Petrando Richard

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Petrando Richard

Petrando Richard

@PetrandoR

Freelance Full Stack Developer

Sleman, Yogyakarta Katılım Nisan 2023
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Hridoy Rehman
Hridoy Rehman@hridoyreh·
How to get your first 100 users:
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Adrian | JavaScript Mastery
Adrian | JavaScript Mastery@jsmasterypro·
I sent one of our developers undercover on X. No real name. No portfolio. No credentials. Just AI-built projects posted from a blank account (@thebuggeddev). Within weeks, the creator of Three.js noticed. 5 client projects. A job offer. Nobody knew it was a test. Until now. youtu.be/uqpXAfNEY4g
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Petrando Richard retweetledi
Om Patel
Om Patel@om_patel5·
HOW TO GET YOUR FIRST 100 PAYING USERS WITH ZERO AD SPEND i've done this multiple times now in less than 2 weeks with $0 to my name. here's the exact playbook: 1\ reddit is your best growth channel and nobody uses it right posts: > YOU DON'T NEED AN AUDIENCE TO GET HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF VIEWS. > don't post "hey check out my product" in subreddits. you'll get banned instantly > instead write genuinely useful posts that solve a problem your target customer has > make 80% of the post pure value. mention your product between the first and last paragraph with at least 2 additional links in the post > formats that work: "i built X and here's what i learned", "here's how to solve [problem] step by step", "i analyzed [data] and here's what i found" > post these in 3-5 subreddits where your customers hang out. comments: > search for threads where people are actively complaining about the problem you solve > type "[competitor name] sucks" or "looking for [tool type]" or "frustrated with [problem]" in the subreddit search bar > these people are warm leads >dm them instantly. answer their question. mention your product naturally at the end of the convo > do this every single day. 10-15 DMs per day. not copy pasted. each one specific to the thread > this converts at 30-40% because they already told you they have the problem > follow up 3 days later and ask how it's going build your own subreddit: > create a subreddit for your niche (not your product name. the problem space) > post valuable content there consistently > invite people from other subreddits who are interested in the topic > this becomes your owned community that you control. no algorithm changes. no bans > cross-post your best content from the subreddit to other relevant subs to drive members back this alone drove my first 300+ users for beta 2\ twitter + linkedin content recycling > take every reddit post that performed well and turn it into a twitter thread (because on reddit YOU DON'T NEED AN AUDIENCE) > take every twitter thread that performed well and turn it into a linkedin post > take every linkedin post that performed well and turn it into a short form video script > one piece of content becomes 4 pieces across 4 platforms > post on twitter 3-5x per day. linkedin 1x per day > the formats that work: "i built X and here's what happened", "here's what nobody tells you about [niche]", "this guy did [cool thing]" with a screenshot > reply to big accounts in your niche. don't pitch. just add something useful to the conversation. this gets you followers faster than posting > screenshot interesting reddit threads and post them with your take. this is the highest engagement format on twitter right now 3\ negative reviews (the greatest underrated strategy OAT) > go to g2, capterra, trustpilot right now > search for every competitor in your space > read every 1-star and 2-star review > screenshot the ones where people describe the exact problem your product solves > these reviewers are your first customers. they already pay for a competitor. they already hate it. they already told you what they want > type in their name and DM them on linkedin or twitter. don't pitch. just say "saw your review about [competitor]. curious what you ended up switching to?" > half the time they'll ask what you're building. now you have a conversation not a cold pitch 4\ build comparison and alternative pages before anything else > create pages on your site for "[competitor] alternative" and "[your product] vs [competitor]" > these rank fast on google because people actively search for them before buying > write honest comparisons. don't trash the competitor. just show where you're different > include pricing breakdowns, feature tables, and screenshots > update these monthly with fresh data > this is the highest ROI SEO you can do because every visitor has buying intent 5\ write the most boring blog posts imaginable > find the exact questions your target customers are googling > use tools like answerthepublic or just type your niche into google and look at "people also ask" > write long-form posts answering those questions in detail > examples: "how to fix [specific problem]" or "best way to [workflow your product helps with]" > these posts are boring to write but they compound. one post per week for 6 months and you'll have a traffic machine > don't mention your product until the last paragraph. the post should be genuinely useful on its own > this is good for compounding SEO 6\ cold DM people who just posted about the problem you solve > set up google alerts for keywords related to your niche > monitor twitter/X for people tweeting complaints about competitors > when someone tweets "ugh [competitor] just lost all my data" or "anyone know a good [tool type]?" reply within minutes > speed matters here. the first helpful reply wins > don't send a link. start a convo. ask what they need. then offer to show them your product > if people actually have this problem they will 100% be interested. just don't be a bot 7\ join 5-10 communities where your customers already hang out > slack groups, discord servers, facebook groups, indie hacker communities, niche forums EVEN whatsapp groups. > don't join and immediately promote. lurk for 2 weeks first > answer questions. help people. become a known name > after 2-3 days of being helpful, mention what you're building when it's relevant > one good slack community can drive 20-30 users on its own. most have spaces where you can share your startup too 8\ create a free tool that solves one tiny problem in your niche > this is the move nobody does because it feels like giving away value > build a small free tool related to your main product. calculator, checker, analyzer, template > put it on your website. make it genuinely useful with zero signup required > people find it through google, use it, and discover your main product > this builds trust faster 9\ the "reverse cold email" that actually gets replies > find companies or people who match your ideal customer profile > don't email them about your product > email them with something useful: a tip about their website, a competitor insight, a resource they'd find valuable > BUT make it so that you give them value after they respond. > after a follow up you send "btw i'm building [one line about your product]. happy to show you if it's relevant" > response rates go from 2% to 15-20% because you led with POTENTIAL value not a pitch (remember, you're going to send the value after they respond) 10\ launch on product hunt/directories but don't rely on it > product hunt gives you a spike not a strategy > the real value isn't the launch day traffic. it's the backlink and the social proof badge > prepare your community beforehand so you have upvotes ready on launch day > use the momentum to get press, get into newsletters, and fuel your other channels > most product hunt traffic churns in 48 hours. the brand signal lasts forever 11\ do things that don't scale. literally > manually onboard every single early user with ademo > send them a personal welcome email from your real email address > ask what they're trying to do. help them set it up > follow up 3 days later and ask how it's going > these users become your evangelists. they tell friends. they leave reviews. they post about you > your first 100 users should feel like they know you personally 12\ post every single day on twitter > failures, losses, wins, lessons. all of it. raw and unfiltered > "i tried XYZ today and it completely failed. here's what i learned" > "just hit $500 MRR. took me 4 months. here's what actually moved the needle" > "lost my first paying user today. asked them why. their answer changed how i think about onboarding" > PUT YOUR FACE ON EVERYTHING. profile pic, videos, screenshots with your face in the corner. people trust people not logos > nobody wants to follow a faceless SaaS account or some AI account. they want to follow the person behind it > build in public is not a strategy. it's THE strategy. the audience you build while building the product becomes the distribution for the product > consistency beats quality. a mid post every day beats a perfect post once a week the pattern across all of these: > go where your customers already are > be helpful before you pitch > lead with value not links > do it every single day for 1 month instead of vibe coding another project the people who do this get to 100 paying users. the people who skip it and run ads at $0 MRR burn money and wonder why nobody converts start today. pick 3 of these. do them for a month or even a week if you post more. you'll have your 100 users
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Petrando Richard retweetledi
Amit
Amit@HeyAmit_·
You can make $600 per day if you have: 1. A laptop 2. Wi-Fi 3. Time Here are 12 websites that pay you daily:
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Petrando Richard
Petrando Richard@PetrandoR·
@xoaanya Because you create the job posting which I fulfill the requirements
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Aanya
Aanya@xoaanya·
Frontend Developer interview: We can write 80% of frontend code with AI, why should we still hire you? What will be your response?
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Petrando Richard
Petrando Richard@PetrandoR·
@thesayannayak chartformers is a new charting library for React.js apps which supports unique type of charts that cannot be found on other libraries: 👉sortable pie/donut chart 👉sortable and filterable stacked bar chart 👉sortable sankey/alluvial diagram chartformers-doc.vercel.app
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Sayan
Sayan@thesayannayak·
Pitch your work in one line / link
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Petrando Richard
Petrando Richard@PetrandoR·
@suni_code chartformers is a new charting library for React.js apps which supports unique type of charts that cannot be found on other libraries: 👉sortable pie/donut chart 👉sortable and filterable stacked bar chart 👉sortable sankey/alluvial diagram chartformers-doc.vercel.app
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Suni
Suni@suni_code·
Drop your project URL Let’s drive some traffic Curious to know what you all are building
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Marko Denic
Marko Denic@denicmarko·
Useful websites for developers: ~ Charts chartjs.org ~ Animations animista.net ~ Photos unsplash.com ~ Hosting sevalla.com ~ Animations animista.net ~ Icons tablericons.com ~ Code Snippets carbon.now.sh ~ HTML templates uideck.com ~ UI inspiration websitevice.com ~ UI components flowbite.io ~ Illustrations undraw.co ~ Color Palette coolors.co ~ Remote Jobs jobboardsearch.com ~ 40+ button designs cssnippets.shefali.dev/buttons ~ QR Code Generator markodenic.com/tools/qr-code-… What is your favorite website? Let me know in the comments below!
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furkan
furkan@afozsn·
@bilinearlabs @aave when hovering over a stacked bar chart, it would be nicer if the tooltip showed the values for all groups at that particular x-axis value, instead of only showing the number for the specific group.
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Adrian | JavaScript Mastery
Adrian | JavaScript Mastery@jsmasterypro·
"Create a caricature of me and my job based on everything you know about me" 😅
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Subhrajit Sarkar
Subhrajit Sarkar@xubhrajit·
most enterprise dashboards are just expensive graveyards for data nobody actually uses. teams spend months building "all-in-one" views, but the user only looks at 2 widgets before exporting to Excel. the truth? A great dashboard isn't a buffet; it's a filter. if your dashboard doesn't tell the user exactly what to do in the first 5 seconds, it's just noise. what's one "standard" dashboard feature that actually provides zero value? I'll say: The "Welcome, [Name]" header taking up 20% of the fold. #UXDesign #B2B #SaaS #ProductDesign
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Official Blessing
Official Blessing@BlessingGives·
If you are not M0NETlZED, please say “Hii” & connect with others 😎 And if you don’t have blue tick, Like & comment let’s get you one!! There’s money on X💰💵
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Petrando Richard
Petrando Richard@PetrandoR·
@s_lempens Looks nice! How's your experience working with r3f and nextjs? A while back I was doing something similar with this tech stack, didn't work well, which I then assumed that nextjs didn't blend well with r3f. Is it okay now?
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iqran_
iqran_@iqra_codes·
Hey X I'm looking to #connect with people interested in: - Frontend - Backend - Full stack - DevOps - Leetcode - AI/ML - Data Science - Freelancing - Startup - Tech Let's grow together 🤝🏻
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