Last month, I launched an AI code → docs tool to my 32k audience on X.
I got decent traffic and 20 signups but no buyers
I got roasted on Reddit too 🥹
This week, I tried again with a new product and strategy:
The new product is a social listening SaaS that uses AI to find leads (called Alertly, usealertly.com)
I threw up a landing page and posted about it and people started signing up (more than before) but obviously I’d learned that signups don’t mean validation.
So this time I added an additional offer - pre-pay now to jump to the front of the waitlist and get 30% off for life.
It worked! I got my first customer ~6 hours later
This is how I did it –
Landing page + pricing page as normal with a ‘Start Trial’ button that leads to a waitlist signup
Added a callout to jump the queue and join the founding members group and get 30% off for life (see it in action here: usealertly.com/signup)
I also have an automated email that goes out to the waitlist after a few days asking if they want to join the founding members group
This is awesome because:
Building an audience will help (a lot) BUT you still have to:
Building an audience also builds trust, I think people pay upfront because they trust me, I’ve shipped high quality products before and I’m accountable in public. Much harder to do if you have 3 followers and no track record I think.
Happy to answer questions in the comments
Really appreciate you sharing these honest lessons, Kyle! It’s a great reminder that real validation comes from actual paying users and building trust with your audience.
I’ve seen similar challenges in highly regulated spaces like healthcare compliance, where getting early adopters to commit can be tricky. At CompliAssistant, we’re working on making HIPAA and GDPR compliance simpler for SMBs using AI—helping teams focus on growth while staying secure.
Would love to hear from others in niche SaaS markets on how they’re balancing audience building with product validation. Thanks for sparking this conversation!
you should check out pretotyping by Alberto Savoia, he goes on about how to validate your idea with real customer data before actually building