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Day 4 of launching LifePilot — honest numbers and what I've learned

I launched LifePilot (AI goal planner for iOS) 4 days ago. Here's an honest breakdown.

The numbers:

  • 8 downloads
  • 11% conversion rate (impressions → downloads)
  • 0 paid users yet

What I did:

  • Posted on HN (got flagged — new account penalty)
  • Posted on Reddit (got banned from 2 subreddits, survived on r/IMadeThis and r/SideProject)
  • Submitted to AlternativeTO — live
  • Submitted to Uneed — in waiting line
  • Built a landing page at getlifepilot.org
  • Emailed a productivity newsletter — waiting for reply

The biggest insight came from comments here on IH:

Someone said "founders describe features, users describe relief." I was pitching "AI builds your daily plan" — which is a feature. What users actually feel is "I don't have to stare at a blank page every morning wondering what to do."

That one comment changed my tagline, my App Store copy, and how I talk about the app.

What's next:

  • Resume TikTok in 2-3 days
  • Wait for newsletter response
  • Keep pushing distribution

The product is validated — conversion rate is decent and feedback has been positive. The only problem is getting people to discover it.

If you've launched an iOS app recently, what's actually worked for distribution?

on May 13, 2026
  1. 1

    You've already validated install interest, next step feels like repeating one channel that work instead of spreading across many.

    1. 2

      That's exactly the lesson I'm taking from this week. IH has been the most consistent channel so far — real engagement, real feedback. Going to double down here and stop trying to make Reddit work. Thanks for the clarity.

      1. 1

        Good call. Just worth periodically testing Reddit gain with different angles, platform can shift overtime.

  2. 1

    That 'features vs relief' framing is the most useful thing I've read this week. I'm about to launch a finance app and was guilty of leading with what it does ('tracks expenses, forecasts cash flow') rather than what it solves ('know what you've actually got left without doing the maths in your head'). Did changing the tagline shift App Store CTR, conversion once they hit the page, or both? On HN, my read is the new-account penalty is brutal but recoverable: a couple of weeks of thoughtful comments on other Show HN threads tends to lift things. And on Reddit, the smaller niche subs usually convert better than the big ones, even when the upvote counts look tiny.

    1. 1

      The tagline shift is too recent to have clean data yet — I'll report back in a week with numbers. But the App Store promotional text updated immediately and it feels more like something a user would search for vs something a founder would write.
      The small-subreddit tip is useful — I got burned on the bigger ones (bans) but r/IMadeThis has been quieter and cleaner. Will try commenting on Show HN threads this week, good call.

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