failed experiments.
Word of mouth / Social worked for Dropbox much more so than search.
Warby Parker
Hired a Fashion PR agency (Bradbury Lewis) that landed them in GQ, hit their annual sales target in three weeks.
Made the office into a store.
Co-branded with other stores – the readery.
Took the store on the road – the schoolbus.
Held a bazaar.
Youtube
Monthly video contests with decent prizes
More contests.
Even more contests.
Loose adherence to DMCA.
Ad-free through Sequoia funding in early days.
Comments, subscriptions, user profiles and embeddable flash made it easier to embed than windows media player, popular at the time.
Netflix
One month free trial.
Yammer
Winning TechCrunch50
Try before you buy.
Anyone inside of an organisation can set it up.
Skillshare
With many ideas, not writing a line of code unless 1,000 signups to alpha page.
First Skillshare class around poker.
Controversial article ‘Why College is overatered.’
Kickstarter Student loan crisis
Sketchfab
Blogpost on blendernation.com that embedded the product on their page. (3D file embedded like a youtube window.)
Attracted great 3D artists via twitter
Fab.com
Previous users from faboulous.com (although only XX% came.)
Viral invites invite three friends to gain referral credits.
200,000 users at launch. 38% of visitors came from email campaign, 30% from typing in http://www.fab.com, 10% from twitter links (Ashton Kutcher, Demi Moore), 9% Facebook.
Giveaway of 10 Vitra Eames Elephant
Understanding that people cared more about status when referring than discount. I.e. first on the site outranked 10% off.
Firms such as Dot PR use two general methods:
1) Target "highly-active" users to promote their brands
2) Actually buy likes/ retweets until product goes viral
I think there is much to be said about creating a user driven experience in advertising, as demonstrated with PD3's O2 Academy campaign. Brands are easily forgotten so make them memorable!
http://mcbennett.wordpress.com/2013/02/04/1000-users/