Show Notes
- ISV Con
- Association of Shareware Professionals
- Software Promotions
- GoodData
- DigMyData
- Flippa
- Micropreneur Academy
- AppSumo
- Software Deal Of The Day
- BitsDuJour
- Video Rascal
Transcript
[00:00] Mike: This is Startups For The Rest of Us: Episode 90.
[00:02] [Music]
[00:11] Mike: Welcome to Startups For The Rest of Us, the podcast that helps developers, designers and entrepreneurs be awesome at launching software products, whether you’ve built your first product or you’re just thinking about it. I’m Mike.
[00:19] Rob: And I’m Rob.
[00:21] Mike: And we’re here to share our experiences to help you avoid the same mistakes we’ve made. What’s going on this week, Rob?
[00:26] Rob: To tell you what July has been a tough month. Today is my fifth day of work and — in July. It’s the 24th of the month.
[00:33] Mike: Slacker.
[00:34] Rob: You know, it’s the summer, right? So my — my kid that’s, you know, is going to be in first grade is off for the summer. And my wife is off for the summer as well. So we’ve been doing a bunch of traveling, went to Denver, went to — I went to Reno and spoke at ISV Con couple of weeks ago and then —
[00:49] Mike: How did it go?
[00:50] Rob: You know, it’s fine. It was a very — it was a small conference and it was a different crowd that we typically see that. I don’t think anyone from any of the other conferences I go to were there. So it was more of the –more desktop software developers shareware guys because it’s based on the, you know, ASP which is the Association of Software Professionals and they used to be a conference called — was it the SIC? I think —
[01:12] Mike: Yeah.
[01:12] Rob: … Software Industry Conference that was held, you know, in Texas and a couple of other places and that conference kind of died as the — I mean I don’t know why but it seemed like the shareware movement kind of slow down, you know, for obvious reasons to — and I forget how you pronounce her last name but it’s like Sue Pichotta, I think. She resurrected ISV Con and or SIC and renamed it as ISV Con and this was the first year back. So it was — as a result, it’s pretty small because they didn’t have the momentum of, you know, having multiple years of folks knowing but I did get to hang out with some good folks. Patrick Foley was there and he actually spoke on Sunday. Ted Pitts from Moraware was there. Ruben was there from Bidsketch and then I met, you know, Dave Collins’ partner from Software Promotions. It was good. You know, it’s better for the people. From my perspective it was a better conference because of the people who were there rather than — than the talks, the topics that were covered.
[02:08] Mike: Uh huh, yeah. I think that’s it for most conference so that’s pretty typical. It’s better to talk to the people as oppose to, you know, the conference is just an excuse. Okay. [Laughter]
[02:16] Rob: Right. Although they did have a nice sports bar that was half off all drinks till like 7 p.m. I wound up in like an 8 or 9-hour conversation with a couple other guys just talking about SaaS apps and marketing and different approaches and trading SEO tips and advertising tips and funnel optimization and just throwing out ideas and problem. So that — that was fun. I mean it felt like a 9 or 10 of our mastermind meeting with some pretty sharp people. You know, and that’s got to be the — the highlight of it for me.
[02:39] Mike: Very cool.
[02:40] Rob: How about yourself? Where are you at this time of — of month?
[02:44] Mike: Oh well, I’m in Delaware right now. Having never been here before, I didn’t necessarily have high expectations but those expectations were absolutely shattered. There — there seems to be absolutely nothing, you know. [Laughter]
[02:56] Rob: Yeah. [Laughter]
[02:57] Mike: I had didn’t — the nearest airport to me is Baltimore which is a two and a half hour drive away. So I flew into Baltimore and drove down here. And there was just nothing between the airport and here. I mean there wasn’t even a highway. It was all back roads. I really felt like I was in row upstate New York. I mean nothing but corn fields and cows. I mean [Laughter] it’s just nothing.
[03:20] Rob: Right.
[03:20] Mike: You know, it’s not a bad area. It’s just that there’s nothing here, that’s all.
[03:24] Rob: Right, right. The theme for my month of July is goals and focus. I’ve been kind of honing in on a couple of goals I’ve had with HitTail as well some goals I have in terms of getting back blogging again. I realized, man, it is — it’s hard to stay focus like when you’re doing a lot of things, you know, all the stuff we have on our plates and most entrepreneurs tend to put on our plate. It’s just a challenge to keep moving forward in all of those things until you tend to not move forward in any of them. So I’ve really been making an effort to — to basically like if I get e-mails about things that I’m not focusing on right now, I will literally just send them out with Boomerang and tell them like come back in two weeks. Obviously if something is an emergency, I can’t do that but for the most part, I’ve been just putting off anything that has nothing to do with my key goal for the month and the goal this month is growing HitTail.
[04:13] July is going to be the best month ever for HitTail and in fact, it’s probably going to be the largest single month of growth ever even when I wasn’t working and of course, the reason is that all the seeds for this were sown, you know, a couple of months ago. It’s like delayed. You do a bunch of marketing and then people come the next month or two months later. So I mean there’s 30-day trial that put them even further back. So if I don’t continue the marketing, you know, and pick it up pretty hard now that I’m back from vacation. It will obviously slow down probably in August or September but it is something that I’m keeping in mind. It’s about picking a single goal and trying to get to that goal and monitoring that goal everyday I wake up and the first thing I do is I look at my dashboard. I have a dashboard of a bunch of numbers, lifetime value, churn rate, trial to paid conversion. It’s just a rolling 30-day average and so I now have a very tight pulse on the business and the result it — it keeps my mind focus on it both good and bad. The good part is I’m focused on it so it’s growing. The bad part is I am thinking about it all the time but I’m really mentally kind of thinking about HitTail, what to do with it, how to grow it, tactics I’m going to use and all that stuff even when maybe I should be slowing down and not working.
[05:26] Mike: Cool. What do you use for your dashboard? I think I asked you this before. You use a custom dashboard, don’t you?
[05:31] Rob: Yeah, because — I do. It’s just a single ASP page. I wouldn’t use ASP normally but that’s where the apps written in and it’s just a bunch of hacked queries, very simple. It’s just black text on a white background, you know, login screen in front of it. Yeah, I’ve honed these queries and every, probably a week or two, I realized there’s numbers that I want that aren’t there and also calculating them manually and if I calculated manually a few times, suddenly I realized I really should just add it to the dashboard even if the query is pretty complicated since I’m the only one running it and I don’t run it that often even if it’s slow, it’s still — still worth having. So yeah, I have my real time LTV so I can see how it changes base on how many articles are ordered, how many people were build last night, how many people canceled in the last, you know, 24 hours impacts my, both my lifetime value, my churn rate, my trial to paid conversions, all that stuff.
[06:21] So it’s a very interesting — well, it’s an interesting approach to it. I don’t think it’s something I want to do long term but especially in these early days of the business when things are volatile and they’re still moving around pretty dramatically, I feel like it’s — it’s good to have. I think overtime what I’d like to do is get some grasp so I can actually watch, you know, watch more of a moving average of it because that’s really the more important part of it. And also I think it’s a business mature it is — the stuffs are kind of settle down as more processes are being developed, you know, when the marketing is more stabled, the cost preposition, the LTV, those things all become much more stable as I’m not doing this big kind of experiment which is essentially what I’m learning. I’ve purchased more clicks in the past 30 days for HitTail than I have for all of my other apps combined in the last 12 months. I’m just experimenting like crazy and just throwing money out of my LTV hit the point where I can totally scale this thing. I just need to find a couple scalable marketing approaches.
[07:15] Mike: Very cool. See up — for your dashboard there’s – there’s — really and I was wondering about whether you built it yourself or not was because there’s a couple of different companies out there that offers some dashboarding technologies so to say. One of them is a GoodData which I looked in a couple of years ago but at the time their entry level pricing something like 2000 or $3000 a month and I was just like no. [Laughter]
[07:38] Rob: So it’s an enterprise dashboard then. BI as they call it, right, business intelligence?
[07:42] Mike: Yeah and the other one I saw which I think it just came out of beta back in December or so, it’s called DigMyData which probably actually as an advisor than so they come with all these integration points for a lot of different data sources like –
[07:56] Rob: Yup.
[07:56] Mike: … Google Analytics and PayPal and Gmail and MailChimp, et cetera.
[08:00] Rob: Totally, yeah. So I would actually beta tester DigMyData and I know Adam. He’s a nice guy. He’s one of the founders. We had hooked up at Business Software. Yes, I actually like it a lot. I haven’t been using it because of a certain way they need to track sales and it was just a little more of a pain in the neck than I wanted to do for my particular set up. But I know a lot of people at least a dozen folks who use it, who really like it. And Peldi is not, like not a super data guy and he — he’s totally in to it so I buy it. You know, the other one, KISSmetrics. I actually do have KISSmetrics account. We’ve got a free one for going to MicroConf.
[08:36] Mike: Yup.
[08:36] Rob: And so I do have that all set up on HitTail and I use it for some things but I don’t use it for everything. I tend to use Google Analytics and my costumed dashboard.
[08:45] Mike: Right, right. Oh you know what? I was doing some Math the other day and this is episode 90 and I was thinking, oh well, you know, episode is 100 coming up in the not too distant future and I said, well you know, we should probably do something, you know, kind of special for the 100th episode. And after doing the math on it, I realized that episode 100th is scheduled to go live on October 10th and guess what else is scheduled to live that week?
[09:11] Rob: New season of the Walking Dead?
[09:13] Mike: Not. No, close, very close. AuditShark. [Laughter]
[09:16] Rob: Yes. Well so AuditShark is supposed to go to beta September 10th, right?
[09:21] Mike: Right.
[09:22] Rob: And then you’re figuring you’ll go live one month later?
[09:25] Mike: Right, roughly.
[09:26] Rob: Awesome. You heard it here first.
[09:29] Mike: That’s the — that’s the current plan. We’ll see how that works —
[09:31] Rob: That would be such a milestone for us. [Laughter] Now, the problem is when we record that episode a week earlier.
[09:37] Mike: Right.
[09:38] Rob: So you won’t actually be — be launched but you know what? That would be cool. So episode 100, we do need to take something cool to do for that though.
[09:45] [Music]
[09:48] Mike: So hey today’s episode we’re going to go over bunch of podcast questions because people had been sending us a bunch of e-mails and asking a bunch of different things. So I want to be just to get right in to those. The first question is from Chico and he says, “My name is Chico and I listen to your podcast all the way from Zimbabwe. I think it’s great and it helps me in aspects of managing myself and following my passion. In the midst of building one business, I realized I wasn’t so much in love with it because of other pressures that had built up. In short, I discovered there is a lot more that goes in to design like the customer support, building, et cetera that my initial idea got left interesting. I love the web and developing a lot but I wanted to know what you guys think about a 180 degree pivot. I’ve discovered I’m startup person where I create a product that I run as oppose to creating lots of products that ship out constantly. The pressure is enormous and it gets in to a routine that can be in madness. Given that I want to run a startup I’m developing right now, how can I best bring down the current on my previous business and more importantly, how can I battle with the fear that I might be leaving an opportunity and charging in to uncertainty. Thanks a lot for your feedback. Keep up the good work? What are your thoughts on that?
[10:53] Rob: Well, I mean it’s an interesting question. I feel like there’s some details left out of the question like whether or not he had existing customers on the other one or whether it’s just a work in progress because obviously your approach tends to differ based on those factors. I think if you don’t have any customers and you’ve totally lost passion for your old idea and you don’t want to do it anymore aside from just having to deal with the fact that, you know, you wasted time essentially. I think you just shut it down and you stop working on it. I think if you have existing customers, you can — well, if the thing is just running by itself since it’s a SaaS app, I don’t know that you necessarily need to shut it down unless it don’t have a lot of support. If it is a lot of support you can try to sell it or you can try to offer to the customer so they can install it on their servers. I mean I think there are some fairly simple ways to get out of that if it’s not a SaaS app if it’s downloadable software and people already have it downloaded.
[11:44] I mean I think you just update the site and say, “Look, you know, we stop development on it. We will support bugs and stuff but no new features will be developed and stop selling it.” So I don’t think that’s — that’s too hard. I think the bigger question is second part which is “How can I battle with the fear? I might be leaving an opportunity and charging in to uncertainty.” And I think the best way to essentially appease that fear or get rid of that is not to charge in to uncertainty but it’s you start talking to customers and start building a mailing list then start doing the pre-coding stuff that we talked about, you know. It’s both customer development and talking to customers but it’s also trying to analyze the market using keyword tools built in the landing page, driving traffic, seeing if anyone wants to — to get on the mailing list to hear about it. It’s those things that you should spend time doing before you write a line of code to validate the idea. And the more you’re able to validate, you’re never going to get it to one hundred percent but you can maybe get it to 50 or 60 or 70%. The more e-mails you gathered, the more potential customers you talk to.
[12:45] And to me, that is how you’re going to fight that uncertainty and — and give yourself the — the confidence as well as kind of the staying power with this idea that if you do in fact think it’s going to work, you’re going to be more likely to stick around it and keep working on it.
[12:59] Mike: Yeah, I agree with pretty much everything you said. The other thing that comes to mind is the whether or not the business he’s currently working on is more of a full time income form because I think that that changes things a lot if it is your current full time income versus — if it is your full time income, you can’t just take the thing and shut it down. You can’t just take it and sell it off because there are obvious risks associated with that. But if it’s just something you’re going on the side and as you said if you don’t have a lot of customers, then it doesn’t necessarily matter as much. I think the big question is kind of where existing revenue comes from, is that from a full time job or is it from this business and I think to that right there probably make in my mind a lot of the decisions for me.
[13:40] Rob: Right and if in fact you are making a full time living off of it and that means just probably pretty successful app and I think the opportunities to sell it whether it’s thru, you know, something like Flippa or whether it’s through your blog or becoming — I mean there are people in the Micropreneur Academy who had be more than — more than happy to look at an app that provide a full time income. So I think that’s definitely and that could potentially be a way for this successful to get some revenue out of it or some kind of upfront money that you can then use to fund yourself as you develop the next one.
[14:10] Mike: And then I think it’s probably important to sell it upfront as oppose to kind of string in to things along where the revenue kind of, well probably tank to be perfectly honest if you’re not paying attention to it at all and you just neglect it, my inclination is to believe that the revenue is eventually going to tank. It’s just going to continue going down. And then when you do decide to sell it, it’s just going to be worth that much less. You better off to sell it in upfront and being done with it.
[14:34] Rob: Exactly. If you know you’re done with it, I would agree with that.
[14:37] Mike: So Chico, hopefully, that helps to answer your question. Our next question is from Til and he says, “Hi, Mike and Rob. Thanks a lot for the podcast. It’s been an invaluable source of action and advice and on top of that, I really like the way you guys present it in a down-to-earth manner. Please keep up the good work. My question is I’m working on a SaaS product and I have the opportunity to get some generic product domain name with a .NET or .ORG top-level domain like crmsoftware.net for take example. I’m considering using this generic domain as my sales website for SEO reasons and hosting the app and another domain represented a specific product name like highrise.com, to give another example. Another option would be the use of generic domain plus the top-level domain as a specific product name for, example is prmsoftware.net but from my eclectic perspective I’d prefer a more costumed product name. Please note that the user who likely access the apps via their own sub domains. I’d appreciate hearing your thoughts on this. Thanks for your help. Til.”
[15:31] Rob: Obviously, Google give preference or gives a nice boost to generic top-level domain names. So if you get crmsoftware.net, you’re going to naturally rank higher for CRM Software for that phrasing Google. What I’ve been noticing and kind of been hearing ramblings up is that boost may not be as much as it used to be. It’s still really nice. It’s still a really good signal that they use but I don’t know if in the future moving forward, you know, how much that’s going to continue to be there. I think it’ll be always be there, it’s just a matter of how much they dial it up and dial it down, right? So I guess the next thing I’ll say is I don’t feel super comfortable about separating the sales website from the application website. Then I think, one, it’s confusing to have two different top-level domain names between those two and two, if you need any integration between the two of them like when you have a signup form that does something and maybe a need to share JavaScript from one to the other or maybe it needs to share cookies between the two, it’s not going to work because browsers, security settings are a nightmare when it comes to using any client’s sides stuff across top-leveled domains.
[16:37] I’ve ran in to this a number of times. I’ve actually ran in to this with sub domains of the same top-level domain and had to do pretty hacky work around and like do double redirects and all types of fancy stuff that was really hacky in order to make sure that they’ll like cookies held up between the sales website and the SaaS app. So if at all possible, I would lean towards keeping everything on the same TLD, add a minimum, right? Even if you do sub domains that’s fine, but I would lean towards that unless there’s a compelling reason not to. So with that said, you really have a choice, right? You can name your product fancy CRM but you’re going to get crmsoftware.net. I think you’re inclination is that shouldn’t you have fancycrm.com, right? You know, shouldn’t you have the .com for your product name and I think it depends on how much you plan on relying on SEO. If the SEO is going to be a major player in your business and in your marketing approach, then I think buying crmsoftware.net, I know it’s a fake example but, you know, I’m going to keep the example, but I think the buying crmsoftware.net is a good approach.
[17:40] But if you’re going to be marketing this thing doing a lot of social media and press and stuff that means that SEO is actually only going to be a smaller percentage 10 or 20% of your overall picture, then you want to think about using your product name .com as the main website. I would buy both domains definitely but it’s, you know, it all comes down to how you set it up. I think if you do decide that SEO is going to be a big part of your marketing approach and you go with crmsoftware.net, I definitely would buy fancycrm.com and just have a simple, you know, a 301 redirect to crmsoftware.net so that people can, you know, if they type in your product name .com that they — they always get there. It’s not going to give you any SEO benefit but it will just help folks who are looking for your product. With the generic TLD, the crmsoftware.net, you’re still going to rank for your product name. I mean that’s — that’s going to be a foregoing conclusion because you’re going to get a handful of links for your product name and then bam, you’re going to rise right to the top. So that’s not issue I’d be concern about at all.
[18:43] Mike: I — I think that the SEO boost from having a top-level domain name matching whatever the search term is is great to have but like you said, I mean Google could turn it around at any moment and just completely drop it from the algorithm. I mean the fact is that in any given language, there are only so many words that can be use to describe different things. And using that as a — I’ll call it a biased factor and the algorithm eventually kind of falls over because just as you were there first doesn’t mean that you’re doing the best at it. And Google is from right on said, you know, “We’re rating a lot of updated content much higher than people whose web pages haven’t changed in 10, you know, 10 months or 20 months or whatever.”
[19:29] So if you start following that line of thinking, you might also say, well why should a domain that’s been around for 10 years have more weight than one that is been around for 5 years or 3 years, you know, because you’ll start looking back at those things and just because somebody was there first for CRM Software and they get crmsoftware.com, they’ve had the domain name for 10 or 15 years, does that mean that it’s updated? Does that mean that they know things better than somebody else who’s only been around for 2 or 3 years and I think there’s other things that weigh in to that a lot more.
[20:03] Rob: Right now, Google says yes..
[20:05] Mike: I had said —
[20:06] Rob: Google said —
[20:06] Mike: … they said yes now.
[20:07] Rob: Yup.
[20:08] Mike: But in the future, that’s just one thing that you’re basing this decision off of. That’s kind of my point.
[20:13] Rob: Right, I think the worst case though as I’m thinking about it is if he gets the generic and optimizes for it and starts ranking for it and then Google turns that down, you know, turns down that signal, he could always change later and as long as he gets his, you know, fancycrm.com, you know, his product name .com URL, he could always just move the website there or 301 everything if SEO becomes not as large of a part of his marketing or he loses the rankings because of the TL lead stops being worth it then that’s actually not the end of the world to do that.
[20:45] Mike: Right.
[20:45] Rob: So…
[20:46] Mike: I’m kind of torn on it myself. I think that it’s really nice to have that for the SEO benefit but on the other side customers don’t necessarily relate well to a product name that is generic like that and I wonder if it might be either interesting or a good idea to go in a slightly different direction where you get both domain names and then for the domain name that is the generic one, you basically make it in to a review site and then you obviously will link have to relate it to your own domain. You would review heavily to your own software or maybe you review it favorably or not, favorably or whatever but that’s another option where you could basically give yourself some SEO benefit by linking directly from that domain and you know, you could also use it as an educational site. I mean you could just talk about in general, these are the things you should be looking for if you want this particular type of software.
[21:37] Rob: Yeah, I think building a satellite website like you said or a microsite as some people call them, I think that could be done. I don’t know if I make it a review site. Probably a review site would be decent I guess. I would always have someone else to write it. So that feels a little, you know, a little weird if you’re writing content about your own without disclosing it if you’re writing content about your own app.
[21:52] Mike: Right.
[21:52] Rob: I’d almost want to hire a third party to do it or just not making a review site and make it about, you know, something else just an educational site where you happen to have a banner. That’s obviously going to cut down — I mean that, you know, if you rank number one for that term for CRM Software you’re only going to get a couple of percentage click-through from there. So you really are killing off most of the traffic. It’s not going to make it to your — through your sale website. So it well — different approach you can do. I don’t know that it’s just as good. I agree, I’m torn as well. I don’t think there’s a right or wrong answer here. I just think it’s what you feel comfortable with and kind of how you’re going to be marketing the product if it’s going to be, you know, 90% SEO then it’s an obvious response here. But if it’s going to be mostly a branded product, then I think you go the other route.
[22:33] Mike: Well I think that about wraps it up. And Til, hopefully, that answer your question and thanks for getting in touch. Hopefully, things will work out for you and you come to a decision on that.
[22:41] [Music]
[22:44] Mike: Our next question is from Sean and he said, “Rob, you mentioned using AppSumo to get a boost of capital in the early stages of HitTail and I’m stoked because I love the guys over there and I’m happy that it delivered for you. I’m wondering what other avenues or opportunities you and Mike can suggest to get jumps in revenue or financing in the early stages of a product’s life. I’m a big fan of maintaining control of the product as long as possible and not going the investor route.”
[23:06] Rob: Yeah, I have a few thoughts on this. I guess first I’ll clarify I didn’t do the AppSumo deal for a boost of capital as much as I did because I wanted to get the word out. I don’t actually need the capital right now as much as just, you know, spreading — spreading the word in that respect but — this is a good question. I like — I like this line of thinking. It’s basically you started off, you’ve launched your product to some success but you need some capital for some reason. And I would be hesitant to say that you need a bunch of capital to buy ads and do paid acquisition because if you’re still this early in your startup, then odds are pretty good that you are not going to have — really not going to have the lifetime value and the cost per acquisition where you need it to actually make that a viable thing.
[23:49] So hopefully, you’re not thinking that you’re going to raise the cash just to spend it on ads but to use them in some other strategic way. But a couple of ideas do come to mind AppSumo is definitely one any deal of the day site. I mean there’s like SoftwareDealOfTheDay.com or it might be softwaredod.com. There is BitsDuJour.com. There are several others depending on your niche. There’s a bunch of ones for the Mac too, so any of those can be a quick influx of cash. Another way that I’ve seen used is to do annual plans and to either offer them on the site directly or if you’re dealing — if you’re doing any type of medium touch or high touch sales that you talked to your customers and say, “Hey, you know, if you pay in advance for 12 months, we can cut you a pretty big discount.” And you may have to offer a 2, 3 or 4-month discount depending on how far long your product is and how much people trust it and how much value they’ve already gotten out of it. But you know, if you’re charging a hundred bucks a month and you can suddenly get an influx of 8 or 9 months of capital, you have to support that customer for the next year but that, you know 8 or 900 bucks can be a nice big influx and if you can do that with a handful of customers in any given month, it starts to add pretty quickly.
[24:56] I’ve also seen some apps do it directly on their site where when you go to sign up, it gives you that option and people can just pay in advance. Again, you do have to offer discount but can still be a way to kind of eak some revenue out early. The other way that I would recommend and I’ve done this in the past is to actually do offer customizations. So it’s almost like you’re consulting on your own product but you can almost just consult in the space as well. So to give you examples to this like with DotNetInvoice early on, I would offer customizations for a 125 or a 150 bucks an hour. So I didn’t want to do a lot of them, right? But people didn’t want to pay me to do a lot of them because it wasn’t cheap but if someone came along with 5 or 10 hours, suddenly you’re doing a little bit of consulting work. It is kind of a pain but you can make a little chunk of change that way.
[25:43] The other interesting thing is I’m getting e-mails constantly with HitTail. People want us to offer SEO advice, do link building, just create content, you know, just kind of do SEO services like a consultant will do. So while it’s not a straight customization in my product, it is just affiliated or related consulting gig. It’s something that someone would be interested in if they’re using your product. So I think those are probably three avenues that I would at least entertain. They all have draw backs. I think you can — they’re pretty obvious what the draw backs are but if you’re really trying to put together, you know, a little bucket of cash upfront, I think those are definitely viable.
[26:21] Mike: Yeah, the ones that came to mind for me were, you know, as you mentioned the yearly plan and then other one was doing product integrations with other products. So if you have something that can integrate in to pretty much any major vendor who has a pretty large audience and you can offer any sort on integration between your product and theirs. A lot of times they’re very happy to publicize that there is that integration to their existing customer base. You may very well get a lot of signups as a result to that. It really depends a lot on what the other products are just to kind of you threw out some examples. I know that you can do integrations with like MailChimp and Google Analytics is one but honestly, they’re — you know, people aren’t paying for that but if they are products that people already paying for, you know, as a subscription then those are the types of people who are already willing to pay for a subscription and then they may very well be willing to pay an additional fee for a subscription to your product.
[27:13] So those are the things that I would probably look at as a good way to boost revenue. And the nice thing about that is that it’s continuing. It’s not just a one shot. I mean obviously you’ll get one shot in SEO benefits and you know, the influx of traffic when, you know, whoever that integration partner is publicizes it but – on an ongoing basis, you’ll get additional revenue based on the fact that those people are using their product and say, “Oh I just found this product.” Maybe it’s Basecamp and they’re using Basecamp and I’ll say, “Oh well there’s just an integration with my — with this other product over here. Maybe I’ll go check that out.” So thanks for the question, Sean.
[27:54] The next one we’re going to go to is from – I know I’m going to butcher this name Loradrius Thomas and he says, “Hello, I’m not a techie individual but I have an idea for an application that will assists entrepreneurs but I don’t have any experience with the code or writing software. What do you recommend I start?” I would say start episode 1 and start with —
[28:11] Rob: Yeah, exactly. [Laughter] This is a big question.
[28:14] Mike: It’s a huge topic as an involved topic and there are so many different things that you need to understand that just having an idea for something is not necessarily good enough. I mean you basically have to prove that there is enough demand for whatever it is that your idea is that people are willing to pay for and until then you’re not going to have anyone who is going to be a developer who’s going to sign on to the department, you know, as we’ve mentioned numerous times that you have to have at least two out of three things to build a business you need to have the time, money or skilled set, two out of those three things. And as long as you have two, then you’re fine and it sounds like — I mean, you know, it wasn’t clear you don’t say that you have money, you don’t say that you have time to do it but if you have time, then you can learn to write software. If you have money, you can pay somebody to write it and if you have the skilled set to either do the marketing or do the development, then that’s at least half of the equation. But if you don’t have those things then you’re kind of a stand so there’s not much you’re going to be able to do.
[29:19] Rob: So I think the first thing to think about is how to prove out this idea, how to get as far as possible without having any code. And he doesn’t give us much of an idea of what the app is. It’s a application that will assist the entrepreneurs but if there’s any way to do this without code or is there any way to do it via e-mail with Excel spreadsheets, with a VA, with your manual time just doing stuff on the back end does it truly have to be software or can you hack it and basically do human automation and get your thing launched and even if I mean even if you don’t have a website at all, if this helps entrepreneurs, then find entrepreneurs and start helping them with this, you know. And if you need to throw up a WordPress website and use the theme and you added some text, then learn how to do that and get people to it and then start helping them.
[30:08] So I mean I think that really would be where I would start. Obviously, we’ve talked in the past, there are several — several times about partnering up with a technical co-founder, how to encourage them to get onboard, how to basically prove to them or at least as much as you can prove to them that that the idea has merit and that you basically remove as much doubt as possible. But those things are all down the line to me because until you’ve taken this first step and validated the idea, you don’t need code to validate a lot of the ideas even something like HitTail. If you think about what HitTail does, it really just analyzes traffic and it takes the best keyword and so, you know, the best keywords from what you target. So the hack way around that is to find people who use Google Analytics or using Analytics package and say, “Okay, I’m going to help you with this.” It can be 10 bucks a month. I’m going to need you to export, an excel export of all your organic keywords from last month and they send it over and you manually go through it and do the checks or you hire a VA to do the checks, you know, figure out where your algorithm is going to be, how you’re going to recommend stuff and then send them back the list manually. It’s totally hokey. It totally doesn’t scale but it’s a way to see if you can provide value to people who’ll pay for it without writing a line of code.
[31:25] And you know, and then from there, if you figure out that you can provide value and that people are liking it, now you actually have a few customers using your — your service which is essentially just a manual service at this point but from there you — you can go approach a developer and say, “Hey, people are actually using this. People are paying me money for this. How can we automate this? What’s our first step to automating this?” Because at that point, you don’t need to go ask and spend a thousand developer hours to build something, you could start really simply by just building a very basic database that, you know, you could manually import to and you can kind of just take the next step, the next minimum viable step instead of trying to build this full-fledged app from scratch. I hope that helps, Loradrius, I think that’s his name. Loradrius Thomas, thanks for the question.
[32:07] [Music]
[32:10] Mike: Our next question is from Steven and he says, “What’s the best way to approach other bloggers about interest in my blog and is that even necessary? Here’s the thing, I can’t stand reading other blogs and the genre I like to write about because I feel like it takes off all my time and has information I already know. So how without liking these blogs do I get interest in my writing? Does this even matter in a marketing and traffic growth sense?” Well to me like this isn’t a question so much about a product as it is about a blog and getting attraction from other bloggers and then niche for this blog. And I would wonder about whether or not these other bloggers feel the same way about it as you do. I mean is all the information that you’re putting out there and that they’re putting out there stuff that is common enough between all the different blogs that you can read one blog and pretty much know all there is to know about that particular niche and you know, this question doesn’t necessarily say what’s the niche is but I think it’s hard to imagine that there is a particular niche out there that, you know, one, you could just go to one blog and it’s kind of a one-stop-shop for everything you could possibly know about that and even if it is, it’s — sometimes it’s very nice to get a different take on it especially for people who aren’t fully in trench in to that particular niche.
[33:23] I mean it sounds like if you’re writing a blog about it, you obviously know a lot about it and if right off on it and you’re willing to share that information but you don’t necessarily want to hear other people talk about it because of the fact that you already know all the stuff that, you know, they’re going to be talking about. So those are kind of my thoughts on it but I don’t think that it’s unwanted to go talk to these people. I mean I think that the thing to do is just drop them the e-mail and you know, whether you do have like chat with them or talk to them, you know, one of the things you don’t necessarily saying here is what is it that did you actually looking for from these blogs. Are you looking for recognition from them? Are you looking for back links? Are you looking for partnerships? Those are some things that kind of entered my mind and if you’re looking for back links, I don’t know if getting on these other blogs is necessarily going to meet a whole lot. It might help you in terms of SEO but in terms of getting their readers to come to your blog and also read your blog when the content is going to be similar, I don’t know if that’s going to help you a lot.
[34:23] For partnerships, if they have products and you have products and you wanted to do some sort of cross selling, then that’s a great way to go. I don’t know if you really need to be a reader for a blog in order to approach them because you can certainly just talk to them about it. I mean if you can work out some sort of a deal where you’re cross promoting their products or bundling them together, for example, then both of you collectively become an authority in the space just by a virtual of — partnering and reselling your products together. So those are kind of the things that enter my head with this particular question. But I don’t think that it necessarily matters whether or not you get them interested in your writing unless of course your goal is to get them to link to you for, you know, whatever reason.
[35:06] Rob: Yeah, I agree. It would help to know more specifically, you know, what he’s looking to get out of this. The other thought I had is that if you already know what’s on these blogs, then you can probably just read the title of the post and scheme through their post and getting an idea what they’re blogging about. And if you already know of the information because it’s so basic then that’s probably all you’re going to need to do to stay familiar with what they’re doing and keep up to date. And if you are in an equal plain with them in terms of readership and notoriety, then it should be pretty easy to reach across the island just dropping them an e-mail. If you are at a lower kind of plain field than them if they’re just have a lot more popularity, a lot more experience, then sending them an e-mail is, you know, it may or may not work but the sure fly way to do — to start getting noticed is to pick the two or three top blogs, you know, that you’re looking at in this niche and start leaving some comments. You don’t have to read the whole post if you already know the information.
[35:59] Again, if they’re commenting on, you know, talking about stuff that you already know then you should be able to add to that pretty intelligently, pretty fast from the top of your head and be able to improve upon their post. And once you do that a few times, these folks will start to recognize you and then when you drop them an e-mail, you can mention “Hey, I’ve been a reader, you know. I’ve been commenting on your blog,” and they will likely notice it. But I think it does come back to what Mike said what exactly you hope to get out of these relationships. If you kind of just want to network and yeah, have them cross on products, then that’s fine. I do also thinking that maybe writing a post about them or even linking to them in a post or two of yours, it’ll show up in their Analytics and they will notice you. You know, they’ll notice that you link to them and they probably have Google Alerts if you’ve mentioned them by name and they’ll come out and check out your blog and that’s another way to kind of extend, you know, a hand shake and maybe get them to — to notice you off the bat. So those are our thoughts. Hope those help, Steven.
[36:51] Mike: The last question for today is from Andrew and he says, “Hi, Rob and Mike. Great job for the podcasts, I’m really enjoying them. I was listening to the how to drive traffic to your site podcast and noticed that it was recorded a few years ago. I’m curious if all the tactics still apply. For example, do you still view Twitter as not being useful for driving qualified traffic? Thanks in advance for your response, Andrew.”
[37:11] Rob: So I think most of the approaches, I think all of the tactics actually that were listed there still apply. I think for his specific question which is probably all we have time to answer on this podcast is “Do you still view Twitter as not being useful for grabbing qualified traffic,” and the answer I have is yes. So I view Twitter as a great networking tool. It’s a great way to keep up relationships. It’s kind of like just up an ongoing chat between a bunch of people. It’s great for partnerships. It’s great for kind of deepening relationships and it’s also really good if you are creating content. So if you’re putting out a blog, a post now and again, whether it’s on your company website or your — an industry blog, something that is interesting to people who are reading your Twitter feed, then Twitter is a great distribution mechanism.
[37:53] But that’s — that’s how I view it as, it can certainly draw people in from your Twitter feed to your app but honestly, you need, I mean literally tens of thousands of qualified followers to get any kind of sales funnel out of that. And I just — I don’t see it as being very viable nor a good way to spend your time. I mean there are much, much more effective ways of driving qualified traffic that we did talked about in this episode — it was episode 6, I’m pretty sure.
[38:22] Mike: Yup.
[38:22] Rob: How to drive traffic to website and you know, there — obviously, there’s paid acquisition and there’s SEO and there is other social media approaches. I mean there’s — there’s a lot of ways to do this that that are going to just be a much better use of your time if you’re actually trying to sell something as the end goal.
[38:38] Mike: Yeah, I would have to agree with that. I mean I still don’t necessarily view Twitter as a great way to drive traffic. Now I do feel like Twitter has value in that if you already have a product that’s established and you’re getting people to follow your product on Twitter, then I think the Twitter is a great way to get additional information out about your product or to get people talking about it but that’s going to be generally for people who are already customers of yours. Or if you’re running a product where people kind of admire your product or in your state they admire what you’re doing, they may follow you just kind of hear what sort of things are being said but I don’t necessarily think that those are going to turn in to qualified leads. All of that said, Twitter does have an advertising platform so you may be able to tap in to that and use it to get paid traffic. It’s not something I’ve tried yet. I actually have like a hundred to a $150 that I got from American Express for some program that they were running. I will be trying that out with AuditShark to see how that goes and I’d be happy to share what I learn from that. But aside from that, I don’t think that just having a Twitter account is going to drive the qualified traffic that is qualified enough to turn those people in sales.
[39:54] Rob: All right, Andrew. Thanks for the question. By the way, he is at videorascal.com.
[39:59] [Music]
[40:03] Rob: If you have a question or a comment, call it in to our voicemail number at 888-801-9690 or e-mail us at questions@startupsfortherestofus.com. Our theme music is an excerpt from “We’re Outta Control” by MoOt, used under Creative Commons. Subscribe to this podcast in iTunes by searching for Startups or via RSS at StartupsfortheRestofUs.com where you’ll also find a full transcript of this episode. Thanks for listening. We’ll see you next time.
Episode 89 | Marketing First Steps, To Code or Not To Code, To Cloud or Not To Cloud, and Other Listener Questions
Transcript
[00:00] Rob: If you stick around to the end of this episode of Startups For The Rest of Us, you’ll hear us talk about whether you should pay someone to build your app or learn how to code, figure out how you find datasets you need for an application and talk about the best ways to leverage cloud offerings. This is Startups For The Rest of Us: Episode 89.
[00:18] [Music]
[0:00:27] Rob: Welcome to Startups For The Rest of Us, the podcast that helps developers, designers and entrepreneurs be awesome at launching software products, whether you’ve built your first product or you’re just thinking about it. I’m Rob.
[00:36] Mike: And I’m Mike.
[00:37] Rob: And we’re here to share our experiences to help you avoid the same mistakes we’ve made. What’s the word this week, Mike?
[00:42] Mike: I’m a little disappointed. I think I might have to seriously consider letting go one of my contractors.
[00:47] Rob: Really? Is it a developer?
[00:49] Mike: Yeah, it’s unfortunate. It’s a new relationship. It’s not like he’s been with me for like two or three months or whatever but he started about a week ago. And so far he has yet to actually log any time in oDesk. I mean he keeps telling me about this work he’s doing and is it okay if he comes in some hours offline for offline work or whatever but he’s like, “Oh, I don’t feel comfortable using the oDesk tools that track my time because I feel like it puts pressure on me.” [Laughter] That’s kind of what I used to —
[01:13] Rob: That’s a bad sign.
[01:13] Mike: … make sure. I know.
[01:14] Rob: Yeah.
[01:14] Mike: I know.
[01:15] Rob: Yup. I mean I probably — over the years, I have probably had between twenty and thirty contractors work for me through oDesk. That is a big red flag for me. And I know sure there may be one in twenty people who do that and really aren’t comfortable with it but it just — I don’t know. That is the reason we use oDesk, right? It’s so you — if during those initial weeks you do get some insight in to what they’re doing and how they’re doing it.
[01:35] Mike: So I don’t know. If it doesn’t straighten out and resolve itself, probably by Friday, I think I’m probably going to pull the plug if it doesn’t resolve itself rather quickly.
[01:44] Rob: Yeah, I had to something similar just a couple of weeks ago. I had a developer helping me out with some classic ASP work on HitTail and he was a good developer and he was — he picked up the code really quick which is, you know, a fit because the code is not — it’s not well-architected and he was doing a good job but he just wasn’t putting enough time. He was putting in like two to three hours a week or three to four hours a week and I wanted him for ten to fifteen. And there was always something that was coming up, you know, in his other work. “Oh, the servers all crashed. I have to rebuild them.” I was like, “Okay.” And then the second week it was something else and sure enough we were six weeks in and he’s still averaging like, you know, four or five or six hours a week. So I had to pull the plug as well. So luckily my ASP work has slowed down so I may — I may just be able to scrape through with .NET deal we have at this point.
[02:29] Mike: Uh huh, cool.
[02:30] Rob: Hey, so we have a few new iTunes reviews. We have Quentin at Newbie who says, “This is a great podcast for developers or other creative types looking to use their skills to bootstrap a business. It’s great hearing about the ups and downs, successes and challenges with your own projects that you guys discuss. Thanks and keep up the good work.” And then Thomas Benos he said, “Great work. Rob, Mike, I really appreciate what you do, very good content.” So we greatly appreciate iTunes reviews. Mike was just telling me we’re up over 200 reviews globally which is just awesome. So if you haven’t given us some review, you know, we’d really appreciate a five star. Log in to iTunes, search in for Startups and checking us out.
[03:09] [Music]
[03:12] Rob: So today’s episode we’re going to be diving in to some listener questions. We have several on deck and we will see how many we can go through in our time constraint. The first question is how to do marketing for your startup and it’s from Luis Buenaventura. And he says, “Hi, Rob and Mike. I’m not sure if you guys have taken a marketing question recently but I wanted to ask if you could give some specific first steps towards marketing a young startup. My startup Infinite.ly which is Infinite.ly is a tool kit for small business owners. So I’m not sure if we generate the kind of content that would be useful for SEO something that Rob talks about quite a bit on his blog. I’d love to hear your thoughts on this. Cheers, Luis.” And I went and check out Infinte.ly and it — at least at this point, it’s a landing page and there are super simple way to get a website up. So you can just like kind of type in a domain in to their form and build a web page in 60 seconds or less. I imagine they’re going to have additional things that they’re going to add over the years but they are very horizontal. So it’s a pretty broad market at this point.
[04:17] Mike: I think that my first take on would be that in terms of SEO, everything here is all in one page and I understand that maybe it’s just because it’s in beta right now and there’s not a lot that you want to talk about but I think the biggest red flag to me is that it’s really just a one page. I mean there’s no — almost no way to get any good SEO benefits out of it. The second thing that I would say is that in looking at it says choose a domain name and build a web page in 60 seconds or less and that’s kind of the title at the top. And that doesn’t seem to me like it’s loaded with any sort of keywords that would lands you any traffic. So I think that between the two of those things, it’s really hard to promote the site and get any sort of traction through, you know, some of the classic SEO methods that we talked about. I think that, you know, there is a link to a blog and say hello which I assume is just a contact page but the blog is even on its own sub domain. So that’s going to end going to a completely different page and just kind of reviewing some of the things on the blog. There’s not a lot there that would relay to the product itself.
[05:19] I mean the second post that I’m looking at here is talks about Diablo 3 and the Philippines Startup Community and that has absolutely nothing to do with the product. So that blog isn’t getting any kind of help for the product itself. And you know, those are the kind of things that I would look at first. I would probably take some — build some content around solving the problem itself that your product is trying to address. So for example putting up a landing page, create a couple of articles on how to build a landing page, why you would do it, what are the benefits, what are the down sides, what are the problems that people run in to and set those up. It’s kind of an educational area of the site and link to those from your main page and then use those to drive traffic back to the main page and say, “Hey, if you’re interested in this particular type of product that will solve that problem, sign up here.”
[06:07] Rob: Yeah, I think the first step in to trying to market this app is to figure out who really needs it like very, very specifically who needs it and whether that means you actually niche the app and you say this app, it is for small restaurants who want a website or whether you just realized that small brick-and-mortar businesses are going to be more attracted to this business but you really need to figure out because at this point, I would say figure out who is already using it, who’s getting value from it and go market to them. But my guess is perhaps no one is using it yet that you haven’t, you know, actually done any marketing or gotten anyone using the app. And so you can look at something simple like just trying to get a few initial users in to it by doing some Facebook ads but I wouldn’t even know where to start with – with doing the demographics because you can’t advertise to the whole world. If you have a bunch of money in the bank and I mean seven figures that you’ve raised from venture capital, you won’t have as much of a challenge as doing a big horizontal market and trying to advertise to every small business in the world like Intuit does or Mint.com does.
[07:08] But you know, when you are bootstrapping and you’re trying to just get a trickle of users in and trying to use revenue to grow from, you really have to know who your customer is and you have to know what websites they frequent and you have to notice — know how to reach them. So beyond the SEO that Mike talked about, obviously, Google is a great source, organic searches are a great — great way to do it but going out and pitching a guest blog post, pitching podcast, interviews where you’re interviewed about, you know, doing your startup or how you can help people and doing some initial Facebook ads to get some initial interest. I mean there’s — there’s a ton of stuff. Obviously, this could be an entire book. Each of these things we’re talking about could be its own podcast episode because there’s so many details to it but realize that until you figure out initially who it is that should be using your app and who you’re trying to market to and where they are, none of this other stuff is really that important or really that helpful because you can’t target your message. You can’t position them.
[08:03] And this is actually something I did quite a bit with HitTail when I first acquired it. It was going after, in my opinion, the wrong audience. So there wasn’t good product market fit and I’ve kind of shifted that and the people who now come, you know, come up on HitTail and discover it, the positioning is quite a bit different. The conversion rates as a result are quite a bit higher. So I think that’d be our, our initial advice for first steps.
[08:25] [Music]
[08:28] Rob: Question number two is from Pierre and he says, “Hi, guys. I love the show since I came across it via Lifestyle Business Podcast. Something I personally would love to hear the show about would be your advice on how to go about starting a web app beyond drawing up interactive diagrams and hiring someone off at Elance. Well, I’m no a coder. I’ve used web apps like Juno, WordPress and Magento for years. Now I have an idea that I believe has a huge potential, a proven demand and should be relatively technically simple.” And he puts a cough in there. “What next? My concerns are that if I hire some guy off Elance that my inexperience in coding will end up either blowing out the budget or producing something with major unforeseen technical problems at the same time, is it really the best using my time to spend six months learning to code PHP and MySQL which seem to be the advice you guys gave on starting a software-based business in the past. I’d also be curious to hear what your thoughts were on using Kickstarter to fund something like this.” I think we have discussed this exact topic before and I think we said the opposite of what he said we said. I think we said before that you shouldn’t learn how to code and that you should hire someone to do it.
[09:33] Mike: I was going to say the exact same thing. I don’t know if we ever said that. We might have said that it’s probably a good idea to learn how to code but not necessarily be the one to implement everything. I could see myself saying you should at least learn how it’s done and the process but I don’t know as I would advice anyone to go out and spend six months learning how to code because I don’t think that coding is the thing that you’re really selling. I mean you’re selling a product and your vision behind the product and how it’s build and how everything is put together as a whole ideally a lot more important than knowing how put the stuff together on the back end. He said, “Now, I have an idea that I believe has huge potential, proven demand and should be relatively technically simple,” and that’s one of those things where I guess he doesn’t provide the details about what the proven demand is but I guess I wonder what type of proof he got. Is it just talking to people? Is it showing them screen mockups or anything like that but I guess to get more to the meat of his question, I don’t know as I’d really worry about hiring somebody off of Elance or oDesk or you know, any other place to spend some time building this up and produce something. I think my bigger concern would be about whether you’re building something that people actually want.
[10:43] Rob: Bingo and that’s it. He says it’s a proven demand. How are you proving that? Because if it really is as good as what – how be — percentage here, then shouldn’t he be able to find a development partner pretty easily. He should be able to prove that to him and come to him and say, “Look, it’s a proven demand. Here are the numbers, right?” If it’s proven, then — then he has some data about that. That means you’ve talked to ten customers who’ve committed to pay a hundred bucks a month for the thing or you have an e-mail list of a thousand of people who are dying to get this thing. And any of those assets are assets that you can use to convince a developer to come onboard with you and say, “Look, let’s do a prototype in three months. You’d take X percent equity and let’s develop together.” That’s actually the one approach that I recommend when a non-technical founder is trying to find a technical founder is to have a — you either need some money or you need some, I don’t typically say proof but I typically say some evidence that this idea is actually going to fly and it’s not just some random idea that you have. So if you have that evidence, then I would say consider looking for a co-founder.
[11:41] The other avenue you could look at if you don’t want to, you know, give away equity or if you don’t actually have the proof that you need to convince, you know, a developer to come onboard is to go through Code Academy and Code Academy is a free online tutorial but it’s more of like a course that teaches you the basics of coding and there’s been over a hundred thousand people have gone through it and bunch of people are — are just getting in to learn the basics of coding. And so well I don’t think you need to spend six months to learn every element and every class and every aspect of MySQL. I do think that learning how to code so you understand how to hire and how to manage someone is potentially worth your while to spend part time for a month or two to really kind of get a concept of how to build the basic database accessing PHP app.
[12:29] Mike: Yeah, I think the other thing that I would mention is that if you really thinks that it’s relatively technically simple, what he could do is he could hire is he could hire somebody off of, you know, any of those websites we talked about and have them put together something relatively simple and it doesn’t even need to be his application. Just have them put together a very basic website with some very, very basic data access stuff because of it — truly is a technically simple problem. I think that the question that he’s getting in to is what sort of major unforeseen technical problems am I going to end up running in to. Well, I think to work with somebody and trying to manage them, get your feet wet with managing people who are developers and who are technical when you’re not. Putting together just a basic website and it doesn’t need — it doesn’t even need to be your application because it’s just be like the sales website for your application and you say, “I want to capture this data from people when they come to the website,” and that’s it.
[13:21] It doesn’t need to be anything fancy but you’ll get an idea of what that person is like, what is it like to work with them, what is it like to manage them, what, you know, how they do things, and if that doesn’t work out, I — chances are really good that you probably didn’t spend a lot of money to begin with. So you can kind of move on to the next person and try again with either a related site or you know, something else. But again very, very, minimalistic and in terms of technical challenges, somebody who’s good should be able to point some of that stuff to you and you can intentionally make some poor decisions. You go through Code Academy and make some intentional bad decisions and find out if they point them to you and say, “No, you shouldn’t do this because XYZ,” and if they are able to point out those things to you that should be very basic, then you know that you got somebody that you can kind of rely on to help work through those bad times.
[14:10] Rob: Man, I think to what you said maybe have them build the prototype, you know, you said they can do the marketing side or they can do just have you could have somebody do a very simple prototype that you can then show around and show that there is interest. Something else I would say is depending on the niche. If it is something that you’re eventually going to be selling over the web so it’s more of a SaaS play, then think about just going to LaunchRock and getting a landing page or going to Unbounce in getting a landing page or installing WordPress and using John Turner’s coming soon WordPress plugin and try to collect e-mails, you know, because what’s that going to do? It’s going to do a couple of things. One, it’s going to prove to you that it has the value and two, it’s going to prove to a developer whether you, you know, you try to get them onboard for equity or — or whether you’re just trying to convince yourself to actually spend the money, go to the Code Academy and go through the effort of hiring someone on oDesk.
[15:00] It’s just one more point of confidence for you to move forward with. And realistically, it actually if you, you know, we’re going to try to raise some funding, it could also be an asset towards doing that. So Pierre’s second question was that he’d be curious to hear what our thoughts are on using Kickstarter to fund something like this. My gut instinct, I know Kickstarter takes, I think it’s a total of 8% or 10% that includes payment processing plus their cut, so I don’t think losing that 10% is that big of a deal. My inclination though is that Kickstarter is they — they edit heavily like a lot of people submit stuff to them and they don’t tend to want to fund certain types of projects. And from what I’ve heard they don’t tend to want to fund a lot of software projects. It’s more designed and art stuff like music and movie. So my guess is you wouldn’t be able to get this on Kickstarter but frankly, if you are able, I don’t see why you wouldn’t. I don’t know of any drawbacks to it. Kickstarter may be in my future for a project I’m looking to do. It won’t be a web project. It’ll be something else. So…
[16:00] Mike: I’ve looked at Kickstarter before and some of the statistics that I’ve seen basically say kind of the same thing that you just said is that software projects of any kind don’t tend to do very well. I mean anything dealing with technology. The funding rate was definitely less than 50%. It was like 30 or 40%.
[16:17] Rob: Right. There was one called — it was called Light Table. It was like an IDE for Ruby or Python or something and that got funded and that’s a big success story. So yes, there have been those by and large, the — the ones that are really successful that I’ve seen on Kickstarter are physical products, kind of physical manufacturing stuff that actually have larger production class and then there’s kind of the arts and the movies and music and such so, you know, might be worth the try. I know it’s quite a bit of effort to pitch them and my guess is, you know, that your odds of getting in are low.
[16:48] [Music]
[16:51] Rob: Our next question is from Peter Ozoldos He says, “Hi, Mike and Rob. I’ve been listening to your podcast for a while and I enjoy and profit from it despite not having yet made the leap to start my own product. I’m just applying some of the ideas at the firm’s product that I’m working at but I’ve already started tearing around an idea notebook. Some of the ideas that occurred to me would require a comprehensive dataset to be useful at all much like Rob’s College Coach Finder idea described in his book. Well the book glosses over the process, I’ve researched this idea and came across a pristine dataset of the information needed to build the product that could bridge this gap. The problem is that data costs several thousands dollars per year to license. I would love to hear about some of the approaches you tried or would try to discover whether such datasets exist and how it could be obtained. Looking forward to listening to more episodes in the future. Keep up the great work. Cheers, Peter.”
[17:44] Mike: Well the first thing that I’d like to point out is that when you’re looking for pristine data, a pristine data is going to cost you money and there are not a lot of ways around that. One of the things that I can think of that you might want to try, I mean if you’re looking specifically at this dataset, they cost several thousand dollars a year at license, I would try to amass, say kind of a critical mass of people who are interested in the product and you can kind of roll the dice on it and try and get as people on to a mailing list as you can and then actually go out and buy the dataset and plug it in to your engine or your product or whatever and then release it as a product. And hopefully, you’ll get your money back very quickly but it’s something that you’re going to want to prove that the demand is there before you make that investment in the data.
[18:28] Some other ways that I can think of to get what I’ll call less pristine datasets is to, you know, hire some virtual assistants to just go out and start harvesting that for you. I read a book recently. It was from Robert Graham. It was Cold Calling Success Secrets or something like that but basically talks a lot about cold calling and how to harvest data for your cold calling efforts and he’s got some great ideas about how to go about that as well. And you know, one of the things that most people don’t think of is going down to the public library and you can hire VA’s to go do that for you but you know, there are a lot of sources of information at public libraries for different organizations, different state lists that people subscribe to or members or organizations from the government the people are members of because of they’re – they’re in the specific industry or something like that.
[19:18] So there are ways to get that data and you know, just be a little bit creative in terms of where you’re directing people to get it. I mean I don’t think that you need to do all the leg work for getting some of that data but you do have to be a little bit creative about coming up with the ideas of where to get it and then you start directing people to go get that data for you. And hire a couple of people at the same time, make sure that they are both going out and getting the same sets of data or you know, maybe hire three or four people and then just keep the best one or two that you find that who are — who are coming back with the most results and the most unique results and you know, work from there.
[19:54] Rob: Yeah, I agree. There’s no way I’d pay that that licensing fee before I had at least the mailing list or potentially some people committed to paying for the product. And I think the purchase you named are good. I also think that you could ask for some sample data if there is a pristine dataset that cost three to five grand or ten grand or whatever, ask for a small subset of sample data and they’re going to tend to be willing to do that and then you use that to populate your database and assuming the licensing allows you to do this but allow people to come to your site, do a sample search that you name as a sample search, this is what the data will look like and then at the end say, “Hey, you know, we’re basically putting together the full app right now. We’ll totally ping you and you this is live, give your e-mail.”
[20:37] So it’s no just a simple e-mail landing page. You’re actually giving people a taste of what they might see and that’s actually the — the example that — that he brought up is an app called College Coach Finder that I was considering building. This was before the Micropreneur Academy. So this is like three and a half years ago and I eventually got side track with other projects but I still think that’s actually a decent avenue because there was just so much open space in the SEO area and the dataset did cost, I think it was $3000 to license and that’s why I have all the comps all built out because I was going to have an entire, you know, sale site built and allow people to click through and then basically collect e-mail addresses and it was more of an idea validation at that point than it was trying to amass a list of people to sell to eventually but of course, that would have been a good side effect.
[21:26] So really, unless you have a lot of money, if you’re bootstrapping then, you know, you probably don’t want to drop that three to five grand or ten grand or whatever without first figuring out if there’s demand and kind of faking it until you make it, right? It’s like what can you do? How far can you go with just a sample or small subset of data? So thanks for the question, Peter.
[21:47] [Music]
[21:50] Rob: Our next question is from AJ Bovird and he says, “Hi, guys. Just finished episode 85 on my way home from an Azure dev camp. And I can’t wait to check out some of the new tools you’ve introduced me to. I was wondering if you could talk in the future episodes about your experiences or thoughts on using cloud platforms like Azure and AWS which is Amazon Web Services. Well, I’m having a lot of fun learning about Azure’s intricacies in particular. I’m having a hard time making up my mind on whether some or all of the individual components that make up Azure are really going to be that beneficial to me as oppose to traditional hosting. Thanks very much for taking the time each week to produce a podcast. It’s an invaluable resource and a source of inspiration for me.” Mike, you are the resident expert on this. I’d love — love to hear [Laughter] your thoughts first.
[22:35] Mike: I mean I think that you have to have the right type of product to actually build on, you know, a cloud platform in order to make it worth the time and effort of doing it. For example, Azure does a lot of black holes when you start getting involved with it. There is a wealth of information out there but it is I’ll say poorly organize for somebody who’s just trying to learn it. There’s not a good walk-throughs that I have found. I mean at this point I kind of understand it and how it all fits together and how it works but when you’re first trying to figure it out, it’s not that easy and I think that the learning curve is high enough that in most cases, you shouldn’t be looking at it. That said, there are cases where I think that any sort of a cloud platform would be very beneficial for you.
[23:18] So some of the obvious things are, is if you have a very, very large datasets. So if you’re hosting video files or large files or you plan on scaling out to be hosting a large numbers of them, I could imagine if you were running Dropbox or something like that, you could definitely use, you know, the Azure or Amazon platform for that type of stuff. If you’re doing anything that needs to scale across tens of thousands of user and you know that upfront, then those are types of places. Another one is where you can foresee the upfront cost of that hardware being very, very difficult to swallow and you need to be able to manage your cost associated with it. So those are the different places where I could see going in to those cloud platforms and wanting to use them. But if you’re just hosting a small website where you’re going to be able to host everything all on one server, I would be hard press to say, yeah, you should do that.
[24:11] Rob: Frankly, I have a tough time seeing the real value proposition of things like the Azure and Google App Engine. I see some benefits but to me the fact that your app has to be built differently and that you’re essentially locked in to that platform is a huge negative in my mind. Amazon Web Services is just a generic global umbrella of like ten different web services Amazon offers and I’m assuming that he means EC2 which is their Elastic Computing Cloud, that’s different, EC2 is actual virtual server. It’s like VPS as that you can boot up and if I have a Python or Ruby or pitch the app that run on there or .NET app if use their Windows engines, I should be able to move that app somewhere else. I should be able to move that to my own hosted server to a cloud server or somewhere else. There’s no lock-in. So that’s the big difference I see. Azure and Google Engine and I think there maybe one other or — they’re almost — they’re different. They’re like compiled run time environment where you put code in —
[25:11] Mike: Not all of it though. They’re —
[25:13] Rob: No?
[25:13] Mike: No —
[25:14] Rob: Because — could I — could I just take a basic .NET app and run it in Azure with zero changes and —
[25:20] Mike: Yes.
[25:21] Rob: … put my sequel database?
[25:22] Mike: Yup but —
[25:22] Rob: So it’s just basic hosting. Why has no one told me this? [Laughter]
[25:24] Mike: Because —
[25:25] Rob: I heard .NET MVP and I’ve never heard this before.
[25:27] Mike: Because it’s — it’s brand new like that — that came —
[25:29] Rob: Oh I got it.
[25:29] Mike: … just came out —
[25:31] Rob: Oh, okay.
[25:31] Mike: … this year. So like there’s —
[25:32] Rob: Okay.
[25:33] Mike: So there’s a difference between like Azure kind of covers the whole thing. It’s kind of like Amazon Web Services that encompasses like ten or twenty different — different types of services they have.
[25:43] Rob: Right.
[25:43] Mike: The Azure umbrella right now covers, I don’t know, probably fifteen or twenty different things that Microsoft does hosting for, so like they do actually have the capability to just host the sequels for server for you. They have the capability to just host a web application for you. Basically, just upload the web application bits and they host everything. That said, if you want to get in to something like fault-tolerance or scalability, there are other things that you can do and know that — that they do somewhat involve like a vendor lock-in and no matter which platform you go with whether it’s Amazon or Azure or Rackspace, it doesn’t matter at that point. You really are going to have some sort of vendor lock-in if you start integrating in to certain types of their services.
[26:26] Rob: Right. Yeah, I think, AJ, I think my advice would be unless you have a specific need for something that Azure offers that only Azure offers and that you really can’t get elsewhere, I would lean towards more traditional hosting like VPS shared hosting, dedicated hosting. Obviously, there are specific needs and sometimes you may need to do that but as someone who’s likely bootstrapping and you’re going to want potentially want to find contractors who can work on it. Azure it its own — I mean ask Mike, it its own unique skill set. You need experience in it if you’re actually using their, you know, their tools and not just doing their new hosted version that he’s talking about. I would actually see Azure hosting if you could just plug a .NET app in to it, I would put that with – with other hosting options that are available out there. But the one where you specifically have to compile your app in order for it to work and same thing with Google App Engine, I would personally veer away from those unless there’s a very, very specific reason that you think you’re going to have to scale at that level right away. So I hope that helps, AJ.
[27:24] Looks like we’re one more question on deck and this one is from Oak Norton and the subject is “Outsourcing a Help Desk”. He says, “Hi, guys. Just found your podcast last week and I’m fifteen episodes in and loving it. My commute is great now. I have a question and maybe you’ve answered it in one of your podcasts and I just haven’t reached it yet. I’m still working a full time job and I have a pretty cool niche website. It’s riddleme.com,” and it looks like it helps people build scavenger hunts. So it says, “I’ve been selling a simpler version of the software for ten years at riddleme.net and it was very intuitive. The new website is more robust so there’s a few new complexities and the interface isn’t quite a streamlined. I’ve had a few people request refunds lately and I would like to implement a live chat on my site where someone potentially from the Philippines,” there’s kind of a question mark there, “… could be available 24/7 to help anyone that has a question. Have you ever done this? Do you have any recommendations? Thanks, Oak.”
[28:18] My first question would be why do you think a live chat is going to keep people from requesting refunds? Do they request refunds within three or five minutes or ten minutes of signing up? I have never had a 24/7 live chat for any of apps and I have some apps that have gotten a lot of traffic and where people are signing up pretty much 24 hours a day from all around the world and e-mail support has been sufficient for those. So that’d be my first thing is to question whether you really need a live chat or whether you just need a good VA who can check two or three times a day kind of a good intervals to kind of hit people as they’re getting confuse and provide really good support.
[28:57] Mike: Yeah, I think that my thoughts on it would be, you know, start asking people why they’re cancelling. It kind of get to the root of the issue of why they are cancelling. Is it because they didn’t understand the product? Is it different than what they expected? And if so, how is it different? And start figuring out how to alleviate that pain or alleviate that problem so that those sorts of things don’t happen and I understand that that can be very, very difficult because in looking at the website, there’s a lot of information here. I mean just the first page alone is enormous. I’m not saying that it’s good or bad. I’m just pointing out that there’s a lot of information on there and it may be the people are buying it without reading all that stuff and not really understanding what it is that they’re actually buying. I do see a video there. I don’t know how many people actually watch it so that would be something else that I would look at and start taking measurements and try to figure out, are people actually watching the video?
[29:48] You could use Wistia. It has a free plan now. So you could post your video up to Wistia and you could basically plug it on to your website and use their metrics to figure out are people watching it, are they watching ten seconds in and saying, “This is boring. I’m not going to watch the rest of it,” because you may see traffic from that, actually, it’s hosted on YouTube. So you probably have close to no metrics on, you know, how much people are actually watching and what the bandwidth usage of that is. So those are the places that I probably start. I start looking to see what information you can glean from the people who are returning things and you know, what people are actually looking at on your site. There’s something else that I think of, there were a couple of different tools that we’ve talked about in episode 85, I think it was, for monitoring where people are looking on your site. One of them was Crazy Egg. What was the other one, Rob?
[30:37] Rob: Inspectlet.
[30:38] Mike: You could use either of those to find out where people are looking on your website and see if there are sections of the text that you have on this — on this main page that people are just not looking at and maybe tighten that up a little bit.
[30:51] Rob: So yeah, I think that coming to the conclusion that you need a 24/7 live chat as I said before, I think maybe a premature. I think the first thing that I would do is think about going to a service like UserTesting.com or FeedbackArmy.com, I think they’re a little cheaper right now, and getting a bunch of people to come and hit your site and you know, records a video or screencast of them as they do it, you can specify certain demographics try to get people in your target market and they can talk about what’s confusing them and the try to improve those things because it sounds like you’re already aware. You said that the new website is more robust but there are new complexities and it’s not a streamline. So that maybe the real cause, you know, you may not actually need — need 24/7 support. You may just need to — to improve the app overtime and it’ll go away mostly.
[31:35] But the other thing I’d think about doing, if you are still handling e-mail support yourself is to hire a VA at this point and get them up to speed because that’s going to take a little while, have them handle e-mail support first and the nice part about e-mail support is you can work them up gradually to that, right? So they can — if they run in to an issue, they don’t know how to answer a question, it’s not like they’re on a live chat and the person on the other end doesn’t get an answer or whatever or gets an answer that, “Oh, I don’t know what I’m doing,” if you’ve had someone doing e-mail support for thirty, sixty, ninety days and they’ve bounced issues to you, you’ve given them the solutions, they’ve learned about your app, they’re going to be so much more able to do that live chat support. You’re just going to be in a better position for them to handle it. So I would say if you’re thinking about doing a live chat support at anytime, to think to try to get them doing e-mail support first so they can learn your app on the ropes and then move on to it later.
[32:26] So I haven’t ever done this. I haven’t ever seen the need for live chat support but I would definitely, if I would hit oDesk, I’d find a solid VA for e-mail support and slowly working them up to that if you think you need to do it. I mean worst case, you could get something like Olark. You install the JavaScript on your site and then the little popup in the bottom right where it says, “Hey, click here for help,” and just not have someone manning it or you only man it eight hours a day when you’re working and the other sixteen hours a day, when they click on it, it says, “Hey, no one is online right now but you know, just pop — pop your name and your message here,” and then you guys are going to support e-mail so at least people feel like they’ve sent in their issue and it’s pretty easy to do and it’s easy to do from every page.
[33:08] There are obviously some other services that do as well. Olark is just one that comes to mind because I’ve used it with DotNetInvoice. And the other cool thing about Olark is and with most of these is you can get an app on your iPhone and if someone pings your, you know, your site, you can be out and about, your iPhone beeps and you can actually have a live chat on your iPhone while they’re on your website. So hopefully, those are a few good suggestions for you Oak. Thanks for listening to podcast and for sending in your questions.
[33:33] [Music]
[33:36] Mike: If you have a question or a comment, you can call it in to our voicemail number at 1-888-801-9690 or you can e-mail it to us at questions@startupsfortherestofus.com. Our theme music is an excerpt from “We’re Outta Control” by MoOt, used under Creative Commons. You can subscribe to this podcast in iTunes by searching for Startups or via RSS at StartupsfortheRestofUs.com where you’ll find a full transcript of each episode. Thanks for listening. We’ll see you next time.
Episode 88 | At Last…the AuditShark Beta Date Announced
Show Notes
- Lifestyle Business Podcast
- MicroConf
- Foolish Adventure
- YCombinator
- AuditShark Private Beta – September 10th
- AppSumo
- inDinero
Transcript
[00:00] Mike: This is Startups For The Rest of Us: Episode 88.
[00:02] [Music]
[00:11] Mike: Welcome to Startups For The Rest of Us, the podcast that helps developers, designers and entrepreneurs be awesome at launching software products, whether you’ve built your first product or you’re just thinking about it. I’m Mike.
[00:20] Rob: And I’m Rob.
[00:21] Mike: And we’re here to share our experiences to help you avoid the same mistakes we’ve made. What’s going on this week, Rob?
[00:25] Rob: You know, I want to give a shout out to Dan and Ian from the Lifestyle Business Podcast. They just wrapped up their first in-person tropical MBA mini-conference. I think there were eleven or around a dozen entrepreneurs that are kind of in their audience and they just wanted to bring them together in to one place. And the cool part was in the most recent episode of the LBP, Dan had mentioned that us doing MicroConf and talking a lot about kind of the inner workings of it, you know, our behind-the-scenes episodes we’ve done each year, he said that we may had part in influencing him to kind of do an in-person event because — it’s actually an uncommon thing in terms of podcasters who build an audience and you tend to interact with people via e-mail, via the podcast itself and maybe via a blog but it is indeed, you know, kind of a rare occurrence for a podcast to actually blow up in to a full-pledge conference.
[01:13] Yeah, I’d just wanted to congratulate them and it felt good that, you know, we may have been a very small part of the inspiration or at least got the spark going in his mind of, hey we, you know, we should bring folks together in to one place and they did it. You know, we do it in Vegas. They did it in two weeks in the Philippines.
[01:28] Mike: Yeah, I can’t imagine trying to coordinate anything like that overseas. I mean I think that that just be really hard and it’s funny because we’ve gotten a couple of requests from people, I guess more than a couple for us to do like a MicroConf in Europe. And it’s one of those things where it’s — it’s honestly kind of intimidating to even consider doing something like that. For them I think it’s a little different because they knew the area and they know how to get in and out of the country and all these — all the logistics of coming in themselves. But for us to do something in Europe seems extremely intimidating just because we’d have to deal with booking our hotel over there, you know, depending on the country they — we would have to deal with the language barriers and things like that. And I think that a hotel, it’s a lot easier to get by speaking English but I just can’t imagine trying to get people to come in from a foreign country and to actively trying to pursuit that type of an audience and bring them in.
[02:19] Rob: Yeah, I think they, you know, they did it smart. They started small like I said they’re only about a dozen folks there. They didn’t do — I mean it wasn’t like MicroConf where there is a hundred and sixty people there and we fly speakers in from around the world. I mean they just, Dan and Ian led the sessions. This is just based on — listening to the podcast. I don’t have any insider information. But Dan and Ian led the sessions. I think they had — they had Tim Conley from Foolish Adventure and maybe another expert or so. And it was kind of more like a seminar. It was a two-week long thing and it was — people hacking away, you know, kind of day and night trying to get to launch and then meeting during the day and giving inspiration and feedback and all that stuff. So it was just super fast iterations. And I think the whole — the whole program actually run two months, maybe a little longer than that and a combinator in this two-week hackathon. So it was — you can almost think of it as like maybe a Y combinator type of thing where they got a group together and you know, they let them feed off of each other’s energy and then folks gave each other feedback and such.
[03:11] But that would definitely be easier to organize in the Philippines or something if you had someone living there like, you know, Dan. I guess he’s not living there but he’s, you know, he frequents there and you only have eleven people to worry about because you’re right, if we’re — if we had to do something in like France or I don’t know, Western Europe or anywhere, there would be — there’d be some hurdles for us to have to jump in order to get — pull off a MicroConf. And I have seen, yeah, we’ve had at least a dozen requests to do something like on the East Coast to the US or in Western Europe. I think definitely on our radar but that maybe a year or two out until we really have everything, you know, dialed in with our — our West Coast one and then we can think about hiring someone to help us with the, you know, something in England might be the best place to do it actually. It’ll eliminate the language barrier and it’s just, you know, a nice Central easy place for people to get to I think.
[03:59] Mike: Well, having a second MicroConf in Europe would certainly alleviate the problems associated with, you know, keeping MicroConf small because then we’ve had two instead of one. [Laughter]
[04:07] Rob: Yeah and as you know, I mean based on people that write in as well as folks in the Micropreneur Academy, we have a quite an audience in Europe and I think when I first sold my — when I first put my book up for sale, I was surprised that 40% of the sales were from outside the US and there was a big chunk of those were in Western Europe. So I actually do think like there, you know, that we do have enough of momentum there that we probably could pull it off in terms of ticket sales. It’s just all the other stuff that goes along with it that I just don’t think you and I have the time right now. You’re trying to get AuditShark out of the door. I’m trying to grow HitTail and it’s like taking or I have the ball to do, you know, another conference and it doesn’t feel like a wise move at this point.
[04:46] Mike: Just recently we actually got a podcast question which we’ll probably cover in the near future, a question that came in from somebody in Zimbabwe so —
[04:53] Rob: Yeah, it’s always — it’s always crazy. How about you? What’s new with you? Any — any AuditShark news?
[04:57] Mike: Yeah, I’ve been trying to figure out exactly how much longer it’s going to take to get AuditShark out the door and I went through all the different bugs or the majority of the different bugs and cases that are outstanding in order to get AuditShark to launch. And I’ve started cutting things left and right. And it’s funny because things that used to be must-have’s to me if — I guess I’ll say, I’ve dialed them back and [Laughter] then just kind of threw them away and said, “You know what? I really don’t need that.” And it’s just interesting how my perspective has shifted in terms of just trying to get the product launching out the door.
[05:31] Rob: Do you have an example of like a specific feature that you’ve — that you used to think was a must-have and that you’re able to get rid of it?
[05:38] Mike: Yeah, I can — I think one off the top my head which was a — because everything is in Azure, I wanted to be able to run things like reports and things like that on a daily basis or weekly basis or whatever. And one of the issues with running that stuff in Azure is that because everything is distributed, there’s no expectation of concurrency anywhere. So when you deploy an application out there, it has to be written in such a way that it can run on its own or with other copies of itself. So if you have a scheduler for example, the problem with a scheduler is that you can’t just deploy it out there and have everything run because the first part of the problem is, you know, the redundancy. I mean the primary purpose of using Azure is to, you know, rely on that redundancy and if you only have one copy of that Azure worker role or web instance out there, then there’s no guarantee that it’s going to stay up and running.
[06:33] You know, they move things all — all around all the time. They bring things up, they bring things down and you have no control over that but you’re using things on a platform and the expectation that they have basically set forth is that if you build your application correctly, they can bring one of them down and they set up rules so that they’ll be in different machines and different physical hardware so that they can bring one down and then bring you up another copy of it some place else. And your traffic just kind of gets a load balance between them. If you deploy a single instance, you don’t get any of that redundancy and the problem with Azure is that it can drop that instance at any given time and you’ll basically lose everything scheduled during that timeframe until it comes back up again. So it’s possible for the thing to go down and then you lose it, you know, anything that will — was scheduled to go off during that time will basically be gone. It just won’t happen. So whether it’s reports or whether it’s specific tasks that need to go on and that you really have no notification or way of knowing that that scheduler went up and down.
[07:31] Rob: So it’s —
[07:31] Mike: And that’s kind of a problem. [Laughter]
[07:32] Rob: Right, right. But what’s the feature that you had that you’re not going to do?
[07:36] Mike: It has to do with organizing the data and the building reports off of it.
[07:41] Rob: I see. So you had a feature organizing data building reports and you’ve decided to drop it because it’ll get you to market faster. Why the change of heart? What convince you that you could do this now? Is it just looking at it with fresh eyes? Or is it that it’s serving a new market now?
[07:57] Mike: No, it’s more of a I’ve decided not to try and build a redundancy in to it and if it —
[08:03] Rob: Got it.
[08:03] Mike: … hacked out, then there’s only so much I can do about it, so it’s one of those things where what’s the harm if somebody doesn’t get a particular report especially if it happens within the first couple of months of the application being live.
[08:16] Rob: Is it — is it a report that would run in the background that’d be e-mailed to someone or it is someone —
[08:19] Mike: Yes, no. It’s —
[08:21] Rob: Okay, a background report.
[08:21] Mike: … it’s back end process. At that time, there’s this process that scheduled that will kick off and run a report. Well let’s say, 12:04 the — the Azure instance drops and then comes back five or ten minutes later. Well, that scheduled repot is not going to execute. So it will never execute. It actually won’t execute until the next day. So that daily report will not go out pretty much for anybody, you know, for you running this process once a day and just a report is just one example. I mean there’s a lot of other back end processes that, you know, I’m looking at that I might — I may end up scheduling. But if that’s the case, how often could it happen, you know, if you only have something scheduled once day, chances are good that it’s probably not going to it hit very often.
[09:01] Rob: Right.
[09:02] Mike: But I mean there’s a lot of things where people are going to be putting schedules — schedules in to the system. So they’re going to say, “I’m going to schedule my audit to run on my servers at 1 a.m. or 2 a.m. or 3 a.m.” Oh, what happens when those things kick off and —
[09:16] Rob: I see.
[09:17] Mike: I’m caching them on the client sides so I don’t think that that’s going to be an issue. It’s going to be more if the customer decides to make it change in the near, you know, somewhere around the time that audit supposed to kick off and it’s just not going to be able to stop it in time or reschedule it and —
[09:32] Rob: Right.
[09:32] Mike: … I look and I said, well that’s probably not a huge deal right now.
[09:35] Rob: But how hard is that to fix after you’ve launched if it becomes a big deal?
[09:39] Mike: It’s a — it’s a very challenging problem like it does shoot —
[09:41] Rob: Got it.
[09:42] Mike: … it fault tolerance. Scheduler is a very hard problem.
[09:44] Rob: Right, so it’s not — yeah, it doesn’t but it doesn’t become any harder because you do it after launch. It’s the —
[09:48] Mike: Yeah.
[09:48] Rob: … same difficulty basically to do it now and do it later.
[09:51] Mike: Right. And now all —
[09:52] Rob: Yeah.
[09:52] Mike: … I’m doing is just saying well there is only so much I can do. I think it would be a significant engineering effort to make it work and I’ve talked to some people within Microsoft to say how would you actually do this and you know, they’re still trying to get back to me.
[10:05] Rob: Yeah, it seems like — a pretty big limitation with Azure because I have — you know, I’m on a basically a cloud server which is essentially a really beefed-up VPS, right, Virtual Private Server and that’s what runs HitTail. And I have at least a dozen tasks that run in the background daily. They’re — there’s billing that runs every night. They’re, you know, they’re all console apps, right, just Barebones EXE’s that pulls off out of the database and do something with it and then — and then stop. And so there’s — there’s billing. There are — there’s an eMailer that you get keyword, e-mail alerts. There’s a few reports that it actually generates and e-mails to me about the number of trials of previous day, the high volume users, you know, just different stuff so I can keep track of it. And when they don’t run once, it’s actually not catastrophic. I mean even billing has choked a few times. I’ll, you know, upload a buggy version and it’ll crash. And since I’ve written it so that if I run it the next day, it’ll go back the previous two days, obviously, it’ll go, you know, kind of bill everyone who should have been billed by now. But that’s pretty rare that that happens and I can count on it running everyday because I’m using the Windows Scheduler. The Azure doesn’t have anything like that or it doesn’t have an equivalent, you know, mechanism.
[11:15] Mike: You can do those things but because of the way AuditShark works, it’s a little different. At least about the underline architecture for it is such that when something is scheduled to go off, it’s not initiated on the client. So what happens is it’s initiated on the server. So the server says “I’m going to spawn this task and this task needs to happen on the client.” So what it does is as part of that scheduled task on the server, it creates an entry in one of the Azure queues and because the clients are pulling in to the system and saying, “Hey, do you have anything for me to do? Do you have anything for me to do?” It creates that task basically on the fly. So it’s more of the fact that it is time sensitive in terms of the delivery and not the fact that, you know, there’s this report — I mean the reports was just one example.
[12:03] Rob: Right.
[12:03] Mike: And it’s probably not a big deal if it runs, you know, if somebody doesn’t get a report Tuesday night and they get one Wednesday or they, you know, it doesn’t kick off Tuesday night and then Wednesday morning I look at it and say, “Oh this didn’t get out. Let me fire it off manually and just go ahead and do it.” That stuff, I don’t think is a big deal. What is a big deal is if somebody schedules their audits for the middle of the night and then none of them run.
[12:25] Rob: Yeah, I agree. So it’s — it’s early July right now. And you are honing in on — on what timeframe for doing your beta and other stuff?
[12:35] Mike: I was going to say September 1st.
[12:37] Rob: Yeah. So somewhere like first week of September is what you’re looking at?
[12:40] Mike: Yeah, the first or second week of September, probably at the latest.
[12:43] Rob: And that is what — that’s when you’ll have beta to – you’ll let like a handful of beta testers in to start?
[12:49] Mike: Yeah, I mean that’s probably when I’ll start opening up to, you know, multiple private beta testers. I mean I’ll probably be reaching out to a couple of them within the next week or two to see if I can get some of them on in August. So it’ll kind of be, you know, there’ll be some that will come in on August, probably only one or two, maybe three tops and then hopefully, once I get in to September, then I’ll kind of flashed out more of the issues and you know, add in more private beta testers. And then I think that the first, first or second week of October is kind of what I want to shoot for a full blown launch.
[13:21] Rob: Because Labor day is September 3rd and that’s a holiday. So, you’re looking at September 4th or you’re looking at the September 10th?
[13:28] Mike: I was looking at September 10th because –
[13:29] Rob: Right.
[13:29] Mike: … if I’m talking to these people beforehand, you know, the Monday afterwards or the day after and say, “Hey, would you like to beta tester?” I want to talk to them beforehand. I’m going to talk to them in August at some point.
[13:39] Rob: Let’s say a date. Let’s say it’s September 10th and it’s just so that we can revisit this in — I mean that’s basically two months away because it’s July 10h today. So you have two months to get — get your stuff together. What happens between now and then? Is that all feature development?
[13:53] Mike: So some of it is feature development, I’ve still got that back end tool that is being built and that, you know, working through a number of different usability bugs right now but I have to have more conversations with people about what their expectations are for what the tool tells them because the engine, you know, the engine works the way that it works. It grabs data from the machines and puts it out on to the servers and I can run at least minimal reports at this point. But what I really wanted to find out from people is what things they’re interested in knowing about their machines. Are they more interested in — in like the vulnerability side of things or they’re more interested in path side of things? Are they more interested in industry standard configuration policies?
[14:35] I mean I’ve been reading a lot lately more of to gaining marketing material for my website and in looking through different ways that machines are — are hacked in to or compromised, a lot of those breaches come from system misconfiguration. So that was kind of really what my goal was. But I want to know is that people or something to people are actually really concerned about or is it, you know, just the data there, out there is telling me hey, this is a scenario of serious concern and it becomes more of an education process because I don’t want to have to educate people as much as possible. I really like to have them to say, “Yes, I recognize this is the problem. I want you to tell me what all the issues are with it.” And the product can do it. It can do all of those things. I just really need to figure out I guess what my landing point is in terms of the content that’s loaded in to the system. So —
[15:25] Rob: Very cool, man. Two months obviously we’ll be talking about it between now and then but I’d just kind of want to get — get something on the calendar so we can check it out as it — as it gets closer.
[15:34] Mike: So I have a question for you. You —
[15:36] Rob: Yes.
[15:36] Mike: … you had done this, the articles for HitTail and you had started pushing that to people and having them be able to request articles based on the keywords. How is that going?
[15:47] Rob: You know, it’s — it’s going quite well. It’s actually going better than I thought it would. I knew that there’ll be interest in it but there had been multiple articles purchase pretty much everyday. And so I did almost eighty articles. It was like seventy five articles in June that were sold and then looking to — I’m actually on track to beat that in July. And so what that’s done is I talked a little bit about it last time but in effect as raised the lifetime value of a customer because that revenue aside from the — the money that goes to pay the authors, that revenue is now — it’s pretty much pure profit. It just — it goes straight to the bottom line and as a result if I divide that whole, you know, the big bucket of revenue by the number of active customers, I have this — this bucket of money that’s basically increasing lifetime value and it means I can now spend more money to acquire a customer and that really was the original goal. I mean I talked about this in MicroConf talking. It was definitely the goal was to increase that lifetime value because aside from — from increasing prices or keeping people from canceling like lowering churn rate, selling extra things to people, extra value, extra things that they need is one of the best and easiest —
[16:58] Mike: Yeah.
[16:58] Rob: … ways to kind of increase a lifetime value of a customer. So you have more money to work with when you’re doing your marketing. So I’ve been pretty happy. I’m actually getting in to some paid acquisition with HitTail to haven’t done up till now because the funnel was so — it was a leaky funnel is what the phrase I use. People were just bailing during the trial and then the churn rate was high but I got that tamed and so now I’m actually, looks like I’m going to be able to use some — some paid acquisition and make money out of it pretty easily. So it’s — it feels like a good time to be — to be doing this. I’m really glad the articles have worked out to say the truth. And I think for the amount of hours that I spent building it, it’s probably been the most profitable feature that I’ve implemented in the past almost year that I’ve owned HitTail now.
[17:41] Mike: That’s really cool. I mean a lot of that sounds very similar to just basically selling additional products to your, just say, audience.
[17:49] Rob: That’s what exactly what it is, yup. So with DotNetInvoice when we wanted to increase lifetime value, we added on. We have a QuickBooks Integration, you know, little modules that’s like 99 bucks. And so it’s along the same lines, right? It’s just selling one more thing that people probably have already requested or maybe they haven’t but you know that it’s a good compliment to the service and create a lot of value for both you and the users doing that. The funny thing is maybe the punch line to the whole thing is yes, my — my revenue, my profit went up but I have this monthly milestones I’m trying to hit and typically it’s like I want to grow by a thousand dollars month over month, right? So it’s a small growth right now but I missed the milestone by $14 this month which I did two —
[18:29] Mike: Oh.
[18:30] Rob: … months ago as well, right? So it’s like one more article would have pushed me over the revenue mark. But again, it comes back to, okay, so fairly, you know, by — by comparison to 14 bucks it’s a pretty large number and I missed it by 14 bucks like it actually doesn’t really matter because I’ll blow past it next month, anyways. But it was just funny to add those numbers up and be like, “Oh, it’s going to be close, it’s going to be close. Oh…” That the agony —
[18:54] Mike: [Laughter]
[18:54] Rob: … just defeat, you know. But it’s nice to see – to see the growth coming. I’m actually I saw a big rush of traffic because I did the AppSumo deal in June and that went well. It sold a lot and so I should be expecting a big chunk of cash from that that I’m done hoping to feed in to my paid acquisition funnel to just, you know, be able to leverage that cash in to buying some ads through some different channels I’m trying out and hopefully, continue to grow the recurring revenue because the AppSumo deal is all one-time revenue, right? They basically bought a year’s worth of HitTail for a discounted price but I want to take that cash and put it to good use by building recurring revenue and that was really — really the goal of it.
[19:31] Mike: Now, did you include the — the money from the AppSumo deal in to your June numbers or no?
[19:37] Rob: I did not, no. Yeah, I know the AppSumo deal I bet will do between two and three times my monthly June revenue that I will — I will net two to three times the month of June revenue purely from that AppSumo deal. That’s — the audience is huge, dude. So they, you know, it’s a really quick influx of cash is what it is.
[19:55] Mike: Uh huh. So basically based on what you just said though, you know, what you’re supposed to do generally when you’re doing accounting for these types of things is when you get those one-time revenue spikes that are for a year in advance, you’re supposed to take that whatever that number is divide by twelve and then amortize it over the course of the next twelve months. So realistically, you did probably —
[20:15] Rob: Right.
[20:15] Mike: … hit then.
[20:16] Rob: I did.
[20:17] Mike: That $14 is covered I think. [Laughter]
[20:18] Rob: Yeah. Oh, it definitely is. I’m just not — I’m just not going to do that because I’m going to — I get paid, you know, in about a month. They pay net 60. So I get paid in early August and I’m basically going to just reinvest that right back in and I’m not — probably not going to count – I’ll probably put an asterisk in my little revenue tracking sheet and say this month, you know, I took away X thousands of dollars from the AppSumo deal but I’m not even going to — I’m really way, way more interested in recurring revenue. This one time burst in revenue even if they are high four and low five figures, I won’t say it’s not interesting to me but it isn’t as nearly as interesting to me as something that is building up that monthly recurring flywheel, right? It’s the flywheel that I want to get. So just because I can — if I can license something or you know, do one big sale that goes in one big influx of cash, I want to take that money and just reinvest it back in to creating more flywheel revenue, more recurring revenue.
[21:09] Mike: No, I understand that. It’ll make sense to me. I mean I was just saying that in terms of your the charts and stuff that you’re putting —
[21:15] Rob: Yup.
[21:15] Mike: … in for, that was just probably, you know, divide by twelve and then add it in every month for the next twelve months.
[21:22] Rob: But yeah and based on accounting and tax accounting and all that stuff, I’m sure that’s what I’m supposed to be doing but it’s kind of yeah, I’ll just lump it in with my annual revenue at the end of the year. Hey so, you’ve been working four tens.
[21:33] Mike: It’s going pretty well although I’m not particularly thrilled about getting up at 5:30 in the morning. I mean I’m sure there’s people who listen to this and are like, “Oh 5:30 is nothing. I get up at 4 or 3.” I am not a morning person by any stretch of the imagination. I mean if I — if I were a president of the United States and I could had the power to abolish mornings, I totally would. Like no work anywhere, would get on before noon. [Laughter]
[21:55] Rob: So but you’re — but you have Fridays free now, right? You’re basically able to get — if you’re traveling, you’re able to get home a day early and —
[22:02] Mike: Right.
[22:03] Rob: Have you been able to put in time on AuditShark on those days?
[22:05] Mike: Yeah.
[22:05] Rob: … just spent and do another stuff.
[22:06] Mike: No, it’s been on AuditShark so, you know, I’ve been getting home late on Thursday evenings or you know, really early in the morning on Friday but then I get up Friday morning and then I have pretty much all day to work on AuditShark which is really kind of nice. And you know, because I have — I’m off to five contractors working for me right now. So I have all of them doing different things but managing them, you know, in the evenings is much more of a full time job than I thought it’d be because —
[22:32] Rob: Yeah.
[22:32] Mike: … I have to direct people all over the place and say, “Oh, you need to do this,” or “This isn’t right,” because I have everything going through FogBugz, you know. And it’s nice to be able to manage all that stuff in there but at the same time, I feel like there’s times where I have to micromanage things because they are all contractors. And I think maybe this is a little bit of a difference between employees and contractors where contractors will not do something unless you explicitly tell them to do it —
[22:57] Rob: Yes.
[22:57] Mike: … versus employees who will probably look and hence say, “What should I be doing to kind of move —
[23:01] Rob: Yeah.
[23:01] Mike: … forward?
[23:03] Rob: Right.
[23:03] Mike: So I felt like —
[23:03] Rob: Right.
[23:04] Mike: … I’m doing a lot more micromanaging than I would like to be but I don’t know if there’s another choice right now because it’s not like I have the money to hire — hire somebody full time.
[23:12] Rob: Right, you know, that’s what I’m going to say. I think as you move up to chain, what I’ve discovered because I’m starting to move up to chain with a few oDesk contractors with kind of some positions that I have and what I mean by moving up to chain is you start making money for my business that we’re working on and then you have a little more budget to pay them because you’re not just syncing money in to it. And so I’ve sort of hiring people that are a little more expensive than I would have originally hired. And I’m finding that those people tend to be more forward thinking even as contractors and I have people who are making suggestions about improving my business which is super helpful and it means that you’re exactly right, you don’t have to micromanage when you start getting good people like that but they tend to be a little more expensive for sure.
[23:55] Mike: Yeah, I mean I have one guy who’s been with me since January so he’s — he’s done things like that where he’ll see something and he’ll just do it and I’ve told him upfront in numerous times like, “Look, if you find something or see something that should be fixed or could be done better, just go ahead and do it.” And there’s been several times where he’s just like, “Oh and by the way just to let you know, I did this,” and I was like “Wow, that’s awesome. Great. [Laughter] You know, great. Thanks.” So he’s definitely aware of those types of things but, you know, I don’t — obviously, I don’t get that from everybody. One of the things that I’ve had the contractors worked on is the AuditShark’s sale site because I — the site is out there right now. It’s okay. It was just kind of meant to have a website but I’ve put a lot more thought and effort in to the website itself as a, you know, kind of sales machine at this point. So what I did was I hired out to design and had somebody build everything for me and then I had to put together. And basically, what I did was I generated all the content for all the different pages and one of the things I found was remember that survey, the Wufoo survey that I was running a couple of months ago?
[24:55] Rob: Yup.
[24:56] Mike: What I did from that was I was trying to build like the FAQ page because most larger applications are semi complicated applications have an FAQ section. And what I did was I went through that and one of the questions in my survey was “What concerns or questions do you have about AuditShark?” or “Would you have about, you know, a service like AuditShark?” And I basically was able to fill out my entire FAQ based on what people answered there.
[25:23] Rob: Nice.
[25:23] Mike: Oh, the nice thing was it was people raising objections. I mean and that’s really what —
[25:29] Rob: Sure.
[25:29] Mike: … what the people were saying —
[25:30] Rob: It’s perfect.
[25:30] Mike: … is like, you know, “This is why I wouldn’t use this product.” And I was able to say, you know, somebody — somebody said “I would be concerned about the quality of the code,” for example or “I would be concerned about how trustworthy the application is.” And of course, you know, how do I answer that because I’m a small company and that basically just laid it out in the sale site and then the FAQ and just said, “Look, you know, I’m one person. I’m building this but here’s my online profile. Here’s my LinkedIn account. Here’s the podcast that I run. Here’s the conference that I helped run. I’m all over the internet. I have absolutely no intentions of starting my — my entire online identity over again.” And you know, and that’s basically what I’m kind of relying on for my initial trust. I think that it’ll change overtime as it becomes I’ll say more corporate and I established a lot more generalized credibility in the field but you know, for now, I don’t really have a whole heck of a lot to rely on. So…
[26:24] Rob: Right. And I think you’re — you’re ahead of the game because when I bought HitTail basically the trial to conversion funnel was just a bit small. I mean it was like, I don’t know, 1% or something of people who started trials converted. And one of the things that I did after I relaunched in January was e-mail. I had my VA e-mail everyone who canceled during their trial and asked why they canceled. And he did that for a few weeks and I got this great list of essentially were — they were objections. And so you already have that and you haven’t even launched yet. So that’s awesome. But what I did is I took those objections. I categorized them and there were seven different groupings basically and there were things like, “I don’t have time to use HitTail,” and so I said, “Okay. What’s the solution?” The solution is they should be able, you know, write articles with one-click and that’s why I built the one-click article feature.
[27:13] Another one was “I don’t understand the difference between this and Google Analytics,” or they’d say things like “I get the same information from Google Analytics.” And the fact is that it is just not true and so I was like, “Okay.” So the solution to this is to educate them. And so during the trial now, I had the 30-day trial, people receive about — it depends on how often you log in and some other things you do but you receive about between four and six e-mails during that 30 days. And some of them are purely educational on like SEO, you know, on content generation and other ones are — are more specifically to HitTail and so one of them is just two questions. So it’s kind of like the two most important questions I think people have and it has the questions that has kind of a one sentence answer. And then it says, “You know, here’s a link to a 60 seconds screencast that does even — an even better job in answering these questions specifically.”
[28:06] And so if they click through from the e-mail, they go on to my FAQ and there’s a big video, you know, that they can watch right in their browser and it answers that. It’s my voice. It’s me doing a screencast and I have Google Analytics on the left hand side and I have HitTail on the right and I show how you can have 1000 keywords someone found before in Google Analytics and HitTail has the same 1000 but then the suggestions are only twenty or thirty of those. Like it’s picked out the best ones you should target and that’s the key difference between the two things. So that’s just one example but there were like I said seven different objections essentially and that’s — those seven objections that I packaged together, you know, in a document, that became operation retention, right? And I talked a little about that a few episodes ago and that operation retention essentially doubled my conversion rate. The original 1% [Laughter] the trial to conversion rate went way up when I relaunched and I added credit card, you know, needing a credit card before a trial.
[29:00] But it had – still, it did not gone up as much as I wanted and so from there, I’ve now, you know, increased it by a hundred percent using this — this operation retention. So the nice part I mean the way it ties in to what you’re doing is you already have some of those objections. Certainly new ones will come up later. Once you launched, some people cancel, you know, you want to do the same thing and find out why they canceled. But you’re definitely ahead of the game on that to already have those and be able to put them in an FAQ and then I would suggest, of course, during their trial that you do like I did. You already have the info so you can just maybe call them out. You could put them right back. You could even put the text directly in to an e-mail, you know, and do one of the e-mails during the trial or you could link out to them. But definitely I have seen a noticeable increase in my conversion rate because you’re essentially able to communicate with people, you know, using the phrasing and the same questions that — that other people have had.
[29:46] Mike: Yeah and that’s been the great part of it. What I’m planning on doing the private beta that I’m doing is talking to people and asking them, you know, kind of what they’re objections are to the products then and help and use that to essentially set up the — the auto responder for when people do sign up and be able to send them some of those things upfront. I might actually — I might gather some of that information upfront and then not implement it and then wait a little while like wait maybe a month or two and just measure my conversion rate and then implement it and see what my conversion rate is afterwards because if I do it upfront, I’m not going to have any idea whether it had an effect or what kind of effect it had. I’m not real sure which way I’m going to go on that but, you know, it’s definitely something I plan on gathering.
[30:30] [Music]
[30:33] Mike: If anyone out there is using inDinero, they probably seen this already but basically inDinero decided that they were going to do away with their free plan. I mean we talked about it at MicroConf and you know, the idea is that if you’re going to be eliminating the plan or changing your pricing or something along those lines then typically what you do is you grandfather the people who were in that plan before hand and you just let them keep using it and then you start charging all of the new people. Well, they didn’t do that. They basically said, “All you people who are using the free plan, you have until July 31st and then we’re going to get rid of everything and you have to upgrade between now and then or you’re basically going to lose your data.” So I kind of understand, you know, I sent them an e-mail and said, “Look, what’s going on here? You know, this is a pretty unusual to see this kind of thing.” And I didn’t get a direct response back. I got this generic response from their CEO probably the next day or the day after kind of explaining their decision. But the initial contact that I got was just “Hey, by the way, you have to pay for this within the next thirty days or we’re going to close your account and delete all your data.”
[31:35] Rob: So they just fumbled, right? You can’t do that. If you’re — if you’re going to do that and cancel people’s accounts, you have to give them three months, six months. You got to give them a lot of notice. You’re still going to piss people off when you do that but then at least, you know, you’re giving them time to do it and I don’t see then — the logic of doing this. This really is the whole why free plans don’t work thing. Everyone thinks a free plan is a great idea. It’s going to be a great marketing approach but in the end, it rarely, rarely works unless you have doves of money in the bank and you know exactly what you’re doing, almost it never works. I’d say 99% of free plans that I see, they get removed. You can probably name a handful of free plans like Dropbox and — that’s the only one I can name right now but —
[32:16] Mike: Gmail. Gmail.
[32:16] Rob: Gmail, thank you. Well and Facebook is free, right? I mean there are free apps but these are enormous, enormous apps. If you don’t have apps with hundreds of millions of users or a huge bank account balance, it’s very unlikely that free plans work. And we talk about this before with like MailChimp. They have a free plan now but they didn’t have one for years until they were enormously profitable. And now that they are — I mean MailChimp is minting money basically. They have added —
[32:45] Mike: They handed it differently though. They handled it pretty differently.
[32:47] Rob: I know they added a free plan — they added a free plan back in. They didn’t have one to start and so they’ve added it. Now that they know their funnel, it’s optimized. They know how many free users will confer all the stuff. They can now afford to do that but to do it from the start and then cancel it like this, it’s — it’s bad news, man. And inDinero seems to do this. They seem to fumble the ball on this kind of hard, what do you call it? It’s like a decision. It’s a decision that you make that’s going to piss people off and they don’t seem to be able to handle it very well.
[33:14] Mike: And like I — I would have been okay with it if they sent me an e-mail like before they even did it, you know, like I understand its decisions like this they sometimes have to be made and I would have been okay with it if I gotten an e-mail that says, “Hey, look. We’re really sorry. We put up this free plan and not only is it not working now but we are actively losing money. And we need people’s help and this is what we’re going to do. We’re got — we have to start charging for this plan if you really want it and we’re going to leave it in place until the end of the fiscal year,” because this is financial data so the problem is that because they did it after I forget when I got the e-mail, I’m pretty sure that it was last week, but it was basically after the six-month mark.
[33:54] So basically most banks and stuff, they only let you go back six months after that — or three months and — and pull out the data electronically once you get past that three or six-month mark depending on the back, it’s kind of a pain in the neck to go back and get stuff from beforehand. So like even if you’re doing QuickBooks or pull in transactions through QuickBooks, a lot of them only allow you to go back three months, so that means that there’s like three months of transactions that I would have to manually pour over some place else.
[34:21] Rob: Yeah.
[34:21] Mike: And it’s just like you’re totally screwing your “customer-base” who kind of helped make you popular enough to get you to the point that you are. And I got no notice and that’s really what pisses me off about it. It’s like I got no notice. It’s financial information and then say, “Oh, and by the way, if you don’t want to lose this, you know, you’re going to have to pay us, you know, $30 a month.” And I basically have to until the end of the year. I’m not happy about it. I already signed up. The other thing that they had said in their e-mail was “Oh, you can log in and you can get your data.” Well they replaced the log in with a popup like a modal popup. They come up and says, “You know, your free trial has expired. Please enter your credit card information.” See, you can’t even get your data out unless you pay.
[35:01] Rob: Yeah, yeah, that’s — that’s a bummer. Have you e-mailed — I wonder if you e-mailed them directly if they had export your data but —
[35:06] Mike: I did and they did —
[35:08] Rob: Yeah.
[35:08] Mike: … sent it to me. And they said —
[35:09] Rob: Okay.
[35:09] Mike: … “Oh that’s a bug we’re fixing it,” but…
[35:11] Rob: Right. In full disclosure, I have three inDinero accounts that I’ve — that we’ve been paying for; the Micropreneur Academy and MicroConf has one and then I have one for all of my Numa group businesses and DotNetInvoice has one because that’s a separate partnership. And so I’ve liked inDinero. I like some of the stuff they do. I think we commented a couple of months ago about how they kind of flub the thing around tax time where they removed a bunch of or a couple of different types of categories and it basically wracked my data right as tax time was coming and then I e-mailed them and didn’t get back to me. It took them like ten days to get back to me. And I had — I spent like three or four hours doing manual updates to it. So that made me mad.
[35:49] But in general, they — they have hustled and they’ve done a decent job at the product and it is one of the better products out there for doing this, so I’ve always cut them a lot of slack but this kind of thing is in my opinion and I’m not even — I don’t have a free plan so I’m not like directly being affected by this but this is — it’s a bad sign for me, right? It’s a bad sign that they aren’t being more careful with the kind of changes that they’re making to their apps and giving people more of an opportunity to — to get their data and to upgrade gracefully and that kind of stuff. Do — we received an e-mail right? Someone suggested a different app that does something similar?
[36:23] Mike: Yes, somebody sent an e-mail. Well, actually it was unrelated. They had sent an e-mail to us commenting about episode 85 where we’re talking about free and low cost solutions for entrepreneurs and it was called Wave Accounting. And it looks largely similar to inDinero. I haven’t signed up for it yet. I probably will but it looks very, very much like inDinero except that it is free. Basically, the way they make money off of it is kind of like Mint where they make recommendations and suggestions to you for different products and then they get paid commissions on those products.
[36:58] Rob: Right. Yeah, I got to be honest, with then trying to launch with free I’m very skeptical. I would not, personally, would not —
[37:05] Mike: No, it’s —
[37:05] Rob: … put my accounting on it because I know they have a revenue model but they’re going to hit scale and if they don’t, they’re going to come back and probably pull the same thing that inDinero has.
[37:12] Mike: They — they — I don’t know. They’re claiming they’re getting tens of thousands of users signed up every month and they’ve — I don’t know how long they’ve been around. I haven’t really dug that far in to it.
[37:22] Rob: Sure.
[37:22] Mike: But I’m definitely going to start looking at it.
[37:24] Rob: I’m just telling you I’m —
[37:26] Mike: I agree.
[37:26] Rob: … personally hesitant to base my business accounting because of how complex it is on an app that that is free. But I would prefer to pay. If Wave was this good and they charge me and I was able to pay, I would prefer to do that. And obviously not for — like for an app like Facebook, I’ve, you know, I would prefer to use it for free because that’s how it is and it doesn’t — doesn’t matter if Facebook went away, it wouldn’t bother me. But if I’m in Wave Accounting and I’m six months in and suddenly something catastrophic happens or they have to shut down because they don’t have money or they, you know, pull this — this thing like inDinero did and they suddenly want to charge everybody and they’re going to lock my data up then, you know, that’s not going to work.
[38:02] Mike: Yeah, I mean for me, it’s not about having to pay for it. It really isn’t. It’s about —
[38:06] Rob: No, like hey —
[38:06] Mike: … how it was handled. I don’t mind paying for it and I mean this is — the business that I have this for is more of a shell company at this point and I’m just not — I’m not really using the data but I kind of need —
[38:18] Rob: Yeah.
[38:18] Mike: … to have it some place. So I threw it in — in inDinero because I knew that it was going to be under their fifty-transaction a month limit.
[38:24] Rob: Right.
[38:25] Mike: So —
[38:25] Rob: They’re not grandfathering thing it is, that’s a big deal.
[38:28] Mike: Yup. I got to tweet about it and you know, from them saying, “Sorry, please contact our e-mail support,” “Sorry you’re unhappy, please contact our e-mail support.” I think that they could do a better job handling it. It’ll be up more of upfront about things but I don’t know, whatever.
[38:42] Rob: Yeah. You know, I had to shut down HitTail’s free plan after I acquired it because it was just tanking the server. There were so many people using it for free that had been using it for years and years. And I basically I approached them with kid gloves as what I tried to do. I mean just e-mailing, letting them know they had a long time to — as much time as I could give them, I could — they could export their data. I offered them a discounted plan, you know, I kind of went the whole nine yards and was apologetic and said it was — I mean the reason that thing was having outages was could — which because there was too much load on the server and there wasn’t enough revenue coming in. So I’ve been through this myself and I wasn’t able to grandfather people in. There was a very real reason why I wasn’t able to grandfather people in but at least I won’t say I did it perfectly. Certainly, I had a few complaints but I guess I thought — it seems like I thought through it a little more because I knew people are going to be upset. I almost — it almost seems like inDinero maybe didn’t think anyone would be that upset about this.
[39:35] Mike: I — I don’t know like I said I’ve been — there’s — there’s a few different things. One was being completely locked out and not being able to get back in the short timeline, you know, their complete lack of notice. I mean if it been three months or six months or something like that, that’d be different or if they just said, “Look, in October or November or something like that, then we’re going to have to stop offering this free plan,” but it was just — there was no notice or whatsoever and then just the way that they’ve handled it since then, I just turn — it turns me off to them completely at this point.
[40:03] [Music]
[40:06] Rob: Well, listener if you have a question or a comment, you can call it in to our voicemail number at 888-801-9690 or e-mail us at questions@startupsfortherestofus.com. Our theme music is an excerpt from “We’re Outta Control” by MoOt, used under Creative Commons. Subscribe to this podcast in iTunes by searching for Startups or via RSS at StartupsfortheRestofUs.com where you’ll also find a full transcript of each episode. Thanks for listening. We’ll see you next time.
Episode 87 | Whether to Build Multiple Websites, Creating Residual Income and How to Run a Beta
Transcript
[00:00] Rob: On today’s episode of Startups For The Rest of Us, we’re going to be talking about whether you should have multiple websites for multiple products and some ways to generate residual income. This is Startups For The Rest of Us: Episode 87.
[00:12] [Music]
[00:21] Rob: Welcome to Startups For The Rest of Us, the podcast that helps developers, designers and entrepreneurs be awesome at launching software products, whether you’ve built your first product or you’re just thinking about it. I’m Rob.
[00:29] Mike: And I’m Mike.
[00:30] Rob: And we’re here to share our experiences to help you avoid the same mistakes that we’ve made. What’s the word this week, Mike?
[00:35] Mike: I have completed the code merge that was giving me absolute nightmares last week. [Laughter]
[00:39] Rob: Oh, the merge. So to give the listeners a little background, you had a couple of developers working and like they were both checking coding that would conflict.
[00:46] Mike: Yeah.
[00:46] Rob: Is that right? And you would have to do manual merging? Why wasn’t Subversion or Git handling that?
[00:51] Mike: It’s because it was the Visual Studio’s .Designer files which Microsoft for some reason decides that they’re going to reorder things when they go back in to the designer files. So if you two different people make changes, you’re not guaranteed that the changes in each of those files are going to be in the same places and because it’s kind of an auto-generated file, there’s not much you can do about it. So I actually wrote a utility that would sort the contents of the file and make it so that it was a lot easier to merge.
[01:19] Rob: How interesting. Yeah, I never ran in to that. I think when I was on big teams doing .NET development we use Vault or we did used Perforce but we had the lock file checked. So there if you check something out, it was locked to avoid this kind of thing.
[01:33] Mike: Yeah.
[01:34] Rob: You know, so two people couldn’t edit the file at the same time and maybe that’s why — maybe that’s why they did it at those companies.
[01:39] Mike: It could be. It could just be the type of file too. I mean because everything else merged fine. It was just a couple of .Designer files and a couple of .resx files and you know, I found a utility that would sort the resx files so it’s a lot easier to manage but the .Designer file, I couldn’t find a utility for that. So I just — I wrote one. It took me probably two or three hours to write it where it’s going through by hand. I probably spend six or eight hours before I just kind of gave up [Laughter] and turned to writing a code.
[02:06] Rob: Yeah, that’s brutal. So I guess it’s been about three and a half weeks now, I launched the article feature, one-click articles on HitTail and it’s continuing to do well. I finally sent out an e-mail to all the paying customers. Before that I basically just had a splash screen when people logged in that they would see, you know, articles were available but about a week ago, I finally sent an e-mail to everybody who’s paying and they, you know, continue to ramp up. So I think we’ve done over sixty articles in like twenty five days. So it’s been a nice pace and as a result, the lifetime value of my customers has, you know, assuming this pace keeps up as increased quite a bit. So it’s definitely been, I mean the entire goal really is to increase the lifetime value so I have more leeway when acquiring customers that I can do more creative things and some things are getting little more expensive.
[02:56]So it’s been — been a good experiment. We have had three kind of returns. One I was able – we were able to fix. My admin fixed it himself and then actually, the other one he fixed as well. There’s only one where we had to… gave someone’s money back or we asked for kind of a rewrite. That’s what we’re going to do is have a hundred percent money back guarantee on the article quality. So I actually, to be honest, I expected by the time we got to sixty articles, that there would had been a lot more just manual labor like trouble, you know, support issues, keeping that like an articles or just different things that had happened and so far, it’s just been kind of a walk in the park. I’m knocking on wood right now because I don’t want to jinx it but so far I’m really happy with the level of effort we try to expand versus the revenue that we’ve received from this feature.
[03:41] Mike: And you kind of did a soft launch with it too, right? I mean it’s not like you just blast it out to everybody and said, “Hey, there’s this brand new feature that we think you’re going to love.”
[03:48] Rob: That’s true. Yeah, the soft launch was just the splash screen and so it was very slow going because only thirty to fifty people log in a day and so some trickled in for several days and you’re right, I did fixed several issues during that time and so by the time I e-mailed, gee, as close to a thousand people that really had helped that I had fixed those things, you know, that I hadn’t just on a big launch without tweaking it first.
[04:10] Mike: Cool. I think that by the time we record the next podcast, I’m going to have a definitive date for when I’ll be starting my close beta for AuditShark.
[04:18] Rob: I love it. So that will be next week. We can have a count down timer.
[04:22] Mike: Great.
[04:22] Rob: Mike’s timeline.com and it’ll be a JavaScript count down timer. I like the idea.
[04:27] Mike: Isn’t there some website where you can — you go there and you have to pledge something or you give them a picture of you from high school and you have to meet your launch date and if you don’t meet it, they tweet it out and they e-mail it out to all your friends and family.
[04:42] Rob: I like this. If you know that URL –someone send it to me.
[04:46] Mike: About the other thing is I think along with my launch date, I’ll at least know what the date is but I’m definitely going to start my closed beta program on that date and then I’ll probably give myself maybe four or six weeks to give myself time to get some feedback from people and talk to people and get some of the different bugs and stuff fixed but I’m feeling good about it. I mean things are — things at the back end are starting to really come together with the code merge that I did and the guys had been making really good progress on the back end code. And it’s just been more of — I’ll say it, I feel like more like a project manager than actually a developer at this point.
[05:19] Rob: Right. And when your tight on time, sometimes it’s the best way to be.
[05:23] Mike: Uh huh. And I switched over to four by ten hour days for my consulting work for the next month or so. So that will give me an extra day every week to work on stuff and I’m still working on things in the evenings to get everything done. But so far things are progressing nicely.
[05:36] Rob: Nice, four tens. That’s a nice schedule.
[05:39] [Music]
[05:42] Rob: All right, so shall we dive in to our first question?
[05:44] Mike: Yeah, what we got on deck?
[05:45] Rob: Our first one is from Andrew and he says, “Hi, Rob and Mike. I’m in a process of launching my first SaaS product and the help you guys give on the podcast has been invaluable. While researching and developing my app, I came across another product opportunity in the same niche. I’ve already coded the second product and it’s ready for launch. I want to launch this product with the goal of bringing in some cash as well as building another source of potential customers while I finish coding my original idea. My question is whether I should launch this as a standalone product with its own website or as part of a suite of products that would eventually include both applications. There will be a big crossover in the original content I can create and blog around the two products. So from a marketing stand point, I’m leaning towards the later approach which is the single site that has two products. What are the advantages and disadvantages you can see for each approach?”
[06:37] Mike: I think it’s a tough question. I’m not real sure which direction I would go with this but I think that I might lean more towards one site and then kind of split it in to a couple of different subdirectories and that would be more for I think technical reasons than anything else. It probably would also give you a little more credibility in the website itself because it is a new product and credibility is one of those things that is I think a little difficult to establish early on but if you have two different products with different marketing material around them on the same website, then it tends to lend each credibility to the website itself. If you have your own website that is essentially forming social proof for the website but at the same time it can work because you do have the two products there and the people who look at your website and they see that you have two products, they’ll say, “Oh, this company is legitimate,” “They have a legitimate product,” “They have, you know, legitimate customers presumably” and it does reinforce that a little bit.
[07:31] But I also wonder how difficult it’s going to be to do both of them at the same time because I’ll be honest, I mean I’m in the middle of doing multiple things at the same time and it’s very, very difficult. So I think my advice would probably be to start with one product on the site and build it for just the one product and then integrate the second in to it when you’re ready. I don’t think that trying to do both at the exact same time is probably the way to go on this one.
[07:57] Rob: Yup, I agree with that last part. I think trying to do multiple products is the kiss of death and the only way you can do multiple at once is if they’re like information products and you don’t have the support and adding features and all that stuff to go with it. You can kind of write it like an e-book or something or screencast. You can build it and then it’s done and you know, you don’t really need to put a bunch of time in to it. Yeah, I do think it’s definitely a mistake to try to do both at once. And I also would agree that you want to get one of them out there, get it marketed, get — you know, get the blogging going, get the SEO going, get whatever other channels you have going and then introduce the second one to add a later time once you’ve once you feel like you know the market better and really hesitant to put two products on one website. And there’s a bunch of reasons why but I think the most prominent one is that there’s a lack of focus.
[08:42] Anytime I come to a website and it’s trying to sell me multiple things, it doesn’t do a very good job at any of them. So as an example, Mike, you and I, basically have kind of a suite of products if you think about it. We have the podcast. We have a conference, MicroConf. I have a book that’s related to the same genre. We have the Academy. These things were all related, right? So in theory, you could say well we lend credibility to each other so could just have a single landing page that’s like the Micropreneur landing page and then have a drop down list or have four things in the top and have — and have conference, book, you know, online startup school and podcast, But when you think about that, it doesn’t lend itself to a lot of things. Number one, it doesn’t lend itself to SEO very well because the content is not highly focused and Google likes small articles that are focused.
[09:27] And the other thing is it just — it overwhelms people when they arrived at the website. There’s too many decisions, too many choices and people often wind up just doing nothing. There’s too many paths to follow. What I would recommend if it’s at all possible is to create basically a chain or a long funnel and so you figure out which of these products is lower cost and which of them people are more likely to buy first. And then you set up a website for that and you market the crap out of that and you get, you know, people to buy the product. You support the product. You provide way more value than people pay for and now you have these paying customers and now, just like we do at the podcast and just like we do with MicroConf and the Academy and the book, it’s like you can kind of start tying them together. And you can say, “Hey, since you bought this, I provide quality stuff. You have the experience. You know that I took care of you and now, here look at this other thing I created that’s equally as good and it’s in a similar niche.” So I almost see this as a more of a back end product so you’re doing them in serial rather than trying to market them in parallel.
[10:24] Mike: I think one of the situations where I could see this working really well is if the products are, you know, if one of the products is actually a plugin for the other product or there is a huge integrations between them but as you said, I mean you need to start somewhere I mean even with something like, you know, the products from 37signals. You know, you look at the marketing material for them and they’re really on their own and it’s only until you get in to them and you start using them that you see that there’s additional integration points in them and that you can sort of leverage data between them and kind of stay in one interface. It’s pretty well hidden I’ll say. But I definitely agree with what you said that trying to separate them and if they are in the same niche market trying to figure out which one people are going to buy first and then use the second product as essentially an up-sell from the first.
[11:11] Rob: All right, hope that helps. Thanks for the question Andrew. Our second question today is from Ryan Higgins and he’s asking about top performing residual income generators. He says, “Hey, guys. I really dig your show. Appreciate all of the grassroots tips and have employed many in my online work. Over the past three years I’ve had success selling professional services online but I find this time consuming and often very demanding as I promise response to online clients within twenty hours from receiving their e-mails. I’ve also created modest revenue through AdSense ads and downloadable e-books I’ve written on various subjects. To be honest, I much prefer this later business platform as it seems to run automatically whether I tend to it or not unlike the online services part of my work.” So obviously, he’s talking about products versus services, right? It’s consulting dollar for hours versus building a product that’s much more leverageable.”So my question is what are some other creative ways you’ve seen people generate self regulating income online? And keep up the great work. Ryan, a Canadian in Shanghai.”
[12:10] I’ll take a crack at this one first. So Ryan is basically asking about, you know, other ways that he can monetized his knowledge and monetize his experience but not just trade dollar for hours. And obviously, there’s a big challenge upfront when you’re trying to build the products it’s that you need to find out products that people need or want and you have to spend the time to do it and there is a risk that they may not buy. And that’s where, you know, consulting is such an easier road because you can just have someone pay you X dollar for certain amount of hours and you’d just kind of cash it upfront. But on the flip side, that doesn’t — it doesn’t scale at all. It’s not leverageable over time. It’s just it’s not a way to really build a sustainable business. And so I guess Ryan is looking for other creative ways for people who generate online income and I mean that’s — that’s basically like this entire podcast is about and kind of what the Lifestyle Business Podcast and Smart Passive Income and Foolish Adventure.
[13:04] I mean I would listen to all of those podcast. It’s basically about taking your expertise and starting blogs, podcasts, writing e-books, building software, providing value and in a productized form that, you know, helps people get what they need done. And you can see this all over the place. I think maybe the best example I’ll bring up is like Foolish Adventure. If you never listened to that podcast Tim Conley has this thing called Three Product Approach and it involves having a free product and that’s typically a blog or a podcast that you’re giving away for free and then your second product is also free but you ask for an e-mail address so that’s where you build your newsletter up. And then your third product is when you sell. So that’s typically like maybe an e-book. Sometimes it can be a membership site and that’s his flow and he kind of came up with that concept then it gets — it’s really good.
[13:52] So I mean that’s one way to do it. I think that’s a creative way but I think, you know, there are certainly other ways. Mike and I throw a conference and it’s not, you know, massive revenue-generating thing but it is something that that raises our profiles and it’s fun to do and it does make some money now. So that’s — that could be a creative way. Obviously, writing e-books, writing physical books like I did, you know, paper back books and starting online membership websites are all great ways and if you have desire and you have experience in software, then that’s of course what we, you know, that’s something that Mike and I focus a lot on, on this podcast is building apps, building plugins, building something of value. I mean we know number — a number of entrepreneurs who’ve seen a lot of success in the Micropreneur Academy building WordPress plugins for folks, for in all types of niches, building SaaS applications, building desktop applications, building mobile apps, all that kind of stuff. So you know, I hope that gives you some starting points.
[14:43] Mike: One of the things that you mentioned kind of in passing was something I was going to bring up which is membership sites. And it sounds to me like what you’ve said was “I’ve created some modest revenue through AdSense ads and downloadable e-books I’ve written on various subjects.” And if those e-books are on related subjects, then I think you could probably take a lot of that material and put it in to some sort of a membership site where you’re charging people, obviously, to be a monthly member of that site and provide them access to that material but because it is a membership website, I believe that you could probably charge them significantly more than if you’re going to take all that information and just distribute it as an e-book. So essentially you are would be able to migrate the content from your e-book and into the membership website. And I think you obviously you want to add additional things in to the membership website not just, you know, do a direct copy from the e-book that could significantly boost revenue for you from that particular, you know, line of products as well.
[15:45] The other thing I would mention is that if you already created some sort of a modest revenue through some of these e-books, I would look in to trying to distribute them further and trying to get them out there. I mean it seems to me like a lot of the products that people have with things like this is they get to the marketing stage and they don’t do very well with it and they give up too easily and they don’t necessarily find the upper balance of where they can take something. So a lot of times they’ll give up early and you know, just not push it far enough and they’ll say, “Well, I need to look for a new product because this one has tapped out.” And the reality is it may not have tapped out, you know, are you sure that it has. And so those are the things that I would definitely look in to as whether or not those e-books can be pushed further, whether he could do additional marketing around them and increase the monthly revenue from them.
[16:30] Rob: Nice. So I give generalities on this one and you give the specifics. High five.
[16:34] Mike: Virtual high five. [Laughter]
[16:36] Rob: All right. Our next question is from Rasmus in Denmark and he says, “My product and question is around generating a valid amount of relevant traffic within a reasonable period of time to be able to validate my idea. I know you briefly mentioned AdWords to buy traffic but are there other channels or sources of relevant traffic. It would also be relevant to know more about the AdWords source, for example, volume, time span, et cetera as well as what volume you see as a reasonable validity. I know about setting up AdWords campaigns and get throwing keyword limits et cetera. Personally, I don’t have an established audience like you guys have. So how do you validate an idea if you’re starting from scratch? Would love to hear a podcast allocated to this topic. All the best, Rasmus from Denmark.”
[17:18] Mike: So I think that the things that we’ve talked about previously definitely applies to this. I mean, you know, you’re not going to be able to do SEO and drive a lot of traffic in a reasonable amount of time and I’ll define reasonable as in, you know, two to four weeks, something like that because SEO does take time. You’re going to do some stuff and it’s going to take Google two or three weeks to just either indentify your website or to put in to the rankings and then you’re going to have just take time to figure it out what changes you need to make. And it’s just, you know, a long convoluted process. I think you’re much better off trying to identify people who you want to target and then either use AdWords, Facebook ads or Twitter advertisement to try and drive traffic to your website. And from there obviously, a number of different methods you can use to try and figure out whether or not your idea has legs but two that I would look at is one, seeing if they’re actually clicking through for to the buy now button and then another one is if you will put some sort of a survey out there and start asking people, you know, is this something you pay for and how much would you pay for it. Maybe put a newsletter out there.
[18:22] And I wouldn’t do all three these things at the same time. You know, maybe put the pricing page there and after they click through for pricing or through the buy now button say, “Sorry, this is unavailable but sign up for our newsletter or take the survey.” Or you could kind of chain them together and you have buy now button and then sign up for the newsletter and then after that you can ask them to take a survey. But definitely don’t put all three of them on the same page at the same time. You want to chain them together to get better results for that. But those are the types of things that I would look at. I know that Rob and I both have a decent number of Twitter and RSS subscribers for the podcast or the blogs and everything but I don’t see those as very big generators for at least half of the business ideas that I have. I just don’t see those as legitimate ways to send traffic mainly because it’s untargeted.
[19:10] Rob: Yeah, I would agree. Typically an audience like the one we have isn’t actually that great for the products we’re launching. I experienced very low signup rates from blog readers and Hacker News readers when I relaunched HitTail in January and that was not unexpected. I mean I just don’t expect. You know, a lot of people are just getting started out to really want to pay monthly for a service that they probably can’t use until — until down the line. So Jason Cohen experienced the same thing when he launched WP Engine and he said they got — he got a handful of customers from his blog audience. What an audience gets you more of is it gets you the ability to partner up with people, to raise funding. It’s much, much more about relationships than it is about actually, you know, driving traffic and trying to get people sign up for a mailing list for a product that’s not related to it.
[19:54] I have a couple of thoughts on this. First thing is Rasmus, you got to ask is your audience online is your niche that you need to reach? Are they online at all? Because if they’re not then, you know, all this online stuff we’re talking about just isn’t going to work. You’re going to have to resort to a more offline stuff. So if he can determines they actually are hang out online, I wanted to take a step back and say, don’t just rely on driving people to landing pages and getting their e-mail addresses. Talk to people like try to meet with them in person if they are within driving distant from you. Try to get them on Skype to have a conversation. It is so much more valuable for you and for that person if you can actually have a conversation instead of just a simple e-mail survey or simple e-mail conversation even. I would say that well all the stuff that I’m going to list and Mike talked about is good and it’s good for driving some traffic and getting an idea, getting a list that you can then contact, that’s not the end goal. The end goal is actually engaging with people and having conversations.
[20:48] I’m going to throw out some ideas. I think the first thing you should do is look at if there any conferences within a few hundred mile radius of you that caters to this audience and try to go to that conference so they can meet people in person and have discussions with them, get and idea if what you’re building is at all going to serve them. I would also look for forums that cater to this audience. Obviously, examples to that in our niche since I know them because I hang there or things like Hacker News and you could totally do an Ask HN if you have a product coming out and you can post a link there and that would bring people to the landing page, you know, you can ask them what they think to the idea. You can go on Corra and you can either ask questions or you can answer questions. And you’ll know that none of these are scalable solutions. You’ll never just going to turn a dial in this and bring million of visitors but that’s not the point. At this point, you have to do things that don’t scale and it’s going to take a lot of time. You either need a bunch of time or need a bunch of money and I’m assuming that yet at this point, you don’t have a bunch of money. So I definitely think Corra is under use for that.
[21:44] I also think that creating an infographic right off the bat. I mean you can get an infographic created a pretty nice one from between two and three hundred bucks. I found people both on oDesk and Elance to do that. That’s a great way to drive 30,000 people to your website in 24 hours if it goes viral. And if you make it good, you make it for that niche. You know, it’s a nice way to draw a lot of traffic for a small spend. You brought up AdWords, yes, its the old main stay. If you’re in a tough niche at all that’s competitive, you’re going to pay three to five bucks a click. So AdWords these days for me is more of a last resort but, you know, it could be something you can look in to and I think those four other ideas I’m going to try.
[22:23] One, I would look in to Facebook ads since the demographic targeting is so good and that you can test a lot of ads at once. It’s not about where to go. You can get some pretty cheap clicks there and then StumbleUpon. You can get 10 cent clicks but you can’t just send people to a landing page. You have to send them to some content like an engaging by a blog post that then links over to a landing page. If you send them just to a landing page, they will bail. And then the other two Mike mentioned actually. He mentioned Twitter ads which I have heard some people getting some decent success and then I guess the last one Mike didn’t mention which is Buy Sell Ads and that’s the display advertising. You buy them month at a time and they have your bunch of different niches now and you can spend as little as maybe twenty bucks and you’ll get a fairly low click-through rate because they are banner ads but you can definitely get niche traffic from a service like that.
[23:11] So those were like six or eight ideas kind of off the top of my head. But this to be honest, this process right here is what I did when I was creating the HitTail marketing plan. For the months leading up to acquiring HitTail, I would sit down for fifteen minutes at a time and sketch out a huge list of ways that I thought that I might be able to market HitTail and I just kept stuffing them in to that doc. And overtime it became a really good corpus of all these ideas. There’s about twelve pages of it and I’ve been working through it since I acquired it eight months ago. And I recommend if you’re thinking about launching your product, think about doing the same thing. Make the huge list and then start peeling off ideas and using them, you know, to send traffic at the landing page and some of them are going to work well and then you’re going to reuse those when you get to, to actually launching your product. So I realized that’s a lot of information but I hope that helps Rasmus.
[23:59] All right, for our fourth and final question today, we have an e-mail about beta phase. It’s from Kevin Marshall and he says, “I was wondering if you guys could speak a little bit about closed beta test versus just letting everyone all in at the beginning. I see a lot of startup websites in a beta stage. Sometimes they even close it off at the start and require you to sign up for a request invitation. Sometimes you may get that invitation, yet often you don’t. Overall, my question is how important is it to even have this testing phase? Is a customer more turned off because they see and realize their inner beta or they’re more turned off when they realize that a site they felt was fully polished and ready to roll is not?”
[24:40] Mike: I’ll take a first crack at this one. I think that if you’re putting together a beta and you are telling people that they have to sign up to get an invitation request and they’re not actually sending those out, my inclinations I believe that they’re doing something wrong. I don’t know if that’s a good idea. I don’t think it’s a good marketing tactic. I don’t think that in 95% of the cases that that generates any sort of anticipation or demand for the product. That’s the sort of thing that Apple could pull off or Microsoft could pull off. It’s not something that much smaller companies like us can do. It’s just doesn’t work. The purpose of a beta is usually to flesh out the bugs and make sure that there are no major problems that are going to be encountered by people once you open up the gates. And I think that if you’re going to do a beta, I think you typically wanted to do some sort of a closed beta first. I don’t know if having an open beta is really going to do anything for you because you’re really just not getting the information that you want from people. If you have a close beta, then you can essentially hand select those people kind of categorize them by the type of people they are.
[25:46] So if you had a mailing list and you are asking people information about them before you got them on to mailing list and you can essentially categorize those people. You might say, “Okay, well I want to grab five people from the low end category who would be on the lowest plan five from the middle and five from the top end. And you would essentially arrange it so that hopefully, you can get all five of those in there from each of these categories. But if you can’t, you go to the next person in line and the next person until you find people who are willing to actually sign up and use the product whether they pay for it or not is a different story. I don’t know. I have to give a little bit of thoughts to that but I also think that it depends a lot on the product itself as to whether or not you want people to try and pay for it. It depends mostly I think on where in the product development process you are and whether or not you’re confident that there’s a market for it.
[26:35] So part of it comes back to the purpose of the beta and what your purpose is because different people have different reasons for running that beta. Some people, they’d just want to use it to, you know, flesh out any major bugs or many major process problems that are in the software. So there’s other people who want to use it to actually test the code because they didn’t test it themselves or they aren’t really sure about it and there’s people who are trying to get people in to the beta program to essentially test to make sure that they have a product that was worth selling. And if you’re at that point, then it’s kind of too late for that. I mean you really should have done a lot of that leg work upfront but even if you haven’t, working with people individually is going to give you a lot better feedback than if you just open up the floodgates and try and get a lot of people in.
[27:17] If you segment your audience in to groups of ten or fifteen people what you’ll find is that all it takes is I think the number is twelve people to individually talk to them one on one and those twelve people will give you exactly what you need which is the same as you would get from having more of an open beta from like ten groups of fifteen people because people are going to be much more willing to give you that individual feedback that you’re really looking for if you interact with them one on one whereas if you’re doing something that’s more like a focus group where you have a lot of people in it they say, “Oh well, I’m not going to answer this. I don’t really have time. Somebody else would do it. I don’t have to.” So as soon as your response rate plunges and you have to talk to more people whereas if you — if you get down where you’re talking to people one on one, you’re individually working with these people who you’ve put in your beta program. You’re going to get the information back that you need is, you know, directly relevant to the goals that you put in place for that beta.
[28:13] Rob: Yup, you nailed it with that last one. It’s called the diffusion of responsibility and it’s psychological concepts that when, you know, it explain like when a group of people all get an e-mail, typically, most people will just not do anything with it but if you e-mail each person individually, then they know kind of your eyes on them and they’re much more likely to do something. I would agree with you. You’re going to get far better feedback if you have a much smaller group and you deal with people individually and you let them know whether you’re going to deal with them individually and that your beta list is only five people or your beta testing group is only five people or ten people. If I had a list, let’s say I launched was to 500 people, I would probably invite hand-pick five of them and they would either be friends who are in the niche or acquaintances who are in this niche that I’m targeting who are actually going to use the product and would pay for it long term or you know, if I didn’t have any of those, I would probably just randomly pick the top five of the list and e-mail them and invite them and let them know that it’s a very, very small group.
[29:11] This allows you to do a couple of things. One, it allows you to get a lot of detailed feedback because they’re going to be more willing to give it to you. It also allows you to kind of burn through your beta testers because you haven’t run a beta before what typically happens is you’re bringing a group of people and they look through the app and they look through and a lot of them find the same things, then you go away for a week and you fix all that stuff and you approved it. And then you come back to them and when you ask them again, they will tend to just go in for about three minutes and breeze through and make sure you fix the stuff they asked and that’s it and so you kind of do you burn through beta testers. They aren’t just unlimited resource but if you have that list of 500, you let five in, then you e-mail another five and you say, “Hey, this is like my second round of beta.” You kind of do the same thing with them and you get another around of feedback until you feel like you fix the major bugs and you fix the major usability issues.
[29:58] So kind of just to summarize I would definitely keep it small between five and ten people each round. I would only go multiple rounds if I needed to and I would keep the rounds as short as humanely possible. If you can do five days, seven day iterations, that’s what I would do. I would not do two-month long betas unless it was absolutely necessary. The other two points that I’ll touch on is what’s nice is if you get the beta testers in early and they like the app and you work with them one on one, you kind of build relationships and you build some early users and those early users can be real champions of your product long term. If they get in, they feel like they have a little bit of ownership, they’ll be the first ones, you know, when you launch, you can ask them to tweet it out or ask them to tell their friends. And they’re much more likely to do it then just this blanket list of 500 people because you’ve actually kind of build that kind of relationship.
[30:43] In terms of offering them a discount or comping, I say it would depend on how much work they actually give you. I think upfront, I would say, “Will you be a beta tester, spend some time and know in exchange for a lifetime discount on the product,” and I would just leave it at that and not specify it. And then some people are going to do so much work and give you so much of value that it’s going to just be worth comping them for life period, like I’ve done it in the past. It’s totally a no brainer and then other people are going to do less work and you know, maybe you give them 40% off or 50% for life assuming it’s a recurring product. I think the last point, the one that I didn’t cover is Kevin asked is this phase is even important to have, should you have a beta, a beta round. And I think even, you know, a simple as this article functionality that I just wrote in to HitTail was I mean it’s really just one single feature, even as simple as that was I essentially had a beta phase. It was only a week or two but it led a trickle of customers come in. There were absolutely bugs. There were usability issues. There were some minor things on certain browsers but having that was invaluable for when I kind of unleashed the firehose on it.
[31:50] And so yeah, if I was launching an entire product and I’d only done some usability and unit testing and you know, some integration testing but I really hadn’t had the actual users use it, I would be concerned with mailing out to my 500-person list and letting in a horde of people who I’m trying to sell the app to. I’ll be concern about doing that without having at least one round of testing and you know, preferably if some stuff was found going through another round until it — it just feels like it’s clean and it feels like the app is improved. I can almost guarantee you no matter how good the app is, no matter how good your feel it is, until you’ve done this round of testing and that an actual users use it, you are not going to uncover probably 70% of the issues that are going to rise as soon — as soon as people start doing it.
[32:33] [Music]
[32:36] Mike: If you have a question or a comment, you can call it in to our voicemail number at 1-888-801-9690 or you can e-mail it to questions@startupsfortherestofus.com. Our theme music is an excerpt from “We’re Outta Control” by MoOt, used under Creative Commons. You can subscribe to this podcast in iTunes by searching for Startups or via RSS at StartupsfortheRestofUs.com where you’ll also find a full transcript of each episode. Thanks for listening. We’ll see you next time.