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Ask HN: Promoting your idea

2 pointsby njckname2about 14 years ago
Hey,<p>I know there have been talks, blog posts about what I'm about to ask but I've been ignoring them until now so there is a lot I don't know.<p>Here's what I want to ask you HN, if you have an idea, how do you promote it?<p>Say Twitter does not exist and you invent it, how do you promote it?<p>How do you find people who are good at promoting a website?<p>If I want to tell a forum about my website, I have to compose the text in a manner that will make my product appealing to the potential user and all sorts of things at which I'm bad at.

1 comment

arkitaipabout 14 years ago
How does practical marketing work, then.<p>The non-answer: it depends.<p>In the early stages, few startups would hire a dedicated marketing person because the founders or entire teams does marketing depending on your marketing philosophy. For web startups, working your network in extending outward circles - tech friends, industry colleagues, specialized media - has been the established method to from stealth to viral. Working blogs, forums and other hangout in your industry is another approach by which you can build a good reputation and find potential customers. But dedicated, high quality community outreach is resource extensive and difficult to pull of if your industry is big.<p>If you are a very tech oriented guy, you might want to partner up with a passionate business person to get some needed perspective. This way you will have a co-founder and a more marketing oriented person in your startup.<p>Twitter exists. Use it. Write meaningful content about your startup, products, office, thoughts on your industry, etc. Befriend and interact with people in your business. Reply to their tweets, ask questions.<p>Facebook exists. Use it. Just remember that dedicated community outreach is resource expensive. Plan for it.<p>Never underestimate the Silicon Valley effect. Working=living in the area and hanging out with the right people can be a tremendous marketing advantage. If I lived in the USA and was about to launch a serious startup, I would definitely consider moving to The Valley.