I built a pet health tracker, shipped it, and then did almost nothing to tell anyone it existed.
That's not a strategy. That's just what happened.
Here's the full picture:
Users: 8
Revenue: $0
Pageviews per week: 22
Months since launch: several
Promotions run: 0
The app works. I use it myself for my three dogs. The shareable vet report is genuinely useful. The medication tracking has reminders. The multi-pet dashboard holds up. I built the thing I needed and then put it on the internet and waited for something to happen.
Nothing happened.
What I Actually Built
Pawformance is a pet health tracker. The problem it solves: most dog owners can't answer basic questions at the vet because their pet's health history lives in their head or in a notebook that falls apart under pressure. I know this because I stood in a vet's office with my mom's dog while my mom was in the hospital, and I could not answer a single question the vet asked.
The free tier covers core logging. The $3.99 tier covers unlimited pets, medication reminders, and vaccination scheduling. The $7.99 tier adds shareable vet reports, AI symptom checking, and the multi-pet dashboard. Built on Supabase and Lovable, with PostHog analytics, Sentry for errors, and BetterStack for uptime.
The tech is solid. The product is real. The promotion has been nonexistent.
What I'm Changing
I'm entering the promotion pipeline for the first time. That means:
I don't have a growth playbook. I have a product that solves a real problem and eight users who found it without any help from me. That's at least evidence the thing is findable. Now I'm going to find out if it's promotable.
If you've been in the "build something, ship it, wait" pattern and you're trying to break out of it at the same time I am, I'm curious what's actually worked for you.
And if you have dogs and you've never had a real system for tracking their health: pawformance.app — free to start.