The Launch
July 2025: I spent months building DevHub, a gamified Notion system for developers.
Launch day expectations:
- 100+ sales first week
- Viral Reddit post
- Product Hunt success
Reality:
- 18 views on launch day
- 2 sales total
- Crickets on Product Hunt
Then I vanished for 4 months.
Why I Disappeared
Not because I gave up on the product.
Because I had absolutely zero idea what to do next.
I'd done everything "right":
✅ Built a good product
✅ Posted on Reddit
✅ Launched on Product Hunt
✅ Made it available
And... nothing happened.
The mistake:
I treated marketing like a one-time event, not a daily practice.
I thought: "Build it, launch it, people will come."
Nobody came.
The 4-Month Silence
During those months:
- Didn't post
- Didn't email users
- Didn't engage anywhere
- Just... stopped
Why?
Because every post felt like shouting into the void.
When you have zero audience:
- Twitter posts get 1-3 views
- Reddit posts get buried
- Blog posts get zero traffic
- Nothing moves
It's demoralizing.
So I stopped trying.
What Changed
Two things brought me back:
1. Real testimonials from my testers
I'd given 10 people free access in exchange for feedback.
Only 2 responded. But their feedback was gold:
"I adapted it for both work and school. The flexibility made it stick."
"I use the XP system to tie into real rewards."
Hearing that it ACTUALLY helped someone? That's validation.
2. Realizing I'd learned nothing
I failed at marketing, not building.
The product works. I just sucked at telling people about it.
But marketing is a learnable skill.
Giving up = I learn nothing
Trying again = I learn what works
What I Got Wrong
Looking back, my mistakes were obvious:
1. Built first, marketed never
Should have been:
- Building audience while building product
- Sharing progress on Twitter
- Writing tutorials on Dev.to
- Engaging in communities
Instead: Built in silence, launched to nobody.
2. Expected instant results
2 weeks of posting ≠ traction
Most successful products take 3-6 months of consistent marketing.
I quit after 2 weeks.
3. One platform only
Relied entirely on Reddit.
When those posts stopped performing, traffic died completely.
4. No email list
Had 70+ free downloads. Never emailed them once.
Just let them disappear.
5. Posted once, hoped for virality
One post → no traction → gave up
Should have been: Daily posting for 90+ days minimum.
What I'm Doing Differently
Starting today:
Daily content across platforms:
- Twitter: Value-first posts (not pitching)
- Dev.to: Tutorials and building in public
- Reddit: Genuine engagement before promoting
- LinkedIn: Professional angle
- Email: Actually using the list I have
Building in public:
- Sharing metrics (even when bad)
- Sharing lessons learned
- Being transparent about struggles
Multiple platforms:
Not relying on Reddit alone.
Patience:
Committing to 90 days of daily posting before judging results.
Email marketing:
Actually emailing my 140 free users.
Current Status
Metrics (being transparent):
- 3 paid sales ($13.35 total revenue)
- 140 free downloads
- 2 solid testimonials
- ~300 total page views
Not impressive. But honest.
For Other Builders
If you launched something and it flopped:
You're not alone.
Most launches are underwhelming.
Most products take months to gain traction.
Most of us suck at marketing.
The difference:
Some people keep going. Some disappear.
I disappeared for 4 months.
I'm back now.
Not promising success. Just promising honesty and consistency.
What's Next
Relaunching on Product Hunt next week.
This time with:
✅ Real testimonials
✅ Better positioning
✅ Actual marketing plan
✅ Realistic expectations
Will it work? No idea.
But trying beats hiding.
If you're building something:
Don't make my mistakes.
Start marketing before you launch.
Build audience + product in parallel.
Post consistently for 90 days minimum.
And don't disappear when it's hard.
That's when it matters most.
I build Notion productivity systems for developers. DevHub is my first real product launch. Learning as I go.
Top comments (1)
The "shouting into the void" feeling is really hard to push through. Two weeks of posting with no traction and the rational part of your brain says the signal is clear.
I'm right in the middle of this phase with a personal finance app I've been building - trying to get the Android version live at the moment. Every day it feels like you're one lucky comment away from a bit of momentum, or one dry week away from going quiet again.
Your point about marketing being a daily practice rather than a launch event hit home. That's the reframe I needed earlier. Good luck with the Product Hunt relaunch - the honesty about the numbers is what makes people actually trust you.