This is a great presentation, especially from slide 14 onward. Exactly the kind of practical advice entrepreneurial developers need to move towards a MVP. I wish there was more regarding how to set the stage before launching something (aside greyhat/blackhat techniques), i.e. having some eyeballs waiting for what you might be creating.
Start writing about the topic before you launch. Presumably if you're passionate enough about the space to spend N months slinging code you can at least write a few pages about it. (I need to be better at this.)
Why didn't you do this with AR? (Not being critical, just curious, because I remember you being a bit stealthy about AR pre-launch (of your demo, at least).)
Also, how would you respond to those that wouldn't want to do this for fear of "giving away their idea"?
Is just another case of being needlessly protective of an idea that is, in and of itself, fairly worthless? Or is the trick to write to about the problem generally and not your specific solution?
Something I've been thinking about lately: What if your product is merely a tool? Say, it's useful in solving a real problem, but it isn't central to any particular workflow. For example, OCR software. It can save massive amounts of time, but I can't imagine what I'd write on the topic. Am I just not being creative enough?
You are not being creative enough. Here's a list of blog post titles for you:
- OCR application(s) in forms
- OCR application(s) in vehicle registration plates
- OCR in archive digitization
- OCR in business card scanning
- OCR in mobile industry
With the simple formula of your product plus application fields you can generate hundreds of posts.
It depends on the business, but I have found that finding community forums that have an interest in your niche is a good place for an advert. Email the owner or webmaster and negotiate the rate.
If you are a good fit for the site, the owner and community will love the added benefit. Give a discount and it will be a feature, or value added, benefit to being part of the community, not an annoying advert.
Or when you'd like to be able to DM them. It would need to be coupled with very active following to be a spammer tactic. Don't assume malice when other explanations suffice.
I'm not saying they're trying to spam people, it's just that there are literally tens of thousands of Twitter bots that will automatically follow you back if you follow them first.
The number of followers is meaningless if they're not actual humans who are interested in your tweets.