David

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David

David

@JuggernautMain

Studying how mobile apps grow with short-form video. Sharing TikTok / Reels marketing ideas for indie founders. Building something in this space.

. शामिल हुए Temmuz 2020
176 फ़ॉलोइंग222 फ़ॉलोवर्स
David
David@JuggernautMain·
@echolead_ai Are you building this with java?
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Huitre.dev
Huitre.dev@echolead_ai·
Made a window lighting debugger for my web city builder and it slaps harder than expected. Position, width/height, tint , skew controls... all in one panel. Result? These warm glowing windows that make the night district feel proper cozy 🌙 #CityBuilder #IndieDev
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David
David@JuggernautMain·
@warbornx Would send you a dm
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Iván
Iván@warbornx·
@JuggernautMain Amazing, yes I'm up for it, thanks! I feel like committing to something like that and learn from the process
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Iván
Iván@warbornx·
I made my first internet dollar! It's been a while since last post. Recently decided to jump into the SwiftUI apps journey for my next project... Felt in love with the results so I decided to rebuilt Winder from RN to native iOS, added IAP and today I got my first sale ever!🥹
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David
David@JuggernautMain·
That’s a great place to be honestly. You don’t need anything crazy, just consistency and testing what sticks. I’m actually running a small 3-week sprint with a few founders where we post consistently and learn what drives installs. If you’re up for it, I can loop you in and guide you on what to post.
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Iván
Iván@warbornx·
Not yet but I want to. I have an US tiktok account warmed up from last year, I was thinking about posting some content but I feel like I don't have idea about what type of content would be good Any recommendations? I'm looking to start the marketing journey so when my real next app is ready, I know what to do
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David
David@JuggernautMain·
@warbornx Nice, Are you doing short form content on tiktok?
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David रीट्वीट किया
Steph from OpenVC
Steph from OpenVC@StephNass·
Chess․com Revenue: $100M+ VC: $0 Mailchimp Revenue: $700M+ VC: $0 Zoho Revenue: $1B+ VC: $0 Midjourney (via @onemoremichael) Revenue: $200M+ VC: $0 Butcherbox (via @DanielGulati) Revenue: $600M VC: $0 Dyson (via @PatrickOCR) Revenue: $8B+ VC: $0 Who else?
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Sage
Sage@oranahh·
What are you building now along with goal $MRR?
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Audiencon⚡️
Audiencon⚡️@audiencon·
Your MVP should answer one question: Do people want this?
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Mohd Danish
Mohd Danish@mddanishyusuf·
🎉 Sold Iconbuddy for $30,000. 2.5 years ago, I bought it from @fayazara for $4,000. No revenue. No traffic. Nothing. That $4,000 was literally all I had in my bank. Here's the journey: → Launched on PH, Twitter, HN, Reddit → It blew up. People loved it → Tried sponsor slots for monetization. Didn't work well → Users kept asking for plugins → Built Figma, VS Code, Framer plugins → Added a $49 lifetime deal → Finally, real money started coming in → Bought the .com domain for $4k to build trust → Increased price to $89. People still paid → Built a second site targeting "free svg icons" keyword for $10 → Grew it to 350k+ pageviews → Redirected all traffic into IconBuddy → Everyone said I was crazy → 45 days later, Iconbuddy ranked for all those keywords → Grew to 100k+ users → All organic. $0 on ads → Made $50k+ in revenue running it solo → Now sold to @julianengel for $30k A $4k bet turned into $80k+ in 2.5 years. My 10th exit. Buy small, build smart, sell at the right time. Repeat.
Mohd Danish tweet media
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Wise
Wise@trikcode·
Tech has entered its funniest era. You can spend 3 months building a product just to discover the real job is making short videos about the product.
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Bart ⚡
Bart ⚡@bzagrodzki·
I really like yellow 🟡 You? ps. you can try it live at turbostarter(.)dev 👇
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Yul
Yul@yul_magdaleno·
Small team, high revenue, no VC.
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Noémie
Noémie@FedericoNoemie·
building a list of the best tools for solo founders, what should I add?
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DJ Gizmo
DJ Gizmo@KrazyDJGizmo·
@JuggernautMain You know that’s super funny because I am a white rabbit but sometimes I do kind of roar and growl like a grizzly bear. So to call me “Grizmo” izz perfect! 🙏💪🤪🇺🇸🐇
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David
David@JuggernautMain·
Tips to nailing down your ASO Focus on long tail keywords - lower volume, but easier to rank on. Bear in mind the App Store search algo changed recently. From keywords oriented to natural language now. So instead of using too many random keywords just to rank on them, make sure it explains what your app does / benefits for users, with action oriented titles / subtitles / descriptions.
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DJ Gizmo
DJ Gizmo@KrazyDJGizmo·
@JuggernautMain Good advice you should if you’re really serious about it go ahead and retweet that one. It’s solid info. Keep it updated. 🇺🇸🤪🙏💪
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Eltegani Gabir
Eltegani Gabir@eltegani_gabir·
@BatsouElef Thank you! I would appreciate your feedback in the app store.
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Eleftheria Batsou
Eleftheria Batsou@BatsouElef·
What are you working on this week? Share your product's link (count it as marketing)!
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David
David@JuggernautMain·
I run a testing account where I post demo videos. Something interesting happens: the same group of people like and save almost every post… And the funny thing is, they’re not even followers. It’s like the algorithm is building a small audience around your content before you even notice.
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David
David@JuggernautMain·
I see where you’re coming from, but I’d respectfully disagree. At the core, everything falls back to marketing. Big VCs spend huge sums on marketing for a reason, it works. But for bootstrapped founders, the challenge is to stand out without huge budgets. That’s where volume matters. Users need repeated exposure to truly understand a product. For example, if I see content about a habit tracker twice a day, eventually it sticks, if I’m looking for one, I’ll remember it. We’ve seen this for decades: TV ads drove purchases just by constant repetition. In mobile, the same principle applies. Apps like Cal AI grew to $1M/month by consistently posting content across 100+ accounts. Cluely did the same with UGC and slideshows. Even small mobile studios in Singapore leverage multiple accounts to push content, building recognition and familiarity. The key isn’t random spam, it’s consistent, targeted volume that reinforces your story to the right audience. Viral hits are rare, but consistent exposure creates long-term impact.
Guillaume@iamgdsa

You do not “automate” marketing. Fools and charlatans will tell you to do so either to sell you info or their “spamming” product or strategy. Average views don’t matter. Only viral content is net positive as an acquisition strategy. And viral content isn’t random. You’ll only get lucky once in a while. Increasing volume on short-form algo video platforms is increasing the rate of testing new formats/hooks. Increasing volume isn’t to spam randomly. Viral content is good content. Good content isn’t high-production content either. It’s the content the specific target audience needs to see. This content might look like spam content to an unfamiliar pair of eyes. And spammers thus might start to spam this same content infinitely. Then it won’t work anymore. Everyone who needed to see it saw it. And the cycle repeats. You can arbitrage the crumbles by spamming. You can arbitrage a lot more smartly by copying competitor content. But you’ll get the largest share of the value hitting the audience first with this fresh new story they badly need to see. Clippers (that is, spammers) will get the majority, but it’ll be spread across many tiny shares of the total pie. Back in the day, the spamming arbitrage was way greater as it was so hard to spam. You had to code automation and generate content at scale and farm followers on accounts and so on. Now that the barrier to entry to spam is rapidly going down, it’s peanuts you fight for. This “easy” way is how you get no results. Most people are lazy and will default to the easy way. Just like this, you forgot that capitalism is mostly you competing against the others. Better play hard and outsmart them. Theoretically, “spamming” can still work today if you do it at an exceptional scale. Which will be extremely hard. So best move is to play smart (again and again). Iterate over the work of others. Deeply understand your target audience and speak to them. It’s the greatest time for marketing as content is algorithmically distributed so you get instant feedback if it’s what people want to see or not. First era where you can act based on actual data at the lowest level. Take advantage of it.

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