I’ve noticed that many developers don’t really understand marketing and don’t know how to promote their products. They often choose to find a marketing partner to solve this, but that approach is inefficient—and in many cases, you also have to pay the partner a high fee.
So I built a marketing tool designed especially for indie developers. It’s very low-cost to use, but it can help you get results quickly.
Here’s how it works:
1.Click the link below and log in.
2.Enter your product’s website URL.
3.Get a complete marketing plan (just like one created by a marketing partner).
4.Choose to execute the plan or modify it.
5.Monitor the results in the dashboard and see how many people start visiting your website.
🔗 https://amplift.ai/?utm_source=indiehackers&utm_campaign=post_dec
If you’re interested in this product, leave a comment saying “Interested”. I’ll give you a personal access code so you can use it for free.
As a full-stack developer with over 20 years of experience, I’ve seen countless great tools die because of the "build it and they will come" mindset. You're hitting a very real pain point.
I just tried putting my own niche project (a medical AI assistant) through some similar logic, and the biggest challenge is always context. A generic marketing plan is easy, but a plan that understands the nuances of a specific industry—like healthcare regulations or high-barrier B2B niches—is hard.
My question: Does your tool help in finding the "micro-communities"? For someone like me who has the tech but lacks the marketing "muscle," finding exactly where the potential users hang out (beyond just "Twitter or Reddit") would be the ultimate value.
Interested! Would love to try it out and see if it can handle a 20-year veteran's skepticism!
You can use it for free now by logging in.
Additionally, we offer initial growth services; for a very low price, you can acquire your first batch of users. If you're interested, please contact [email protected].
(Please specify the product you want to promote, your maximum promotion budget, and the number of users you need to acquire initially in your email.)
Thanks for the quick reply! I'll definitely log in with google account and give it a spin with my medical AI project.
Regarding your growth service: getting the "first batch of users" is exactly where most devs (including me) get stuck. If the AI can actually pinpoint where hypertension patients or specialized doctors discuss guidelines, that would be a game-changer.
I'll check the dashboard first and might reach out to Nora once I have a clearer picture of my initial conversion funnel. Keep up the good work!
Interested
I've already launched the free features, and early users can use them for free simply by registering.
Great
Just tried it! The social listening feature is really impressive!
Honest feedback: as a first-time user, I found the dashboard a bit overwhelming. Lots of great data but wasn't immediately clear what action to take first. Also, couldn't tell what's free vs paid (guessing that's because it's beta).
This is a space I've been thinking about a lot, so it was awesome to see your approach. Best of luck with the launch!
Thank you for your feedback! I'm working on improving it. If you'd like to try the product, I'd be happy to offer you a special discount as a thank you for your support!
I'd love to try!
This comment was deleted 5 days ago.
Interested. Would love to try if could get a free code
Interesante, estoy trabajando en un proyecto pero no tengo creativos para promocionar.
This is a problem i have seen many people facing on Reddit just few moments ago. They developed the product and can't find the best ways to market it; don't know where their desired users are hanging out on the internet.
Anyway, this looks great and would give it a free try.
Of course! I've already launched the free features, and early users can use them for free simply by registering.
The problem you're solving is real - most developers build first and market later (or never). The "execute or modify" step is interesting since generic marketing plans usually fail because they don't account for what makes each product unique.
Curious about one thing: how does the AI handle products in crowded niches where the obvious marketing channels are already saturated? Does it identify less obvious angles, or does it default to the standard playbook?