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My first Indie Hackers post just hit the homepage - here’s what I learned from it

A small milestone, but it means a lot to me.
My very first Indie Hackers post made it to the homepage yesterday — something I honestly didn’t expect.

I just wanted to say thank you to everyone who read, commented, and shared their own stories. Every reply gave me a clearer sense that I’m not alone in this early-stage "no users yet" phase.

From the discussions, I learned three big things:

  1. Most indie founders go through the same quiet phase after launch — and it’s normal.
  2. Marketing isn’t a separate phase after building; it’s part of building. I should’ve started earlier.
    3 Being transparent (even about low numbers) builds trust faster than polished success stories.

That’s exactly why I joined Is - for the honesty and shared momentum.

Next up, I’m doubling down on learning distribution: refining DocBeacon’s SEO and experimenting with lightweight outreach. It’s still early, but this time, I’m thinking about visibility while building.

Thanks again, Indie Hackers. Let’s keep building in public and together.

posted to Icon for group Startups
Startups
on October 30, 2025
  1. 1

    The transparency in this post is exactly what makes this community valuable. That second point really hits - marketing is part of building, not an afterthought. I've made that mistake before too. Good luck with DocBeacon and the distribution work ahead.

    1. 1

      Thank you, that means a lot to me.
      I used to think building was the hard part, but now I see that building and being seen are the real challenge. Glad I’m not the only one who learned this the hard way.
      Appreciate the encouragement — I’ll keep sharing the journey as I figure out distribution for DocBeacon.

  2. 1

    Hi, after the product launch, do you think it's necessary to build a user communication and feedback community?

    1. 1

      That’s a great question — and it’s something I’ve been thinking about too.

      Right now, DocBeacon’s user base is still very small, so I’ve been relying on direct email conversations to gather feedback. It actually works surprisingly well at this stage — people tend to open up more when it feels personal.

      But I completely agree that once there’s a larger user group, building a real community becomes essential. A shared space where users can exchange insights, share how they’re using the product, and help each other unlock more value — that’s when the product starts to feel alive.

      My plan is to set up a small feedback hub or discussion space once growth picks up. Until then, I’m treating every email as the seed of that future community.

  3. 1

    Here is the original post https://www.indiehackers.com/post/built-my-first-product-now-learning-the-hard-part-getting-users-68211f1c42, appreciate everyone who shared advice on the first post — it really helped shape this one

  4. 1

    Honestly, this community has been one of the most motivating parts of building DocBeacon.
    Seeing other founders share their own slow-but-steady journeys made me realize how powerful small wins really are.
    If you’re just starting out, I’d love to hear what keeps you moving.

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