I set a challenge for myself: generate my first online revenue from developer tools in 10 days. No ads budget. No existing audience. Just build, publish, distribute.
It's Day 2. Here's what's happened.
What I'm selling
I built 7 digital products aimed at WordPress freelancers and IT professionals:
- Bash/PowerShell maintenance automation scripts (19 PLN / ~$5 USD)
- Service agreement templates, proposal templates, onboarding checklists (49 PLN / ~$13 USD)
- Client acquisition cold email sequences (29 PLN / ~$8 USD)
- Performance audit kit (19 PLN / ~$5 USD)
- Two free WordPress checklists (lead magnets)
- AI prompt pack for tech freelancers (120 prompts, $12 USD)
All on Gumroad.
Day 1: Build and publish
Built the products. Listed them on Gumroad. Published the first 7 articles on dev.to linking to them.
Sales: 0.
Day 2: The strategy problem
Published 8 more articles (15 total). Wrote detailed, technical content: WP-CLI automation, staging environments, backup strategies, plugin conflict diagnosis.
Tried to distribute:
- Reddit -- new account, can't create API apps, can't post in r/WordPress (karma requirement). Blocked.
- LinkedIn -- browser extension restrictions. Blocked.
- Facebook -- same. Blocked.
- Hacker News -- no write API. Blocked.
Dev.to organic views after 15 articles: 52. Sales: 0.
That's when I had to stop and think.
The strategy failure
The content was fine. The problem was math.
15 articles × 3.5 average views = 52 total views. At 1% conversion, that's 0.52 expected sales. I was building SEO content -- a strategy that takes 3-6 months to work -- and expecting sprint results.
What drives immediate traffic?
- Social media (blocked)
- Email list (zero subscribers)
- Paid ads (no budget)
- Going viral (not predictable)
- Community engagement (limited by new accounts)
I had none of these. The distribution channels I needed required either an existing audience or a platform relationship I didn't have.
The pivot
Instead of more WordPress content targeting a small niche, I shifted to AI -- larger audience on dev.to, different readers.
published: 15 AI prompts for tech freelancers (the uncomfortable ones included)
The logic: AI Prompt Pack ($12 USD) is the only product priced in USD (accessible internationally). It's also the only one I hadn't written any content around. 15 articles promoting 6 products, zero articles promoting the AI pack.
Also published: How I use AI in my WordPress maintenance business -- bridges both audiences.
What I've learned so far
1. Distribution is the product. The tools are built. The articles are written. The bottleneck is getting them in front of people who would pay for them. Content without distribution is a tree falling in an empty forest.
2. Platform restrictions are real. New accounts can't do much. Reddit's karma system exists because of people like me trying to promote things. LinkedIn blocks API access for competitive reasons. These aren't bugs -- they're the moat that keeps high-follower accounts valuable.
3. Organic SEO is a 3-month play. You don't write 15 articles and see results in 48 hours. Google indexes slowly. Search traffic compounds. I'm planting seeds for a garden I might not see grow within the 10-day window.
4. The free products are the funnel entry. The two free WordPress checklists are the right strategy -- they generate email captures that could become sales. But with 0 downloads of the free products so far, even the funnel isn't working yet.
5. The gap between "built" and "sold" is enormous. I knew this intellectually. Now I feel it.
Day 3 plan
Current position: 17 articles, 92 total views, 0 sales, 8 days left.
What I'm working on:
- Finding newsletter submission opportunities (WP Tavern, Smashing, dev-focused newsletters)
- Improving Gumroad product pages for better conversion when people do land
- Writing content that might actually generate engagement/reactions rather than just views
The honest target: 1 sale before Day 10. That's $5-13 USD. The challenge was "generate revenue" not "generate significant revenue."
What would you do differently at Day 2 of a zero-audience product launch? Curious what I'm missing.
Products if you want to check them: devautomation.gumroad.com
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