Distribution insights for founders
Field notes on distribution, community presence, and finding your first 100 users.
How do I find the right subreddits for my product?
The right subreddit is where your ideal customer already complains about the problem you solve, not the biggest one in your category. Here is how to find and vet them.
How do I write a cold DM that actually gets a reply?
Most cold DMs fail because they are about you, sent to strangers, asking for time. A DM that gets replies is short, specific, and earns the response before it asks for anything.
Should I start a newsletter or post on social media first?
Social media builds reach you do not own. A newsletter builds an audience you do. For most early founders the right answer is to do social first and convert it into email.
How often should I post when building in public?
There is no magic number. The right cadence is the one you can sustain for a year without resenting it. Here is how to find your rhythm and what to post at each interval.
How do I get users from X when I have zero followers?
With no followers, posting into the void does nothing. The way in is replies: show up where your audience already talks, add value, and let your profile do the converting.
Should I do content marketing or community marketing as a solo founder?
Content marketing scales but is slow and lonely at the start. Community marketing is faster to first users but does not compound the same way. Here is how to choose and combine them.
How do I get my product recommended by ChatGPT and other AI assistants?
AI assistants recommend products they can find described clearly across the web in the context people ask about. You earn mentions by being present and specific where the models read.
Why does my product have zero users after launching?
If your product has zero users after launch, the problem is almost never the product. It is distribution. Here are the four real reasons no one showed up.
Why do most founders give up on distribution after two weeks?
Founders quit distribution because they post into silence with no feedback loop. Distribution needs about 90 days to compound. Here is how to survive the silent phase.
When should I start thinking about distribution for my SaaS?
The answer is before you finish building. Waiting until launch is the most common and most expensive distribution mistake. Here is what pre-launch distribution looks like.
What is an ideal customer profile and how do I build one for my SaaS?
An ideal customer profile is not a demographic. It is a specific person with acute pain, a trigger event, and a clumsy current workaround. Here is how to build one.
How do I create content that sounds like me and not like AI?
AI generated content gets ignored in communities because it sounds like everyone. A voice profile captures how you actually write. Here is how to build one and the samples you need.
How do I track which distribution channels are actually sending me users?
UTM parameters explained simply, what to measure and what to ignore, and how to close the loop between a post and a signup so distribution improves over time.
How do I use Reddit for distribution without getting banned?
Reddit can send real users to your product, or it can get you banned in a day. The difference is credibility before promotion and a value ratio that actually holds.
Does Product Hunt still work for getting users in 2026?
Product Hunt still works in 2026, but not the way founders hope. It is good for credibility, press, and investor visibility, not sustained user acquisition. Here is how to use it.
Should I post on LinkedIn or X/Twitter to find my first customers?
LinkedIn and X reward different things and suit different products. The honest comparison for B2B versus consumer, why replies beat original posts, and the voice requirement.
How can I figure out who my real customers are from my product code?
Your codebase is a map of who you built for. Dependencies reveal sophistication, architecture reveals the use case. Here is how to read your own repo for your ICP.
How do I reply to Reddit threads about my product without sounding spammy?
A spammy Reddit reply gets downvoted and reported. A good one earns upvotes and clicks. The difference is value first, product mention only when it directly solves the problem.
How do I find users for an app I built with Lovable or Bolt?
You shipped an app with Lovable or Bolt in a weekend. The tools built the product but left you with zero distribution. Here is where your users actually are.
How do I launch on Hacker News Show HN and actually get traction?
Show HN can send thousands of technical users to your product, or sink without a trace. The difference is the title, the first two hours, and how you handle comments.
How do I do distribution if I have no marketing experience?
You can build a product but have never run a campaign. Three things work without any marketing background: community presence, genuine replies, and building in public.
What are the best distribution channels for a solo B2B SaaS founder?
Ranked and honest: community first, then content, then outreach. Why paid ads rarely make sense under $10K MRR, and how to pick channels by product type.
Is community marketing better than cold outreach for indie founders?
Cold outreach buys attention that stops when you stop paying. Community marketing compounds. Here is the honest comparison, including when outreach still makes sense.
How long does it take to build enough credibility in a community before promoting your product?
Plan on three to six weeks of genuine contribution before your first product mention. Here is what counts as credibility, the ratio that works, and what happens if you skip it.
What should I post when building in public?
Most build in public advice is generic noise. What actually gets engagement is specificity, real numbers, and honest failures. Here is what to post and what to skip.
Should I build an audience before I launch my product?
Ideally yes, practically complicated. Here is what building an audience really means for a solo founder, the minimum viable audience before launch, and how to do it in 60 days.
What is answer engine optimization and why should founders care about it?
Answer engine optimization is getting your product cited by ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini. With 700M people using ChatGPT, AI engines are now a primary discovery channel.
How do I find out where my competitors get their users?
Your competitors have already done the work of finding the channels that convert. You can read most of it from the outside if you know where to look. Here is how.
Why distribution fails at the same step for every founder
The pattern shows up in every community. Builder ships something real. Gets zero traction. Tries Reddit, tries Twitter, tries Product Hunt. Nothing compounds. Here's what's actually broken.
How much time per day should I spend on distribution?
You do not need hours. Thirty to sixty focused minutes a day, spent consistently on the same few channels, beats an occasional all day marketing binge. Here is how to structure it.
The timing problem: why most monitoring tools surface the wrong threads
Syften found the thread. You replied. Nobody saw it. The problem isn't what you said — it's when you said it. Thread engagement has a lifecycle and most tools completely ignore it.
How do I get my first users for a developer tool?
Developers ignore marketing and trust other developers. You get your first users by being useful in the places they already are and letting the tool prove itself in seconds.
How do I get my first users for a consumer app?
Consumer apps live or die on word of mouth and emotion, not on rational pitches. You get your first users by reaching small passionate communities and making sharing natural.
How to build community presence without getting banned
Every subreddit has unwritten rules. Post the wrong thing at the wrong time and you're shadow-banned before your first user sees your product. Here's how community reputation actually works.
How do I find beta testers for my new app?
Good beta testers are people with the problem you solve, not random volunteers. Find them in the communities where the problem is discussed and make saying yes easy.
How do I know if a community is worth my time?
Not every active community will send you users. Judge it on whether your buyers are there, whether the culture allows value, and whether contributions actually get seen.
How should I respond when someone criticizes my product publicly?
Public criticism is a distribution moment in disguise. How you respond is read by everyone watching, and a calm, useful reply often wins more trust than the complaint cost you.
How do I get testimonials and reviews when I have few users?
You do not need many users to get social proof. You need to ask the happy ones at the right moment, make it easy, and use specific results over generic praise.
How do I write a launch thread that actually converts?
A launch thread converts when it opens with the problem, not your product. Lead with the pain your reader feels, show the result, and make the ask the easy next step.
What do I do after my launch flops?
A quiet launch is not a verdict on your product. It usually means a distribution problem, not a product problem. Here is how to diagnose it and recover without starting over.
How do I get my product featured in newsletters?
Newsletter writers need a steady supply of things worth sharing. You get featured by making their job easy: be genuinely relevant, build a relationship, and hand them a ready story.
How do I do distribution if I am an introvert who hates self promotion?
Distribution does not require being loud or salesy. The introvert's advantages, like writing, listening, and one to one depth, are exactly what builds trust and brings users.
How do I get users without going viral?
Viral hits are rare, random, and rarely repeatable. Steady distribution to the right people compounds into real users without a single breakout moment. Here is how it works.