You shipped. The product works, the landing page is live, you posted the link to your timeline — and nothing happened. No signups, no clicks, maybe one reply from a friend. The build was months of focused work; distribution is the part nobody scheduled time for, and it is now the entire job.
Zero traction on launch day is the default, not a verdict. Most products that eventually found users did not find them in the first 48 hours. What follows is a tactical sequence for the cold-start problem: where to post, how to post, and the loop that keeps working after the launch spike fades.
Launch day is an event, distribution is a habit
The core mistake is treating launch as a finish line. You announce once, to an audience of roughly zero, and expect the announcement to carry the product. It cannot — an audience of zero forwards nothing.
Reframe it. Your launch post is post number one of fifty. The founders who break out of the cold start do not write one great announcement; they show up in the same five places every week for three months. Traction is the cumulative result of that repetition, not the output of a single Tuesday.
Where to actually post
Reddit. Skip the instinct to drop your link in r/SaaS and watch it sink. Most subreddits remove unsolicited product links within minutes, and repeat attempts get the account shadowbanned. Accounts that survive build comment history first. Find the subreddits where your buyer already complains about the problem you solve, then answer those threads as a person — mentioning your product only when it is genuinely the answer. r/SideProject and r/indiehackers tolerate direct launch posts; most niche subs do not.
Hacker News. Post a Show HN with a plain title that states what the thing does. The front page is decided by upvote velocity in the first one to two hours, so post on a weekday morning in US Eastern time when the site is busiest. Do not ask friends to upvote in a coordinated burst — HN detects voting rings and quietly buries the post. Answer every comment, including the harsh ones.
Bluesky. Build-in-public content does well here, and the audience is friendlier than X. The catch is that posting into the void still produces void. Spend two weeks replying to people in your niche before you post your launch — reach on Bluesky is a function of who already recognizes your handle.
dev.to. This is a writing channel, not an ad channel. Publish a technical article about the problem — a tutorial, a postmortem, a benchmark — and set the canonical URL back to your own blog so the search credit accrues to your domain. The product gets one honest mention. A useful article outlives a launch post by years.
Product Hunt. You realistically get one credible launch per product. Schedule it; do not wing it at midnight with no audience. The first handful of comments and the people who show up early shape the whole day. Hold this card until you have a small email list you can mobilize — launching to nobody wastes the one shot.
Reddit's spam filters act before a human moderator sees your post. If your account is new, has no comment history, and its first action is a link to your own domain, the post can be auto-removed and invisible to everyone but you. Open the post in a logged-out browser before you assume it flopped — it may never have been live.
Write a post people actually read
A launch post that gets ignored almost always leads with the product. Lead with the problem instead. Open with the specific frustration your buyer recognizes in one sentence, then show the product solving it — a screenshot, a short clip, a fifteen-second demo. People scroll past walls of text; they stop for a picture of the thing working.
Include three things every time: who it is for (be narrow — "for freelance iOS developers who invoice in multiple currencies" beats "for everyone"), what it costs (hiding pricing reads as a trap), and one open question at the end to invite replies. Then clear the next hour and answer every comment as it lands. Early engagement is what every feed algorithm rewards, and a thread with twenty replies travels much further than one with two.
The loop that compounds while you sleep
Every launch post is a spike. It climbs for a day, maybe two, then decays to nothing. If spikes are your only channel, you are back at zero every Monday. The asset that does not decay is search traffic.
Pick the exact phrases your buyer types into Google — not your clever product name, but the problem in their own words — and publish one article a week answering each one. A piece targeting "how to split expenses with a remote co-founder" pulls in qualified readers for years after you publish it, with no further work from you. That is the loop: launch spikes buy attention this week; search content earns it every week after.
The leak in that loop is letting hard-won visitors land once and vanish. Capture them. A newsletter turns a one-time reader into someone you can reach again on purpose — and the next time you ship a feature, you email a list that already trusts you instead of starting cold on Reddit.
Run the launch tactics and the content loop in parallel from week one. The posts get you through the next month; the content gets you through the next year.
Originally published at pickuma.com. Subscribe to the RSS or follow @pickuma.bsky.social for new reviews.
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