- 65% of traffic is organic: people google or bing, or baidu
karma bot, we practically occupied most of the first page results
- 611 from IndieHacker, I’ve been posting updates weekly for more than a year: https://www.indiehackers.com/product/karmabot 🙏 Thank you all for this.
- 468 from https://www.lapa.ninja/post/karmabot/ – simply because we have such a beautiful landing page, this aggregator grabbed it and created this page. The conversion rate is low for this, obv. These visitors do not come for the product.
- 278 twitter. We don’t really post under @karmabot_chat acc, but I track progress at my personal https://twitter.com/stas_kulesh
- 193 https://cashbar.app – launched this side gig at PH and got featured as a good example of Carrd.co landing template later on Twitter. Karma banner at the bottom of the page seems to be working.
- 71 personal blog at https://staskulesh.com
- 64 visits from Pioneer-related pages. (Karma was featured twice)
- 61 HN
- 42 YT
- 29 Facebook
- 28 Linkedin
What I read from this data:
- having a personal brand helps a lot (Twitter, personal blog)
- posting your progress regularly works
- side-projects and beautiful landing pages sorta work – they get featured, but the crowd is not likely your customers. However, I strongly believe that increases your search engine visibility.
- social networks don’t work
The conclusions are very subjective, I’m simply sharing as it is and thinking out loud. Obviously, every company is different, this is all very much Karma-specific.