Marketing tactics for your SaaS: how to get the word out ?


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Jan 15 2019 33 mins   2
We received some product marketing questions from Nirav Mehta: How to get the word out about your SaaS? Should you pursue partnerships? How can you get distribution for your software product? What marketing channels work best? Build anticipation before you launch One big opportunity many folks miss is building up anticipation before they launch. Examples: Adam Wathan and Steve Schoger shared design tips on Twitter and on their blog for 6 months before they released their book, Refactoring UI. Derick Reimer allowed people to “Claim their username” for Level.App before he launched. So far 5,787 people have registered. Ben Orenstein talked about Tuple.app, his new product, on podcasts for months before they launched. Build a reputation for being helpful Adam, Steve, Derrick, and Ben also have something else in common: they were consistently helpful to their respective audiences for years before they launched anything. Being helpful now, in forums, on Twitter, in podcasts, on your blog, in your mailing list, at conferences, at meetups, in email, is an investment in your future. It’s an advantage that can’t be easily copied or replicated. Bake SEO into everything you do The most underrated, and often under-pursued, grow strategy is investing in Search Engine Optimization. “SEO is the biggest growth lever that you have and it's something that you should prioritize." - Ryan Hoover, Product Hunt” Think about it, when people have a desire to solve a problem, what do they do? They Google it! If your product is the answer to people’s question, you want to make sure they can find it on Google. Quick SEO tips: Explore what questions are asking on: Answerthepublic.com. Use a tools like Ahrefs.com on your competitors’ sites! See what keywords people are using to find their site, and what their most popular pages are. Make sure you have Google Search Console set up for your website. They have a new “Performance Report” that will show you what keywords people are using to find your site, and where you could rank better. Focus on what matters on each page: Main title - should feature the focus keywords, preferably at the beginning of the title. Subheader or first paragraph – expanded description, should also feature the focus keywords. Alt text in images – alt text was designed to show text when an image is not loading properly, or if someone has to use a screen reader. This text is read by Google as any other content. Meta description – a short, concise (usually 300 characters or less) description of a webpage, shown in search results. Keep a document on “blog post title ideas.” For example, I can see, through all my research, that “podcast distribution” is a good keyword combination to pursue. So I could write a blog post with the title: “Podcast distribution made easy - 5 steps.” Write these authoritative guide on a topic. Ben Orenstein noticed that there weren’t any good pair programming guides, so he wrote one! http://learntopair.com. These guides typically get shared a lot, which means you’ll get high quality backlinks to your site (which is important for SEO). People will also search for “[competitor name] alternatives.” Those are great keywords to target. The big list of marketing channels: Ads: Facebook Ads, Adwords, LinkedIn ads, etc. Partnerships: finding influencers that have a similar audience to you, and cross-promoting SEO: getting backlinks to your landing page from other sites, and ranking for certain keywords Content marketing: blogging, infographics, viral videos Platform marketing: engaging in Facebook Groups, on forums, in comments threads Direct mail: sending your prospects stickers, postcards, or letters by post Events: attending tradeshows, conferences, and meetups and handing out business cards (or other swag) with your website address Things to remember: Marketing doesn't work like a jackpot. You're not going to hit that "one thing" that works and creates an avalanche [...]