In early October, I announced on Indie Hackers the launch of my new website, KetoHub, a recipe aggregator for keto meals. At the two month mark, I posted an update on the site's progress and got great feedback, so here's what was good, bad, and learnable about KetoHub's third month.
Improvements in December
New logo
The most visible change is that KetoHub now has a logo. Behold!
I primarily market KetoHub via Facebook groups (more on that below). I was embarrassed by how ugly the sharing link looked without a site logo:
I'd need a logo eventually, so I decided to try 99designs for the first time. It's a "design contest" site, so you describe a design you want, assign a prize value, then dozens or hundreds of designers submit options. The full prize money goes to the designer whose logo you select.
99design's lowest tier design contest cost $400. I justified the cost to myself in various ways, but then I woke up the next morning and realized I could have commissioned a freelance illustrator to make a logo for about $75. I was trying to de-ugly my Facebook links, but even a mediocre logo would have been sufficient. A $400 design contest was a bit overkill.
Oh well! Now I have a logo, and I like it. I probably would have preferred having an extra $325, but let's consider it a $325 lesson in website building.
Site redesign
I'm not a web developer, and I don't have a good eye for design. When I built the first version of KetoHub, the design was utilitarian with little attention to aesthetics.
In December, I read the book Hello Web Design by IH podcast alum, Tracy Osborn. It's a quick read, written for people in exactly my situation. It doesn't get bogged down in design theory but instead provides simple, practical tips for achieving a successful web design.
The book gave me good ideas for improving KetoHub's look. Here's the before and after on desktop:
And here's comparison on mobile:
Actually, as I write this and look at the mobile screenshot, the "after" shot looks worse. The logo and category buttons take up more than half of the screen's vertical space to the point where you can't even see even one recipe card.
Looks like I've got a bit more work to do...
50% increase in recipes
I added the popular recipe site Low Carb Yum to KetoHub's recipe index. This added over 500 new recipes to the site, bringing the total to 1,500. This was the largest increase in KetoHub recipes from any single keto site.
Visitor growth
KetoHub's visit stats are still small, but it saw exciting growth in December.
Compared to November, it received almost 8x as many unique users and 4.5x as many pageviews:
Finding users on Facebook
Facebook was, by far, the largest single source of new users. Of 1,372 visitors that discovered the site in December, 717 of them came from Facebook. I promoted the site on Facebook in two distinct ways.
Sharing in medium-sized groups
Facebook has hundreds of different keto groups. Some have close to a million members; others have as few as 20-30.
I saw the most efficient results in groups of between 200 and 1,000 members. I made posts like the following, being up front that it was my website and I'm looking for feedback:
The post above brought over 100 new users to KetoHub the day it was posted and continued to receive positive responses for days after.
Unfortunately, this doesn't seem to work in bigger groups. The larger the community, the more sensitive their administrators are to self-promotion. I tried making similar posts to groups with 100k+ members and found myself booted within minutes.
KetoHub as the answer to your question
I also found success in using KetoHub as the answer to people's questions.
People frequently posted in these groups searching for recipes that met particular criteria. For example, when someone asked for keto breakfasts that exclude egg, I shared a link to a KetoHub search for all breakfasts that don't include egg as an ingredient:
For each post I responded to like this, only 10-20 people clicked the link. However, it's easier to find these types of posts than to constantly find new medium-sized keto groups to join. When I spent an hour scrolling through posts from different keto groups, I usually found between two and six opportunities to answer someone's question by linking to KetoHub. This translated to a total of 60-100 new clicks.
Biggest challenge: Retention
If the cost of 100 new users is an hour of shilling- er, promoting on Facebook, that's a great deal. Well, at least to someone like me who has yet to break 200 daily visitors. I'd gladly do that every day except for one problem: I'm losing users as quickly as I gain them.
The chart below is a cohort analysis from Google Analytics. Each row is a group of users that first visited the site in a particular week. Each column shows the percentage that returned to KetoHub in the subsequent week.
The numbers are abysmal.
A small percentage of users will stick around the week after they discover the site, but the percentage decreases each week. After four weeks, the percentage shrinks to zero.
Spenser Skates discussed retention on a recent episode of the Indie Hackers podcast:
...the standard baseline that I use with folks is that after the first day, after using it for a day, 40% of your new users should come back the next day, then 10% of those should still be around by day seven. If you're hitting those benchmarks, then you have a good product, but if you're below those then you should be much more introspective and ask yourself, why is it people are not coming back enough and spend time understanding that.
-Spenser Skates, IH Podcast #40: "Learning How to Be a Successful Founder"
I'm far below these numbers, so my focus in January will be increasing retention.
Next steps
Conduct more user interviews
When I initially launched, I had keto-dieting friends speak to me on the phone as they tried the site for the first time. I used their feedback to improve the site, but now I want to focus less on first impressions and more on sustained usage.
I'll be conducting interviews with strangers who follow keto, then doing a follow-up interview a week later to find out why they did or did not continue using KetoHub after the first day.
Read about retention
I've started reading Hooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products by Nir Eyal. I listened to his interview on the Indie Hackers podcast last year and found him insightful. I'm hoping the book will give me ideas for incentivizing my users to return to KetoHub regularly.
Set up better event tracking analytics
I'd like to build a better understanding of how visitors use KetoHub. I'm currently using Google Analytics, which is nice, but not very powerful. I'd like to ask questions such as, "Of users who return every week, how often do they filter by category? How often do they search?"
Courtland Allen has said good things about Amplitude, and I fit in their free tier, so I'll check them out.
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This article originally appeared on mtlynch.io.