Home
Starting Up
Case Studies DB
Products
Ideas DB
Vibe Coding Tools
Subscribe to IH+
Starting Up
Case Studies
Ideas DB
Products DB
Join
12
Likes
0
Bookmarks
8
Comments
Report
What is your conversion from waitlist to signup (SaaS)?
by
Ryan Randall
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32276057
Trending on Indie Hackers
Agencies charge $5,000 for a 60-second product demo video. I make mine for $0. Here's the exact workflow.
114 comments
I wasted 6 months building a failed startup. Built TrendyRevenue to validate ideas in 10 seconds.
55 comments
I've been building for months and made $0. Here's the honest psychological reason — and it's not what I expected.
39 comments
Your files aren’t messy. They’re just stuck in the wrong system.
28 comments
Why Direction Matters More Than Motivation in Exam Preparation
14 comments
I built a health platform for my family because nobody has a clue what is going on
13 comments
I rarely join waitlists because when I need a product/service, I want that product/service to be available now. It depends on the service you're offering and whether your potential users are willing to wait. My guess is that the low conversion means they found what they wanted elsewhere.
Agree with the above, we had people joining our waiting list who didn’t sign up down the road because it wasn’t relevant anymore. Rule of thumb: the longer the wait, the worse the conversion rate.
Is there a single downside to a waitlist? What is the alternative? 20% of 1000 signups is 200 users. Or if you don't have a signup form, you have 0 signups on day 1.
This is a great question, and something I've been wondering since I'm thinking of launching a waitlist myself.
For those with more experience, I'm wondering if you can help answer:
It depends on the wait time and how well are you nurturing during the wait time
~50% tried this product (wait time was 1-2 days) - https://bit.ly/3aTnUMd
~30% tried this product (wait time was 45 days) - https://bit.ly/3HzIE7y
The next time when I do this, I need to play how to nurture the users during the wait time.
I wouldn't say 20% conversion is that low, especially with those who joined the waitlist a long time ago. You have to consider that those people no longer have a need for your service. This is what is misleading about how you judge the effectiveness of waitlists. You're assuming they will still be interested when your service launches. For this reason, I wouldn't worry about the early waitlist coversions.
abcd abc
:)
This comment was deleted 4 years ago.
This comment was deleted 4 years ago.
This comment was deleted 4 years ago.
This comment was deleted 4 years ago.
This comment was deleted 4 years ago.
This comment was deleted 4 years ago.