You've got to start somewhere right. You've got your landing page and maybe even an MVP, but no one is visiting your website! How do you actually get those first 100 users? I've been there myself with my startup, and I would have loved to read such an article when I got started, so here it is! In honour of my past self and to help all fellow startup founders!
Here are a few basic tips you should get started with. They will pay off in the coming months.
SEO will not get you users overnight, but it's an amazing long term investment. Do it.
Obviously, don't try to rank for super general keywords, instead, focus on niche keywords your audience is interested in. Here are a few examples from our own startup:
*Like passive income, those articles are generating a steady (albeit small) traffic to our app. But what's powerful about this traffic is that its super high-quality people. Only passionate people will find your articles, and when they do, they'll check out your app as well. *
Create a company account and start replying to questions related to what you're doing. Twitter has a really good advanced search feature and Quora will suggest you more than enough questions you can reply to. If you spend a few hours each week generating good content on those platforms, you'll get a steady stream of clicks to your landing page as well.

Pioneer is an online accelerator that you can join for free. Every week, you submit a progress update and other users will give you feedback. This is a free way to get a few clicks to your app from startup founders.
10words and BetaList are like a small Product Hunts. They are much smaller, you can expect around 50 clicks to your website for each. Still worth something!
### List your startup on Indie Hacker & Makerlog
Those are two cool communities. If you're active, you'll definitely get some attention and users!
Product Hunt has a place for upcoming apps called ** Ship **, I've not found it to be very useful, but it can get you a few additional users.
That's where stuff gets exciting. Use these growth hacks with moderation, there is a fine line between marketing and spamming.
If there are already a few apps on ProductHunt that are similar to what you're building, consider using this growth hack. I've used it extensively myself.
I've built a tool myself that lets me scrape email addresses from founders on Indie Hacker. What's powerful is that you can filter by every filter available on Indie Hacker (revenue, location, business model, ...). You can use it to buy an email list here and use a tool like Gmass or Streak to reach out. Buy a list here.
I don't recommend just sending the same email to everyone as this will impact your reputation. Instead, send personalized mass emails. It does take a bit longer, but it's worth every second considering the impact it will have on response rate and trust.
There are many chrome extensions out there that have tons of users but that are not maintained anymore. You can buy one for very cheap that is related to what you do and advertise your business on there. I bought Google Contacts Opener and it's been generating significant traffic to our website ever since.
It will cost you too much. Just don't think about it. In the early days, ads are not the way to go.
You've got only one shot at this, it better be big. You don't want to launch on Product Hunt before having built a mature product. Product Hunt is not for the launching phase, it's for the growth phase. BetaList is a better place to start.
Here is a breakdown of who visited our website recently. This will give you a better idea of what you should focus on.

Great writeup, thanks! I'm curious to hear more about buying a Chrome extension. Like how did you find the right extension to buy? How did you buy it and how much did it cost? How have you been promoting with it? And how much traffic have you gotten from it? A lot of questions, I know, but I think this could make a good Growth Bite.
Sure!
So I did search related chrome extensions basically. Just search. We integrate with Google Contacts, so I thought that GContacts super users would be a great fit.
I reached out to 10 extensions, got 4 replies, 2 interested and bought one. Can't disclose the price but it was less than 1k usd.
We haven't changed the extension much yet, we've promoted our own app through adding a call to action in the app's description and in the app itself.
The extension page get's around 1k daily visitors, and the app has around 1k DAU as well. So we're generating around 150 website hits per week :)
One of our paying customers found us through this :)
How did you find out how many hits the chrome extension page was getting?
Google Analytics + internal analytics (every time a user clicks on the extension, it triggers an api call so that we can record it. It's anonymous, we just count the click).
right, I guess I wanted to know if there was a way to measure how many clicks the page gets before you reach out to extensions
No, and you actually will need to implement this manually. It's not provided by default :)
Awesome, thanks @Webbiger!