In April, “stealth” social media startup Kohort announced its upcoming launch. Within a few days, the site received thousands of user signups, according to its founder Mark Davis. In the startup world, this itself perhaps isn’t uncommon, but what made Kohort’s story unique is the fact that those thousands of users had no idea what Kohort was when they signed up. To this day, the purpose of the site is still secret.
It may not matter to you what Kohort is or isn’t, nor whether stealth is good or bad. But the fact that it managed to get thousands of people to take blind action (before the site even launched) with so much competition for early adopters is quite powerful.
Kohort is not alone, or even lucky, in its ability to break through the startup-launching, consumer-pitching chaos. There’s a science to generating pre-launch buzz and an art to gaining new users. Here are four tricks startups have used to make it happen.
1. Create a Shareable “Launching Soon” Page
LaunchRock gives startups a turnkey solution for a custom coming soon page that allows users to sign up for updates and share the fact that they did so.
2. Create Viral Content
Disclosure: The author is an adviser to Visual.ly
3. Make A (Smart) Game Of It
The most remarkable part? Subjot’s launch page didn’t even say what it was. “It got 10% conversion,” Carrella says. “That’s amazing considering there’s nothing on the page.”
It’s a core idea for Jameson Detweiler, co-founder of LaunchRock: “It’s all based on the concept of incentivized sharing. After someone signs up for your site, you ask them to share it with their friends through various social media channels and/or email. In exchange for doing so, you reward the user with something if they get enough of their friends to sign up.”
4. Tease Users With Exclusivity Or Mystery
Kohort also used exclusivity and scarcity to drum up user signups. Its launch page tells visitors to “stake your claim” and reserve your username before someone else does. Judging by the chatter on Twitter, many people are reserving usernames because they don’t want to risk losing their chosen handle in case this “mysterious” service turns out to be something cool.
“Adoption has far exceeded our expectations,” Davis says. “There seems to be a good bit of curiosity about what we’re up to that is driving interest.”
Buzz Is Great, But Substance Matters Most
In the end, if a startup’s product sucks, it doesn’t matter if it has four users or 4 million when it launches. But if a company has something cool or useful to show the world, an extra thousand users or so to share your message can be pretty nice to have around on launch day.
It’s an even simpler — if not more ambitious — equation for LaunchRock’s Detweiler: “Have an addicting and useful product that brilliantly solves a real problem for a specific market.” Build it, and they will come.
From:http://mashable.com/2011/05/04/startup-launch-buzz/#CgPMgJWxePqM
HOW TO: Sign Up Users Even Before You Launch Your Startup
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