| ▲ | Ask HN: How do you do marketing in the age of slop? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 8 points by probst 6 hours ago | 12 comments | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hi dear hackernewsfolks, vocal contributors and lurkers alike. We (that is to say my business partner and I) are building SaaS products, but we are really struggling to find enough users. This is an age old problem, but I find it has gotten particular bad after LLMs made it trivially to make apps and services. Whether these products end up good or bad is mostly irrelevant, the end effect is the same: the market just seems so heavily saturated with new products, that it's incredibly hard to break through the constant drone of people vying for attention (the irony of me finding a way to do the same isn't lost on me). Even briefly mentioning what we are building in a comment on a "what are you working on" thread yesterday, had my inbox filled with AI outreach from questionable SEO, "How to optimize your product", "let me create a garbage video for you" style e-mails. My conclusion so far are:
In short: I'd love to learn how you do this and how you think of the role of marketing and how you approach getting customers, particularly now that the very same customers likely have inboxes filled by AI generated outreach.Lots of love from Berlin | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | 35mm 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
You already know what works: organic forum engagement gives you excellent conversions. The problem is the hit-or-miss part. That's the actual constraint to solve. Pick the two or three forums where your ideal customers actively ask questions about the problem your product solves, not where founders hang out. Spend 20 minutes a day answering those questions thoroughly before mentioning what you build. This builds trust and relevance. The conversion quality difference you see between paid ads and forums tells you where to focus. I've also found that forums (in my case private FB groups) are the best source of leads, so I built an app (GTM Intel) to check them frequently and give me a daily list of leads to respond to. P.S This is very meta / ouroboros but your post is actually one of the ones it found for me today! | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | Festro 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
"paid search ads etc have resulted in lots of clicks but absolutely abhorrent conversions in our case, whereas conversions for the more organic channels like forums etc are excellent (maybe a targeting issue...)" Absolutely a targeting issue. Paid search should be able to produce traffic that converts at roughly the same rate as your non-brand organic traffic (at this stage most of your organic traffic). How much it costs per click for that quality of traffic depends on your industry, and whether that's profitable depends on your margins. But that's the baseline. After all paid search traffic is the same as organic search in essence, it just depends where the searcher ends up clicking. For you, before you rank highly for core terms, paid search can drive volume you want. This isn't any advice for the AI slop you're seeking but your line about targeting issues stood out to me as something definitely worth looking at. I don't know how to specifically guide you remotely but if I had to guess I'd advice you to look at your keyword targeting, swapping things away from broad match to exact match, cover more keywords if you can (since exact is narrower than broad) and add negative keywords liberally. Check your search term report for anything irrelevant and apply them as negatives. If you're not using keywords because Google (or whoever) have pushed you to some 'smart' campaign, then switch to keyword targeting. The smart campaigns are fine but require finesse to handle their blunter settings options. If in doubt, use AI to figure out keywords to prioritise and negatives to set by default. Or speak to a paid media consultant and get an account review from them, sometimes they'll do this for free. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | nifski 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hey, You’re right about it being a bit more difficult to market in an age of constant AI slop. Personally I have two products that I have created that actually solve a problem, whether or not the product is good or bad doesn’t even matter because getting users is the key. I would advise you start with friends and family first, just to get some valuable feedback. Influencer ads and TikTok promotion also is promising — atleast compared to cold outreach or LinkedIn Hunting for discords or telegram channels or finding where your core audience hang out (not necessarily in real life even though that is useful info) so that you can reach these people and showcase the product. Ps. I wouldn’t pitch the product like a sale or like you need users. I would pitch it by asking if they could help take a look as I am researching. If you lead with research you will get users | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | m_bashirzadeh 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
[flagged] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||