After publishing my last article on how to launch your first SaaS as a software engineer, I got good number of questions: "But how do you market a product when you know nothing about it, and with all the restrictions on different platforms?" Instead of replying to each comment, here's my honest take based on my journey with FounderSignal.
You've built a clear landing page. Congrats! But just sharing that page on Reddit, X, Indie Hackers, or Slack won't suddenly bring waves of users, many platforms have strict rules about promotion, and people are wary of cold pitches.
I learned the hard way: dumping your product link everywhere just gets ignored (or worse, flagged as spam). The only thing that brings results is providing value before you promote.
Suppose someone posts:
"What's the best way to validate a SaaS idea if I'm not sure people will pay or even use?"
Wrong way:
"Check out my site, FounderSignal, it helps you do that!" (Likely removed by mods, gets zero engagement)
Right way (short, valuable, subtle):
"I'd start by talking to real potential users first, ask what they'd pay for, not just what's 'nice to have.' For what it's worth, I built something to help with this but learned a ton just by DMing people and asking direct questions."
Notice:
Pro tip:
This "give before you take" approach earns trust everywhere: Indie Hackers, Product Hunt, and even LinkedIn. When I first posted about FounderSignal on indiehackers, producthunt, and similar platforms, zero feedback! Only after I spent real time helping others did people start replying, engaging, and eventually asking about my product.
If you're building your first SaaS, don't just build in silence, build in public. This means sharing your journey, wins, roadblocks, and even your unfinished work openly on platforms like X, LinkedIn, Reddit, or Indie Hackers. Don't worry about "What if others steal my idea". You're gonna be left behind with this mindset.
Here's what building in public does for you:
In my experience launching FounderSignal, being open about my process made it easier to gain valuable feedback and support, way more than cold promotion ever did.
Beyond social channels and forums, another high-impact way to market your SaaS is by writing for large publications that already have a substantial reader base.
Publishing a blog post in a well-known outlet allows you to:
For example, in this very article, I’m showing you helpful strategies and including my FounderSignal URL, demonstrating how you can give actionable advice, share your journey, and spotlight your SaaS without being spammy. If your story solves a real problem, it’s welcome!
Quick tips for large publication posts:
Since launching FounderSignal, this mindset shift has made all the difference:
Your primary "marketing" as an engineer isn't plugging a product. It's showing up, helping (without strings), and being patient.
Only after people trust you as a real contributor do they care what you've built.
You don't need to be a marketing genius, you just need to be a helpful, genuine part of your target community. That's what gets you noticed, and that's what leads to real feedback and early users.
#SaaS #BuildInPublic #FounderJourney #ProductMarketing #Startups