314 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2024
    1. We just sent an email and said due to the price increases of our CMS we are having to increase our monthly hosting fees from $--.-- to $--.-- Should you have any questions or concerns please don't hesitate to reach out to us. No one has said anything YET.
    2. I am planning on giving them a 30 day notice for each renewal and with the transparency of “platform increase” and if they can no longer afford it, I’ll tell them to pay for their own hosting with Duda so they don’t lose their site.

      Natalia see this price increase also as an opportunity to get rid of bad clients, that would have probably leave her sooner or later anyway.

    3. I am struggling a bit figure out how I am going to justify this price increase to them. Spefically I am struggling with the people who have simple brochuer sites

      IDEA: 2. Letter of information to Duda’s client for price increase. We can list a few options if they don't want to continue using Duda: like switching to Brizy. We can hack it by letting them use their affiliate link (so they'll still win).

    1. Marco Celli their support group and support system has been much better than Duda’s as well. I’ve never seen it where the owner or CEO still answers the Facebook support group, even when their company is worth over $100mm. Also escalating tickets and such has been a breeze.

      again, the founder's implication in small things it's well perceived

    2. Ben MungerMakena Delaney plus I’ve also got to know the owners and they are very supportive especially with all of our transfers. for Brizy so far!

      you're going to see a few times mentioning "the owners" or "founders". this is really important for them

    3. Dewayne Anthony Black yes! But is honestly really cheap. I think like 50 bucks for up to 20 pages. But don’t quote me exactly. But it’s more than reasonable

      this is a really good way to address their concerns

    4. Ben Munger ooooooh okay so excited that you’re loving it. I might have to pick your brain on a couple of things. I’ll ask the support team first but I might need help

      IDEA IDEA IDEA: Slack Group dedicated to ex-Duda, they can help and support each other

    5. Makena Delaney Brizy is awesome! I’ve moved over a bunch of sites for my agency and white label agency partners. Highly recommended. No white label fees like Duda. Huge savings. We also have been testing the site’s on page structure and optimization/ page speed because we have dozens of SEO accounts and they all perform just as good as Duda, which was a major concern for us.

      This comments are GOLD, we need to save them somehow in a dedicated page and feature them on the landing page. It's public info.

    6. Bruce Smith what’s your email? I can connect you to one of the founders! I’m hoping to spend some time this afternoon playing in the editor

      I like that after her main comment she took it private, not promoting Brizy too much.

    7. I had a meeting with one of the founders of Brizy today and he’s just worked out a deal for us for making a transition because of the price increase! Message me if you want to know more.I don’t know much about the platform yet- just exploring today. But I was really impressed overall!

      Makena is on fire, she is a Top contributor on the group, so no small thing.

    8. every couple of years there needs to be a " Push and shove and niggle" its what keeps us sharp and competitive. It can give us a reminder not to be complacent, I am driven so much on managing clients like I might lose them, but its also a two way street, I also need to feel the love from my clients. In this case? It was a good "blew" as we say in Australia but some of it? Was a little over the top and nasty. But we are all grown ups, some will stay some will go but in the end I pray we all succeed. Onward and upward hugs to all.

      good keywords for specific countries: "blew" & "over the top and nasty".

      I believe this needs to be saved as a good copy for our next price increase.

    9. Duda used to be loyal to the agencies. Now they only care about their enterprise accounts. Their culture and family values and their love for the smaller agencies has vanished since their last round of funding! It has become EXTREMELY apparent as of the last couple of years and I feel that MOST will agree with me.

      so many keywords and phrases here: "used to be loyal to the agencies", "their love for smaller agencies has vanished"

    10. What value are you giving me the agency I do not have now? I can tell you it's for Profitability and not Userability.

      THIS one is GOLD: "what value are you giving me the agency I do not have now??"

      the other one is strong as well: Profitability and not Userability

    11. Justin R Sturges Idk, I’ve been looking hard at standing up a new WP environment for more reasons than just price.

      copy inspiration: "have you looking hard at standing up a new WP environment but don't have time/not ready to give up on the cloud/etc.?"

    12. Nick Kurnik I wonder if they gave their employees a 30% increase as well. You know they think it’s okay to increase the prices 30%. Do their employees get an increase crease as well? I would bet not!

      nice ad copy: "did Duda employees get a 30% increase as well?"

  2. May 2023
    1. Most NDAs are several pages of dense text and sending your unique form ends up requiring your potential business partner to review it all over again and slowing you both down. But we’ve standardized and streamlined the process. Our NDA is free and takes just minutes for both parties to review and sign all online in one simple tool.
  3. Mar 2023
    1. But, she was smart about it. She posted it in a super relevant group (Trends.co which is all about the business of businesses), and she came at it from an angle of sharing cool info with people who’d be interested.
    2. Posting in Facebook Groups was another method Codie used early on to get more eyeballs and subscribers to the newsletter. She would take one of her articles, or a business idea she was highlighting and post about it in those groups. This is similar to how Harry Dry of Marketing Examples did this. Provide a ton of value, and then let people know about the newsletter afterward. And oftentimes, she wouldn’t post a link at all and just waited for people to ask for it.
    3. Just like reaching out to her network, Codie has no fear of reaching out to people to get on their shows. I think this is based on a combination of having great content and interesting life and business experiences to draw upon, and an extra layer of confidence.
    4. Tapping Into Her Network Codie is not afraid to ask people in her life to join the newsletter. She emailed a lot of old contacts she found in Gmail and messaged friends she hadn’t been in touch with in a while.
    5. 1. Growth Experiments….on speed. I’ve talked about others using experiments and trying to grow their audience in different ways. But Codie set out to get 10,000 subscribers in 30 days…and hit the goal. She wasn’t messing around. ? 2. Other People’s Audiences. Whether it’s podcasts, social groups, or interviews, Codie is great at getting in front of other audiences to grow her brand. ? 3. Twitter, but not in the way you might think. Codie didn’t pass 10k Twitter followers until after she hit 100k subscribers. She used it in a really interesting way that I’ll dive into.
    6. 9-Day Challenge – low-ticket offer to help you learn the basics of buying businesses. – $49 Buying a Small Biz course – 1-year access to their mid-tier course around buying small businesses. – $1,497 Private Mastermind Group – their premium group for people looking to purchase businesses using Codie and Ryan’s methods. – $8,800 per year
  4. Feb 2023
    1. 50% should be big product roadmap features delivering on product vision and constantly reshaped by understanding core users’ needs50% should be some combination of responding to customer needs and solving UX issues evident from customers interactions with the product.
    2. Write good content that educates and your audience wants to read and learn from.Do good keyword research and find the right keywords to write about.Make sure your on-page SEO is on point, meaning your website is fast, bounce rates are reasonable, and you keep improving the page. (Ahrefs, by the way, gives you a nice report of ways to improve your page.)Do organic outbound, meaning go out to related blogs and other websites with strong domain authority and build links (meaning get them to link to you and you link to them). This will give your website more power and Google will begin to see your website as an authority.Keep at it. It’s a long play, but pays off!
    1. This is the B2B2C model. A B2B2C is a particular business model where a company, rather than accessing the consumer market directly, does that via a partnership with another organization. Yet the final consumers will recognize the brand or the service provided by the B2B2C.
    2. To escape the "resume-builder" circus above - we turned to our focus to mirror the product messaging that brought our partners the most success. Mainly focusing on the unique feature of how Rezi uses (simple) AI to create a significant advantage by optimizing content with potential keywords found in the job description. The results are fantastic:
    1. We don’t use paid advertising We don’t use spy pixels and retargeting We don’t use session recordings We don’t do popups and other intrusive calls to action We don’t pay anyone to promote or recommend us We don’t use a chat bot to engage you or convert you We don’t participate in any link buying for SEO purposes
    2. We focus on a small number of things, but we try to do them as best as we can: Build a great product that people enjoy using and want to recommend. This is the key, as nothing else would work without a great product. We publish content on our blog and social media, communicating what we believe in and stand for. We take a stand and hope it resonates with as many people as possible.
    3. They announced that they will kill Universal Analytics and that there’s no way to import historical stats to their new GA4 version. We’ve experienced an immediate increase in interest in Plausible following this news. March was our best month yet, with $8,247 in net MRR growth.
    4. We had some interesting data that compared the level of blockage between Google Analytics and Plausible, so we decided to publish a little study with the details in “58% of Hacker News, Reddit and tech-savvy audiences block Google Analytics”.
    5. This opportunity came as part of our outreach to different influential websites. Most sites ended up ignoring our messages. It isn’t easy to send so many emails and hear nothing back, but this one fabulous mention from a very relevant site was worth all that silence.
    6. We had our first traffic spike by getting more than 2,500 visitors in one day. It was thanks to the “You probably don’t need a single-page application” blog post making it to the front page of Hacker News.
    7. Our marketing in the early days was focused on building in public. The latest updates and milestones were posted on our blog, Indie Hackers and Uku’s Twitter account. All the early users came from these updates.
  5. Jan 2023
    1. So I purchased a Crunchbase Pro subscription and performed a search for all recently funded companies in the space of marketing/sales automation, recruitment tech, or web scraping. Then, I exported the results in .csv format with their corresponding general emails and began a series of cold email outreach to their general emails.
    1. Well what works best is Google Search ads, its expensive but they deliver new users non-stop and I was able to drive down the cost per lead a lot. Besides that post on free platforms like Reddit, Twitter, Facebook into relevant groups and tell them about your tool or service.
    1. Social proof played a huge part in growth. It got the ball rolling. No one wants to buy a product that has no other customers. The journey to gathering ratings, reviews, customer success stories, case studies, brand logos, and testimonials was a long one.
    2. Although you shouldn’t rely on places like ProductHunt and Hacker News, don’t underestimate what a good amount of traffic can do for you. Hope for the best, but expect for the worst. For a long-term approach, we've now invested into things like SEO and content. If you're an early-stage SaaS, I recommend doing the same.
  6. Dec 2022
    1. In fact, our first hire was someone to help with customer success. Their job was literally to go through every account, see whether it was set up properly and seeing results, and reach out and offer to help if it wasn't.
    2. The landing page was some long-form copy about what we were doing, with four or five dropdown boxes where you could choose things about yourself (business type, email marketing tool you use, and so on) and see the copy update in real-time, as an example of the sort of thing personalization could do. It was simple, but it did the trick.
    1. Word of mouth has been our strongest marketing channel. We focus on providing ridiculously good customer support, and I think that goes a long way toward reinforcing people’s positive feelings about us. A couple of podcast appearances and conferences have helped spread awareness, but really, we’re still relying on people to tell their peers about us.
  7. Nov 2022
    1. Yes, LTD helps bring initial users, which helps validate the idea and demand. Have LTD as an option in your pricing table, launch your product on PH and other channels, Twitter, Reddit, Slack channels, Facebook groups, wherever your potential users are I never partner with any 3rd-party to promote my LTD, and I get 100% revenue. Can't comment on AppSumo, but I heard people ran good campaigns on it
    2. My Twitter follower count was < 1000 end last year My own SEO took a while. But in the early days, some organic traffic came from the PH post. PH did really a good job on SEO for daily featured products. I do have some early users who told me they found Testimonial from PH. I mentioned the affiliate program in the new user onboarding email campaigns. If someone is interested, they can sign up directly
    3. One growth hacking I implemented is to allow freemium users to continue to collect video testimonials even when they exhaust the 2 free credits, but if they want to access the 3rd video and beyond, they have to upgrade. I think this is the ah-ha moment that customers find value, and it's the best moment to convert them to be paying customers.
  8. Oct 2022
    1. I realized that SEO was the best growth strategy for the tool. I created content that targeted specific keywords and published it. It took Google at least 6 months for them to start ranking the content which is when we started experiencing organic sign ups.
  9. May 2022
    1. We also have a small internal marketing department that is focused on maintaining our online and offline image on various social media channels, and this helps attract some business leads that are far more difficult to convert than the ones coming from recommendations.
    1. The only bad thing is that I’m not up to date with programming trends. Not having clients demanding to use certain programming languages and tools I’m still using the same tools I used 10 years ago. I find PHP and JavaScript-capable of solving all my problems.
    2. I launched my premium HTML editor with the free demo being limited to 300 words. My other free HTML editor sites are also recommending to subscribe for a pro license at HTMLG. Since then I sold thousands of licenses and even I use them almost every day.
    3. I develop websites, mostly online tools that don’t require too much maintenance and generate passive income with insignificant investment. I do everything alone from registering the domain name, programming, SEO, and maintenance.