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We validated our idea and reached $1k MRR
3 points by davidheikka 571 days ago
I know what it's like to try to market a product that no one wants.

We spent months building a product and then 6 months trying to market it and got 0 sales.

We even spent $900 on ads... But nothing.

It was actually a well-built product, the problem was just that we hadn't validated the idea at all. We had no confirmation that there was a market for it.

Eventually we had to abandon it.

Our next idea was the complete opposite. We reached $1k MRR in two months and things are going really well. Here's exactly how we validated the idea:

Step one: Talking to potential users

- We had a pretty well defined idea but we didn't want to make the same mistake again.

- We wanted to solve a problem that founders had, it was a problem we understood intimately.

- So we made a Reddit post on r/SaaS and r/indiehackers asking founders to answer a few questions and in return we would give them feedback on their project.

- Here's one of the posts (4 months ago as you can see): https://www.reddit.com/r/indiehackers/comments/1ea1cpd/lets_exchange_feedback/

- This got us in touch with 8-10 founders who were willing to answer our survey.

- We asked questions about pain points related to the problem and tried to get an idea if they were willing to adopt the solution we had in mind.

- The responses were positive so we had the green light to start building

Step two: Building the MVP

- This is the easy part. We knew what we should focus on from the feedback so we let that guide our building.

- We built fast. 30-45 days for the MVP.

- We made sure that our MVP actually solved the problem we had identified.

- That's it. Time to market this MVP and see if we can get some users.

Step three: Marketing and collecting feedback

- First we set a clear goal. We wanted as much feedback as possible so we were going to need active users. 20 active users was our goal.

- Then we selected 2 marketing channels we believed in. Since we wanted to reach founders we focused on X and Reddit.

- Then we set daily volume targets. For example, post 50 replies on relevant posts on X and create 5 new posts.

- So we had our daily targets, meaning we knew exactly what to do every day. We thought it would be reasonable to expect that we can hit our goal of 20 active users in 2 weeks.

- Then we just executed our marketing plan. It was easy, because we knew what to do every day. No questions.

- Two weeks later we were at 100 users (and it was exactly 100, what are the odds). We had hit our goal.

That was the validation process for Buildpad. From there on, all we had to do was improve the product based on feedback and continue marketing and that took us to $1k MRR in two months.

I hope our journey can inspire some of you to not give up and to follow a solid process for building your product.

I'm happy to offer my input in the comments if you have any questions.

1 comments

This is amazing and I really appreciate your testimony. Clearly you know people need your product because you created the product based on a market exigency / need. And you discovered the need through, talking to actual potential clients! Very cool. I'm inspired by your efforts and your marketing strategy, if I may call it that, to focus on "volume" or the "volume-based approach" for X and Reddit, it makes a lot of sense, and demystifies a lot of the "outreach" that is so difficult to brandish [like a sword] effectively, especially as a small company. When you plug your solution to potential clients, is it typically after a back-n-forth or answering their questions?
It totally depends on the situation. The good thing about X is that you can link your project in your bio and do a pinned post as well, so when you provide some value in a conversation many people will check out your project.

I think the best kind of posts are the ones where you provide a lot of value and can naturally link to your project at the end. Can't be too salesy though, there's a fine line.