✍️ 필사 모드: Side Project Launch Strategy 2026 — Product Hunt, HN, X, Bluesky, Indie Hackers, the Newsletter Circuit (Deep Dive)
English- Prologue — The 2026 Launch Landscape in Two Lines
- 1. Pre-build — 80% of a Launch Ends Before Launch Day
- 2. The Channel Landscape — Where to Spend What
- 3. Product Hunt — The 24-Hour Game and the 2026 Reality
- 4. Hacker News — The Craft of Show HN
- 5. X / Twitter — The Algorithm-Dependent Era
- 6. LinkedIn — The Underrated B2B Home
- 7. Bluesky — The New Village for Dev Twitter Exiles
- 8. Threads and Mastodon — Supporting Channels
- 9. Indie Hackers and Disquiet — Maker Communities
- 10. Reddit — The Self-Promo Maze
- 11. Lobsters and dev.to / Hashnode — Small but Deep
- 12. Newsletter Circuit — One Feature, Days of Traffic
- 13. YouTube, TikTok, Shorts — Demo Video as a Permanent Asset
- 14. Launch Day — A Time-Slot Playbook
- 15. After the Launch — The Real Work Begins Here
- 16. The Honest Reality — Most Launches Do Not Work
- 17. Twelve Launch Anti-Patterns
- 18. Per-Category Channel Picks — A One-Page Matrix
- 19. Self-Diagnosis Checklist — 8 Weeks, 2 Weeks, Day Of
- Epilogue — Launch Is Not an Event; It Is a Lifelong Habit
- References
"You believe a new product ships every week. The internet does not know about the one you shipped yesterday."
That sentence explains half of side project launches. The other half is — how do you make it known anyway?
This post walks through the 2026 channel landscape honestly, channel by channel. Is Product Hunt really dead? Does Show HN still work? Should you really migrate to Bluesky? Does the newsletter circuit drive traffic? And at the end — why most launches fail and what the working few have in common.
Prologue — The 2026 Launch Landscape in Two Lines
The picture first. Between 2024 and 2026, three things shifted.
- Product Hunt's weight dropped. A 2020–2022 PH No. 1 changed lives. A 2025–2026 PH No. 1 is a single-day traffic spike. SEO and trust badge value remain, but a "PH No. 1 only" strategy no longer works.
- Twitter/X split in two. Part of the Build in Public crowd has scattered to Bluesky, Threads, and Mastodon. The largest audience is still on X, but dev twitter's signal-to-noise has fallen.
- AI coding tools exploded supply. Cursor, Claude Code, v0, and Lovable let anyone ship fast. The result — dozens of "AI note-taking apps" land on PH daily, and people scroll past.
One sentence to remember. "A launch channel does not create traffic. A channel amplifies attention you already created."
Every chapter in this post is a variation on that single line.
1. Pre-build — 80% of a Launch Ends Before Launch Day
People who think about what to do on launch day get worse outcomes than people who audit what they did eight weeks before launch day.
1.1 What "Build in Public" Actually Means
Build in Public is not screenshot bragging. A working Build in Public thread contains four things.
- A stuck problem — "how should I solve this?"
- A choice and trade-off — "I picked B over A because …"
- A number — DAU, traffic, cost, response time — any one number
- A next step — one thing you will do this week
Repeat those four items two or three times a week, and by launch day your followers are accomplices rather than spectators.
1.2 Three Channels for Building an Audience Early
- X / Threads / Bluesky — short progress updates. Screenshots, GIFs, short videos work well.
- Indie Hackers / Disquiet — long retros. Write down the decision-making.
- Your own newsletter (Substack, Beehiiv, ConvertKit) — the strongest asset. The only channel not at the mercy of an algorithm.
Start the newsletter early. "I started a month before launch" cannot catch up with "I started six months before launch."
1.3 Waitlist — Yes or No?
A waitlist has two benefits. (1) Email collection. (2) A "many people are waiting" signal on launch day. It also has two traps. (1) If you fake scarcity, trust erodes. (2) Email deliverability tanks when you actually open the gates.
Recommendation — open a public beta. Use a waitlist only when you have real paid plans or genuinely limited slots.
1.4 Asset Checklist — Two Weeks Before Launch
- 30-second demo video (with captions, plus a 9:16 mobile cut)
- Six static images (social card, in-app screenshots, comparison graphic, pricing image, stats graphic, mirror maker)
- One-line landing copy (who, what, why from you)
- Pricing page (if a free tier exists, what are its limits)
- A "why I built this" blog post (ship it on the same day)
- One-minute interview answer — 30s, 1m, and 3m versions of "what is this?"
Launching without these forces you to make them ad hoc, channel by channel, and the first day disappears.
2. The Channel Landscape — Where to Spend What
| Channel | Audience | Effort (1–5) | Traffic | Direct Revenue Potential | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Product Hunt | Early adopters, B2C, tools | 4 | Medium | Medium | Hunter politics, 24-hour game |
| Hacker News (Show HN) | Developers, infra, OSS | 3 | Huge (front page) / 0 (if not) | Medium | Take the comment heat |
| X / Twitter | Devs, designers, indies | 5 | Algorithm-dependent | Low | Largest audience, weaker signal |
| B2B, SaaS, enterprise | 3 | Medium | Very high | Underrated | |
| Bluesky | Dev twitter exiles, the curious | 2 | Small to medium | Low | Good signal, smaller audience |
| Threads | Instagram users, designers | 3 | Algorithm-dependent | Low | Strong visual assets |
| Mastodon | OSS, privacy crowd | 2 | Small | Low | High loyalty, no algorithm |
| Indie Hackers | Indie makers, MRR tracking | 3 | Small | Medium | Deep discussions |
| Disquiet (Korea) | Korean makers and designers | 2 | Small to medium | Medium | Standard entry to the Korean market |
| T-Hub / Toss Makers | Korean Toss core users | 3 | Medium | Medium | Korean B2C |
| r/SideProject | Self-promo welcome | 2 | Medium | Low | Friendly comments |
| r/Entrepreneur | Business-oriented | 3 | Medium | Medium | Strict self-promo rules |
| r/webdev / r/programming | Developer audience | 4 | Algorithm-dependent | Low | Self-promo penalized hard |
| Lobsters | High signal, deep tech | 3 | Small | Low | Invite-only, weighty |
| TLDR / Newsletter Circuit | Devs, AI, design | 3 | Medium to large | Medium | One feature lasts days |
| YouTube Demo | All categories | 5 | Large (when it hits) | Medium | Video is permanent |
| TikTok / Shorts | C2C, visual tools | 4 | Large (when it hits) | Low | Algorithm-first |
The table is relative, not absolute. Focus on the top three to five that match your product, audience, and time budget. Trying every channel is the most common mistake.
3. Product Hunt — The 24-Hour Game and the 2026 Reality
3.1 An Honest PH State of the Union
A 2020–2022 PH No. 1 brought tens of thousands of pageviews and thousands of signups. A 2025–2026 PH No. 1 brings less. Three reasons.
- PH traffic dropped slightly (not officially announced; external estimates).
- AI tool launches saturated daily slots, diluting the "No. 1" title.
- Real paying buyers come less often from PH than from focused channels.
That said, why PH is still worth doing — (1) an SEO backlink, (2) a trust badge ("No. 1 on PH"), (3) email collection, (4) newsletter citations. PH is no longer life-changing, but it is still a fine starting point.
3.2 Launch Mechanics — The 24-Hour Game
- Timing: A PH day runs from 00:01 to 23:59 Pacific Time. Sundays have less noise; absolute traffic is lower, but competition is also lower. Tuesday and Wednesday are the most competitive.
- Hunter: Either hunt yourself or ask a known hunter. In 2026, a hunter's influence is smaller than it used to be. Algorithm changes shrank automatic exposure to a hunter's followers. Self-hunting is fine.
- The first hour: The most important. Pre-notified followers, newsletter readers, and friends upvoting in the first hour signals "rising" to the algorithm.
- Comments: Drop your first comment yourself — "why I built this, what is different, what feedback I want." Reply to every comment within 24 hours.
3.3 PH Anti-Patterns — Immediate Demotion
- Buying upvotes: PH watches IP, device, and behavior patterns. Caught = permanent suppression.
- Pressuring hunters: Cold-DMing strangers with "please hunt me" backfires.
- Bot traffic: Inflating pageviews from outside PH still gets flagged.
- Mass mobilization: Many fresh accounts from the same IP / location upvoting in quick succession gets caught.
3.4 PH Wins from 2024–2026
- Granola (AI meeting notes): A run of Build in Public plus a strong demo took it to PH No. 1. Rode the AI category at the right moment.
- v0 by Vercel: Company resources plus an influencer network. Hard to imitate as a solo indie maker.
- Cap.so (open-source screen recorder): OSS plus PH. Grew GitHub stars and PH upvotes together.
Common thread — they all already had an audience. PH did not create the audience; the audience created the No. 1.
Product Hunt — https://www.producthunt.com/
4. Hacker News — The Craft of Show HN
4.1 Why HN, Why It Still Matters
A front-page HN run produces more traffic than PH. And HN is the single shared feed that developers, founders, and VCs all read daily. Six hours on the front page produces 10k–50k visits depending on title and time slot.
Two unforgiving things about HN. (1) If you do not hit the front page, you get zero. (2) Even if you do, the comments are brutal.
4.2 Show HN Titles — Patterns That Actually Work
| Doesn't work | Works |
|---|---|
| Show HN: Our cool new note app | Show HN: A note search tool that scans 1M markdown notes in 100ms |
| Show HN: The fastest React data grid | Show HN: A virtualized React grid for large datasets at 60 fps |
| Show HN: We do AI code review | Show HN: Semantic code review via tree-sitter AST diffs |
Rule — be clear about what it does and what constraint you released. Verbs instead of adjectives. Measurable numbers instead of "cool" and "fast."
4.3 Timing — Tuesday to Thursday US Morning
7–9 AM Pacific (midnight to 2 AM in Korea). Both the US East Coast and Europe are at the start of their workday, and the first 30 minutes of upvote velocity drive the algorithm.
4.4 The First Comment — Half of a Show HN
Your own first comment is half of the post. Include four things.
- Why you built it — your own itch
- How it differs from existing tools — comparisons
- What is still weak — honest limitations
- What feedback helps most — a specific question
A soft first comment sets a soft tone. A defensive first comment invites a pile-on.
4.5 Comment Responses — Sleepless for 24 Hours
HN comments are fast and direct. The worst response to hostility is (1) ignoring it, or (2) making excuses. The good response — acknowledge plus next step. "You are right, that part is weak. We plan to try X this quarter."
4.6 HN Wins from 2024–2026
- Plausible Analytics: privacy and OSS analytics. A keyword combo that fits HN.
- Maccy / Raycast-likes: developer daily-driver tools.
- Codeberg / Forgejo: GitHub alternatives supported by the OSS crowd.
Categories that work on HN — developer tools, infra, OSS, security, data, privacy, compilers and languages. AI job search, AI notes, and AI chatbots are weak on HN — too many post every day.
HN — https://news.ycombinator.com/
Show HN guidelines — https://news.ycombinator.com/showhn.html
5. X / Twitter — The Algorithm-Dependent Era
5.1 What Changed on X in 2026
- The timeline became algorithm-first. The share of your posts that reaches your own followers dropped significantly.
- Premium verification affects reach. Verified replies get pushed up. Whether that is good or bad is a separate debate; it is a fact.
- Dev twitter's signal-to-noise fell. AI slop, crypto spam, and politics have crowded the timeline.
Even so, X still has the largest maker audience.
5.2 The "Launching Today" Thread — A Structure That Works
A launch thread is usually 5–10 tweets. One working structure.
- Hook — one strong claim and a demo GIF. "Today I am launching X. It does Y in Z seconds."
- Problem — who is stuck on what.
- Solution — how it solves it. One screenshot.
- Difference — how it differs from existing tools. One comparison image.
- Build in Public retro — N weeks, N commits, N failures.
- Pricing — free tier and paid tiers.
- Link and ask — Product Hunt link, retweet request.
- Thanks — tag people who helped.
5.3 Who to Tag
- Build in Public influencers: Indiscriminate tagging of mega accounts (1M+ followers) gets ignored. Active makers in the 20k–100k range help most.
- Category influencers: Mid-sized influencers in your product space. AI twitter for an AI tool; design twitter for a design tool.
- Beta users: Comments from real early users carry far more weight than your own.
The golden rule — the tagged person should not feel embarrassed seeing the post. Excessive self-promotion makes a tag counterproductive.
5.4 X Launch Anti-Patterns
- "Follow and retweet for a giveaway" works less than expected (especially in developer audiences).
- The same thread reposted with small tweaks on D-7, D-3, D-1, and D-0 — the algorithm catches it.
- Slipping your link into someone else's big launch thread — the most disliked move.
6. LinkedIn — The Underrated B2B Home
6.1 Why LinkedIn
Enterprise, B2B, and developer tools (especially when the buyer is an executive) work far better on LinkedIn than on X. And the algorithm is gentler — a well-written post stays alive for days.
6.2 The LinkedIn Launch Post — A 1000-Word Narrative
LinkedIn is not a stack of short tweets. A 1000-word personal essay performs. One working structure.
- Personal trigger — "Two years ago I …"
- Problem definition — "I spent N months trying to …"
- What I built — one paragraph
- Numbers / validation — what the beta showed
- Next step — what feedback or partnerships you want
- One strong visual — one image or a short video
6.3 LinkedIn Anti-Patterns
- Corporate-ad tone — write in first person.
- External link at the top — the algorithm boosts posts with the link in a comment.
- Ten hashtags — three to five is optimal.
7. Bluesky — The New Village for Dev Twitter Exiles
7.1 Bluesky in 2026
Bluesky crossed 10 million users in September 2024, and between 2025 and 2026 grew to roughly 25–35 million. The total is smaller than X, but the share of devs, OSS people, and researchers is higher than on X. It has become "a smaller plaza with stronger signal."
7.2 Launching on Bluesky
- Signals that you understand AT Protocol earn extra points. Using your own domain as a handle (for example,
name.dev), maintaining a custom feed, or using tools like Skyfeed all help. - Threads should be shorter than on X. A single post on Bluesky carries more weight than a single post on X.
- Use Starter Packs. Get yourself onto a maker / designer / infra Starter Pack, and curate your own.
Bluesky — https://bsky.app/
7.3 Bluesky Anti-Patterns
- Auto-cross-posting your X threads — the community dislikes it.
- Too many ad-like posts — visible in a small plaza.
8. Threads and Mastodon — Supporting Channels
8.1 Threads
Instagram-adjacent. Visual assets carry well. Good for designers, no-code tools, and C2C / B2C. Developer audience is small.
8.2 Mastodon
The OSS, privacy, and systems crowd. Small audience, very high loyalty, and active non-English instances (German, Japanese, French, and more). For OSS, systems, and security categories, do not ignore Mastodon.
Mastodon — https://joinmastodon.org/
9. Indie Hackers and Disquiet — Maker Communities
9.1 Indie Hackers
Indie Hackers is the standard plaza for indie makers. After Stripe scaled back operations in 2024, some say activity declined, but deep discussion among makers who publish their MRR is still the thickest you will find.
What to include in a launch post — time spent (N weekends), MRR target, tech stack, mistakes, next step. Write it as a retro, not as a brag.
Indie Hackers — https://www.indiehackers.com/
9.2 Disquiet (Korea)
Disquiet is a Korean maker community. Rather than a Korean PH clone, it is a blend of maker discussion and product listing. It is the standard entry point into the Korean market and includes demo days, maker interviews, and a newsletter.
Disquiet — https://disquiet.io/
9.3 T-Hub (Toss Makers) — A Korean B2C Bypass
T-Hub is Toss's maker support program. It offers access to Toss's Korean B2C user base, which is significant. There is a selection process and timelines, so makers targeting Korean B2C should build a relationship early.
T-Hub — https://thub.so/
10. Reddit — The Self-Promo Maze
Reddit's culture varies sharply per subreddit; the same post can succeed in one and get suppressed in another. A short list of subs that work.
- r/SideProject — self-promo allowed. Kind comments. A good first step.
- r/Entrepreneur — business-oriented. Strict self-promo rules (use the weekly self-promotion thread).
- r/InternetIsBeautiful — only visually striking sites. When it hits, it is big.
- r/webdev — self-promo gets suppressed easily. A "technical retro" tone may pass.
- r/programming — direct product promotion rarely works. Detour through a technical post.
- r/ChatGPTCoding / r/LocalLLaMA — workable for AI tools. A demo and GitHub link are required.
Rule — build karma first. A fresh account posting self-promo almost always gets suppressed.
11. Lobsters and dev.to / Hashnode — Small but Deep
11.1 Lobsters
Lobsters is an invite-only tech forum. Traffic is about 1/10 of HN, but comment quality is very high. For systems, languages, compilers, and OS categories, it works hard.
Lobsters — https://lobste.rs/
11.2 dev.to and Hashnode
Platforms where you host your post or mirror it with a canonical link. Not a direct launch channel, but mirroring your launch post boosts SEO and discoverability.
12. Newsletter Circuit — One Feature, Days of Traffic
12.1 Newsletters That Work
- TLDR (tldr.tech) — roughly 2M readers daily. General developer.
- TLDR AI / TLDR DevOps — category-specific.
- Pragmatic Engineer (Gergely Orosz) — senior engineers and managers.
- Bytes (bytes.dev) — frontend weekly.
- JavaScript Weekly / React Status / Node Weekly (Cooper Press) — category cuts.
- Console (console.dev) — picks one developer tool per week.
- Hacker Newsletter — best of HN, weekly.
- Last Week in AI / Latent Space — the AI scene.
- Lenny's Newsletter — PM crowd.
- Refind — curation algorithm.
12.2 How to Get Featured
Emailing editors directly is the fastest path. A working pitch.
- One-line summary — who, what, why
- Demo link — something that works in one click
- Numbers / validation — beta users, GitHub stars, MRR
- One visual — an inline image is welcome
- An ask to the editor — "I think this might fit your X section"
Keep the pitch short. Five sentences or fewer.
12.3 Korean Newsletters
- yozm IT — general IT.
- GeekNews — a Korean HN. Just submitting can lead to curation.
- Disquiet Newsletter — for makers.
- Toss Makers Newsletter — Korean maker interviews.
13. YouTube, TikTok, Shorts — Demo Video as a Permanent Asset
13.1 Why Video
Make a video once and it gets searched forever. PH and HN traffic decays to zero in 24 hours; a good demo video brings signups a year later.
13.2 A 30-Second Demo — A Working Structure
- 0–3s hook — a strong promise like "I built this in five minutes."
- 3–15s demo — real interaction, keystrokes visible.
- 15–22s result — one frame of the output.
- 22–30s CTA — a link and a one-line free-tier mention.
A 3-minute version — keeps the first 30 seconds, then expands. The 3-minute version is for search; the 30-second is for social.
13.3 YouTube Channel Collaborations
ThePrimeagen, Theo, Fireship, and similar channels deliver huge lift. But — avoid paid collaborations. They cover something only when they genuinely like it. If your product is genuinely good, send it directly (a short demo video plus a one-paragraph note).
13.4 TikTok / Shorts
Strong for C2C, visually rich tools, and lifestyle tools. Even in developer tools, some makers grow audiences with Shorts (Theo and Fireship simultaneously publish on YouTube Shorts). Keep a 9:16 vertical demo as a separate cut.
14. Launch Day — A Time-Slot Playbook
14.1 D-1 Evening (Korean Sunday Evening or a Weekday Evening)
- Finalize the PH page draft. Set up hunter, makers, and tags.
- Final pass on all assets (video, images, landing, blog post).
- Schedule the newsletter send (launch time plus one hour).
- Tell family, friends, and colleagues "I am launching tomorrow."
14.2 D-Day 00:01 PT (Around 4–5 PM in Korea)
- Publish the PH page (or have the hunter publish).
- Drop your first comment immediately.
- Publish the X launch thread.
- Publish the LinkedIn post.
- Publish the Bluesky post.
- Send your newsletter.
14.3 First Four Hours
- Switch to response mode. Reply to every comment on PH, X, HN, and LinkedIn.
- Send individual messages — not a group blast — to friends and beta users letting them know "we launched."
- Post on Indie Hackers and Disquiet (about one hour after launch).
14.4 First 24 Hours
- Post Show HN (7–9 AM Pacific).
- Pitch 5–10 newsletter editors with a short email.
- Post on Reddit r/SideProject.
- Share a one-liner in relevant Discord and Slack channels (respect self-promo rules).
14.5 Sleep
If you do not sleep on launch day, the follow-through on day two collapses. If you have a friend or a co-founder, split time zones. No single person can stay up for 24 hours.
15. After the Launch — The Real Work Begins Here
15.1 D+1 to D+7
- Send a welcome email and offer 1:1 user interviews to the top 20 signups.
- Look at first-week behavior — where users drop off, where they come back.
- Write a first-payment retro (if you got one) — an X thread or a LinkedIn post.
15.2 D+7 to D+30
- Launch on a second channel — if you only did PH, try HN, and vice versa.
- Reach out to genuine category influencers — only those who would actually like it.
- Publish a first-month MRR retro on Indie Hackers and Disquiet.
15.3 D+30 to D+90
- A first-quarter retro — what worked, what did not.
- SEO content — three to five posts on your product's keywords.
- A small V2 launch — "Show HN v2" or "second PH launch" works. Up to once a year.
15.4 The Core — Launch Is the Beginning, Not the End
Most makers treat launch day as the peak. Working makers see it differently — launch is the day you got your first audience without a single ad dollar, and the next year is the real work.
16. The Honest Reality — Most Launches Do Not Work
This section matters most.
16.1 The Brutal Statistics
- About 70% of products on PH get fewer than 50 upvotes a day. Nowhere near the No. 1 race.
- About 90% of Show HN posts do not reach the front page. The first hour's first five upvotes decide it.
- The median X launch thread gets about 200 impressions and fewer than 10 likes.
You need to know this going in. Your launch is overwhelmingly likely to be average.
16.2 What the Working Few Share
- They already had an audience. Twitter 5k–50k, newsletter 1k–5k. Launch did not create the audience; it announced to one.
- The demo was good. A 30-second video creates a "wow." When the video is weak, nothing else lands.
- They solved a real itch. A problem they personally bumped into every week for a year. They started from their work, not from an AI trend.
- Timing got lucky. No bigger launch the same day. A category event happened the same week. Luck is uncontrollable.
16.3 How to Not Die From a Failed Launch
- Try again next quarter. A V2 launch of the same product is fair game, once a year.
- Reframe the category. The same product can be seen anew in a different context.
- Detour through content. Often the launch flops but the retro post does well.
17. Twelve Launch Anti-Patterns
- Trying to solve everything on launch day with no 8-week pre-build.
- Launching with text and no demo video.
- Carpet-bombing every channel at once and doing none of them properly.
- Obsessing over PH No. 1 and skipping every other channel.
- Going defensive against hostile HN comments.
- Self-promotion only on X, with no Build in Public retro.
- Sending newsletter editors a pitch that requires scrolling.
- Cold-tagging influencers when your own audience is zero.
- Group-blasting beta users with the same copy instead of 1:1 notes.
- A pricing page that is vague (free limits, starting price, payment).
- A landing page with no one-line copy and 10 lines of features.
- Silence in the first week after launch (no follow-up post, no update).
Do one of these and your result weakens. Do three or more and the launch nearly always dies.
18. Per-Category Channel Picks — A One-Page Matrix
| Category | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Developer tools (CLI / IDE) | HN | PH | X | Lobsters as backup |
| Infra / DevOps | HN | TLDR DevOps | Reddit r/devops | |
| AI tools (chat, productivity) | PH | X | TLDR AI | YouTube strong |
| No-code / low-code | PH | Threads | TikTok works | |
| Design tools | PH | X | Threads | Behance backup |
| SaaS (B2C) | PH | X | Bluesky | YouTube / Shorts |
| SaaS (B2B enterprise) | PH | Bytes / category newsletter | Pair with cold email | |
| OSS / systems | HN | Lobsters | Mastodon | Mirror to dev.to |
| Korea B2C | Disquiet | Instagram / Threads | T-Hub | GeekNews backup |
| Korea B2B / developer | Disquiet | yozm IT | Some use of Korean X | |
| Games / entertainment | r/SideProject | TikTok | YouTube | Discord communities |
| Data / analytics | HN | PH | TLDR Data | |
| Security | HN | Mastodon (infosec) | BSides ties | r/netsec |
The table is a starting point, not a doctrine. Where your audience actually lives is what decides.
19. Self-Diagnosis Checklist — 8 Weeks, 2 Weeks, Day Of
8 Weeks Out
- Can you write the problem you are solving in one sentence?
- Have you picked one channel to build an audience (X, newsletter, Discord)?
- Have you set aside time to publish Build in Public posts two to three times a week?
- Do you have a plan to bring in 10 beta users?
- Have you started your own newsletter?
2 Weeks Out
- Do you have a 30-second demo video?
- Does your landing page have a one-line headline?
- Is your pricing page clear?
- Do you have a "why I built this" blog post?
- Are your PH and HN posts ready as drafts?
- Have you written down your hour-by-hour launch-day playbook?
- Do you have friends or fellow makers ready to help respond?
Day Of
- Are posts live on every channel?
- Did you set an alarm so you can respond in the first hour?
- Did the newsletter go out?
- Did you send individual messages to friends and beta users?
- Are you prepared mentally for the idea that tomorrow is another day, whatever today brings?
Epilogue — Launch Is Not an Event; It Is a Lifelong Habit
The main body is done. One last thing.
What's Next
The next post covers "90 Days After Launch — From the First 100 Users to the First $1k MRR." The first interview question list, pricing experiments that flip free to paid, first churn analysis, the start of SEO content, and how to manage the temptation to build a second product. Launch is an event; the company is a quarter.
One Last Line
Go back to the opening line. "A channel does not create traffic. A channel amplifies attention you already created." Block out eight weeks before your next launch. Those eight weeks decide half of launch day.
References
- Product Hunt: https://www.producthunt.com/
- Product Hunt Launch Guide: https://www.producthunt.com/launch
- Hacker News: https://news.ycombinator.com/
- Show HN Guidelines: https://news.ycombinator.com/showhn.html
- Lobsters: https://lobste.rs/
- Indie Hackers: https://www.indiehackers.com/
- Disquiet: https://disquiet.io/
- T-Hub (Toss): https://thub.so/
- yozm IT: https://yozm.wishket.com/
- GeekNews: https://news.hada.io/
- Bluesky: https://bsky.app/
- Mastodon: https://joinmastodon.org/
- Threads: https://www.threads.net/
- X / Twitter: https://x.com/
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/
- Reddit r/SideProject: https://www.reddit.com/r/SideProject/
- Reddit r/Entrepreneur: https://www.reddit.com/r/Entrepreneur/
- Reddit r/webdev: https://www.reddit.com/r/webdev/
- Reddit r/InternetIsBeautiful: https://www.reddit.com/r/InternetIsBeautiful/
- TLDR Newsletter: https://tldr.tech/
- TLDR AI: https://tldr.tech/ai
- Pragmatic Engineer: https://newsletter.pragmaticengineer.com/
- Bytes: https://bytes.dev/
- JavaScript Weekly / Node Weekly / React Status (Cooper Press): https://cooperpress.com/
- Console: https://console.dev/
- Hacker Newsletter: https://www.hackernewsletter.com/
- Latent Space: https://www.latent.space/
- Last Week in AI: https://lastweekin.ai/
- Lenny's Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/
- Refind: https://refind.com/
- dev.to: https://dev.to/
- Hashnode: https://hashnode.com/
- ThePrimeagen (YouTube): https://www.youtube.com/@ThePrimeagen
- Theo - t3.gg (YouTube): https://www.youtube.com/@t3dotgg
- Fireship (YouTube): https://www.youtube.com/@Fireship
- Vercel v0: https://v0.dev/
- Lovable: https://lovable.dev/
- Cursor: https://cursor.com/
- Granola: https://www.granola.ai/
- Cap.so: https://cap.so/
- Plausible Analytics: https://plausible.io/
- Build in Public guide (Indie Hackers): https://www.indiehackers.com/post/
That is all. Start the next launch eight weeks early.
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That sentence explains half of side project launches. The other half is — how do you make it known a...