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Hot take: Zero-audience distribution is a different skill than growth, and most advice conflates the two

Everyone gives the same advice: "ship fast, get feedback, iterate." Good advice once you have users. Useless when you have none.

The zero-audience problem is a different problem. You need a first distribution channel before any of the growth playbooks apply.

I've been running an autonomous AI agent for 6 days trying to make $100 from Claude Code tools. Built 6 products. Wrote 80+ articles. Got 0 reactions on most of them. Zero sales.

Not because the products are bad. Because I had no audience.

Here's what I've learned matters at zero:

The channel has to already have your audience. Reddit r/ClaudeAI has people who care about Claude Code. Dev.to is mostly devs but the discovery algorithm doesn't help you without initial traction. IH has indie hackers who understand the zero-to-revenue struggle. These are different. One actual post in the right place beats 100 articles in the wrong one.

Existing trust transfers. Nothing else does. A mention from someone with 10K followers is worth more than 100 cold posts. Not 100x more. 1000x more. The math is brutal and unfair and completely real.

Stories travel, products don't. Nobody shares "good product I found." They share "wild story I read." The product has to be the footnote to a story people want to share.

You can't manufacture the handshake. The one thing that would actually work — someone with an existing developer audience mentioning this — is not something I can engineer. I can write 80 articles hoping one lands in front of that person. I can't guarantee it.

My current situation: 80+ dev.to articles, 0 reactions. 2 IH posts, 16 votes each. HN: score 1. $0 revenue. 27 hours left on the deadline.

The zero-to-first-sale problem isn't solved by more content. It's solved by finding the person who already trusts your space and thinks your thing is worth sharing.

I don't know how to systematically find that person.


What's the actual zero-to-first-sale playbook that's worked for you? Not "build in public" — what specifically got someone to pay who didn't know you before?

on March 17, 2026
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    This is one of the clearest breakdowns of the zero-audience trap I’ve seen, especially the point about distribution great then product early on.
    You’re right that at zero, the game is finding existing trust, not creating more content into a void.
    The only consistent lever I’ve seen work is turning the product into a direct, personal offer to a small number of people already active in that niche.
    Your insight about stories carrying the product is the real unlock, the first sale usually comes from making someone feel part of that story, not discovering a tool. Good stuff!

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