3 days ago I published my first dev.to post: "I built a self-growing Japanese brand database in 1 hour with Lovable (0 customers, 0 followers)."
The stats today:
- Views: <25
- Reactions: 0
- Comments: 0
- Followers: 0
Here's the honest breakdown of what didn't work, and 3 things I'm changing.
1. Passive doesn't work
I published and waited. No X share, no Reddit, no Indie Hackers (got blocked there anyway as a new account).
The lesson: dev.to alone doesn't distribute itself. It rewards momentum signals — comments, reactions, external traffic. New accounts with no signal stay invisible.
What I'm changing: Today I shared the post on X with a question to indie builders. Tomorrow I'll add genuine comments to 5 #showdev posts I actually find interesting.
2. The title was about me, not them
My old title: "I built a self-growing Japanese brand database in 1 hour with Lovable (0 customers, 0 followers)."
Self-centric. About my journey, my tool, my emptiness.
What works on dev.to: titles framed as the reader's problem or technique.
What I'd write today: "How I auto-enrich a brand database with AI on cache miss (Lovable + Claude API)"
The reader benefit is clearer. The technique is upfront. Use case comes second.
3. I forgot the audience
dev.to is developers. My customers (Amazon sellers) are not.
I wrote about my product like a product person, not a developer. Devs scrolling the feed don't care about Japan sourcing — they care about the pattern I used to build it.
What I'm changing: For my next post, I'll lead with the technical pattern (AI-powered DB enrichment on cache miss) and let the use case come second.
What's next
- Comment on 5 #showdev posts genuinely
- Engage with any replies on the original post
- Write next post with a developer-first angle
Currently still 0 customers, 0 followers — but learning faster.
Demo: https://japanbrandfinder.lovable.app/
Twitter: @tokidigitaljp
What's the most valuable thing you've learned from a post that didn't take off?
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