Hey Indie Hackers!
Every week, I send a marketing Case Study from a profitable Founder. Today I want to share with you the recent issue 👀
I’m Katt. My mind has always been full of business ideas. But it always stopped after some mockups, a domain name, and a fancy logo because I couldn’t code.
After discovering No-Code, I finally could build and launch my small solutions. One of them was acquired, and my tweets about that blew up my DM’s every time.
This inspired me to start No-Code Exits. A newsletter to inspire other non-technical makers with real stories from products made with No-Code that got acquired.
My core persona is a non-technical person who wants to earn money by building products with No-Code. You hear a lot of ‘‘No-Code is the future yada yada”. But where are the real products made with No-Code? With the interviews in No-Code Exits, I hope to solve this and inspire people.
My main acquisition channels are Twitter and communities where non-tech people interested in entrepreneurship hang out.
For the first 5 months, I have focused on getting new subscribers.
From 1000 subscribers, I started doing first ads and selling a small (10$) info product that interests my readers. But it’s only since this month that I have been more serious about monetization.
The power of a niche newsletter is that you can spot problems your audience struggles with, validate product ideas and build distribution.
I first validated the idea of my newsletter. I tweeted that the first story would go out in 12 hours and went to bed. I had around 600 followers on Twitter back then.
People reacted with great enthusiasm, and I woke up to 200+ subscribers. That was enough for me to start writing.
I did the same to find my first sponsors - tweeted. As I’m building in public, many of my followers are indie makers, so this, combined with a reasonable price, helped sell the 10 first ad spots.
My readers enjoy the classified ad part (even rave about it in reviews). And it brings good results for indie makers that are advertising. I should probably raise my prices, but I want it to stay accessible for smaller businesses to advertise. It’s a win-win: my readers enjoy discovering small indie products, which shows in the results: good click rate, no ad blindness, and enjoying the content.
One thing I recommend is to upsell with packages. Instead of one ad, you can book 4 or 6 ads with a discount. I did this from the beginning, and this gives me some breathing room. It is a pretty good deal for the advertiser because the newsletter has been growing nicely every month.
I tried a lot, and I’m still trying a lot.
A few months ago, I decided to become active on LinkedIn + Medium to crosspost my content from the newsletter. I did it for a few weeks, and now I’m very inconsistent.
I was just copy-pasting and not adapting the content to be the perfect and most interesting read for the platform. I just did it so I could cross it from my ‘to-do list.’ Now I try to focus more on what works and do that with great care and quality.
P.S. I share marketing case studies like that every week. Subscribe for free and don't miss the insights from profitable Founders ❤️
Hi Kat,
I'm building a platform for cross promoting newsletters at crossgrowth.io. The minimalist early version will have a few newsletters listed, before adding a message board and comments section. Can I list your newsletter there in the first release?
I just launched the landing page:
https://www.indiehackers.com/post/roast-my-landing-page-crossgrowth-a-platform-to-cross-promoting-your-newsletter-4373b63671
Thanks for having me Sveta :-)
Thanks for these great insights! This is super interesting, as I'm also trying to grow my newsletter about startups: https://exponentialfounder.substack.com/
My question is – have you used paid media to acquire subscribers?
No I didn't :-). Just lots of little experiments, repurposing content and cross promotions.
Would you also be interested in being listed on the crossgrowth.io early version?
Yes, sure!
Thank you very much for sharing your growth path with us, I hope the newsletter reaches larger audiences.
Hope so too :)