Many startups have the Post-Launch Syndrome, where they had a successful launch but couldn’t keep their momentum to a continuous success. Launch is only a small part of the journey. It doesn’t necessarily make or break a startup. What’s important is if you can take your startup to a success after the initial buzz had died down.
I am working very hard on exactly that with Artsy Editor, a really awesome WordPress WYSIWYG editor. And I want to share with you 60 strategies you can use in order to increase brand awareness and boost up sales after your startup launch.
(If you are interested in pre-launch and launch strategies, read this post on The Agni.)
Promotions
- Promote your product through education. 37Signals and Mint are great examples.
- Send personalized promotion to previous customers. Amazon executed it fantastically.
- Put up a promotion sales on memorable days (holidays, birthdays, etc.).
- Give out discounts/giveaways to news coverage about your product.
- Do cross promotions with related, non-competing products.
- Give free copies to those who blog about your product.
- Put up a fun contest where potential buyers can participate to win.
- Blog about tips and tricks that will help your customers use the product better.
- Offer freebies regularly to customers to keep them excited.
- Be a part of Top 10 list. #1 will be the best.
Connecting with Customers
- Do case studies with customers about how your product had helped them.
- Email all customers once/twice per year and ask them for feedback you can act on.
- Put up a survey to your customers before adding a feature.
- Ask your customers what is the one feature that helps them the most.
- Even send them a thank-you card if you have their mailing addresses.
Advertising
- Give away your product for free in exchange of advertisements.
- Advertise differently on every possible feature.
- Don’t be boring, use creative advertising.
- Advertise on exclusive one-ad site using The Deck or Fusion Ads.
- Use advertisement as a form of testing your market.
Social Media
- Join communities where your customers hang out and build a strong reputation.
- Only be present at networks that your customers are. If none use Facebook, ignore it.
- Post up teasers on sites like Forrst & Dribbble.
- Actively participate in relevant conversation about your product.
- Use Twitter search to find people that is looking for the solution you provide.
Business Development
- Personally email big names in your industry and show them benefits of your product
- Do “shameless plug” of your product only at relevant places.
- Try to get the most respected people of your customers to use & love your product.
- Focus on a small niche and get as many customers there as possible before moving on.
- Collect email leads from people who aren’t ready to buy yet, and followup regularly.
Support
- Be as personal as you can answering support emails.
- If you mess up something, be brutally transparent and honest about it.
- Offer a refund/discount when you mess up.
- Try to answer emails as soon as they arrive.
- Live-chat with visitors using tools like Olark.
Website
- Build landing pages for different types of audience. (My examples: Blogger & Developer).
- Provide extra incentives on the checkout page.
- Shorten your checkout process as much as possible.
- Show different messages/landing pages based on where the visitor is coming from.
- Use real statistics in prominent place, because that’s what convinces people the most.
- Compare you to your competitors side-by-side.
- Hide the coupon field at the checkout page.
- Provide a fully working demo/playground.
- Include what, when, where, how and why in the tour page.
- More images, videos, lists, tables, numbers. Less paragraphs.
Testing and tracking
- A/B test as much as possible so you know what works and what doesn’t.
- Not only track pageviews, track where revenue are coming from with Clicky.
- Spend more time increasing conversion rates than focusing on getting traffic.
- Use advertisement as a form of testing your market.
- Learn where your customers are exiting your site with KissMetrics.
Interviews/Guest Posts
- Feature yourself in industry-related blogs/magazines.
- Write a fair comparison between your product and your competitor’s.
- Get in touch with the tools you utilize for your startup and do a guest post.
- Have a unique voice in your interviews and blog posts.
- Offer discount codes to as an appreciation to readers for reading your post.
Development
- Add features only when your customers need it.
- It’s okay to remove features if it is no longer useful.
- Release updates often to show your product is active.
- Have couple “Made My Day” secret features to give your customer surprises.
- Provide extremely easy way for your customers to update.
After all, position yourself as a farmer and take your startup to a long-term success!
(This post was actually written in Artsy Editor.)