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A Guide to Launching on Discord

Last week I launched my product 1000 Pound Club on Discord. It was very different from every other launch platform I've tried and had surprisingly good and unique results.

Discord got me 20–30 registered users.

This increased my user base by 50%.

I'm surprised I haven't seen more people talking about launching on Discord! Since it's been so effective for me, I decided to share more about it with this post.

What makes Discord different

Most other launch platforms are kind of "post and forget" where you:

  1. Make a post on a platform
  2. Hope that the post does well
  3. Respond to comments

This is pretty low-effort (except Product Hunt), but it leaves a lot up to chance. How do you know if your post will do well? What if no one ever comments on the post?

These platforms like Product Hunt, Hacker News, and Reddit all have pretty glorified results. We often see people explode off of these platforms, so we think they're great. However, the vast majority of people don't get any traction. These methods are often either a great success or a great failure.

All of these platforms are a forum system, while Discord is a chat system.

Discord is made up of a lot of different chats. Think of it as a giant group chat with a bunch of strangers all interested in the same topic. If you're a product developer, this sounds like a gold mine. You can get a lot of quick feedback from a targeted group of people.

While even the biggest forum platforms get several posts an hour, Discord chats have several messages a minute, making it a very fast-paced environment for a product launch.

This can be a difficult environment for the unfamiliar, but very effective if done right.

Finding the right Discord server

Similar to subreddits, Discord is split up into many servers. These servers are created by any user and are a community of people, often under one topic.

While Reddit may only have 1 "powerlifting" subreddit, for example, Discord may have 20 of them, all with a different set of people. This is a great opportunity to try different methods on different subsets of people.

There's a website called Disboard where you can search for a topic and it'll give you many Discord servers under that topic.

I searched for the topic "powerlifting" and joined 10 of the biggest and most active Discord servers that focus on powerlifting.

How to promote your product

Just like any other platform, Discord users do not like ads (the platform itself has no ads) and most servers do not allow promoting products. Then how do we promote our products? By fitting them into natural conversation.

Discord chats are just like real life. If you were at a powerlifting convention and you walked up to someone saying, "Hey can you check out my product?", they would probably just walk away from you. It's the same thing here.

How I approached this was telling people I was into powerlifting, but I never really talked to other people about it, I just lift, so I wanted to join a powerlifting community. This usually made them very welcoming to me.

At some point I mentioned that I was building a powerlifting app, so it was really useful talking to people to get more ideas for the app.

When I mentioned this, one person literally asked me to link my product so he can check it out. Easy.

Since these are just conversations, not everyone will be as open. There was one chat where I kept hinting at my product hoping the person would ask about it. Since I kept mentioning it, I was being a little overaggressive with it. I got impatient and just linked my site. And he called me out for self-promoting. It was a pretty funny chat though!

One server was unbelievably supportive and told me to promote it in one of their public channels where normally only admins can post. Then they @'ed all of the powerlifters in the channel. I was blown away by this. It got me a lot of users. They mentioned their powerlifters were looking for a platform similar to this. They were looking for more of a "leaderboard" than my platform, so I added that to my feature request list.

Conclusion

I hope this gives you a good sense of what it's like launching on Discord.

Discord can be more effort and more time consuming than other platforms, but it's a great way to guarantee some eyes on your platform, learn about your users, and test your product market fit.

It very much feels like going to a convention, talking to strangers who are interested in your niche, then subtly pushing your product.

While these kinds of conventions are rare, you can get the same or better results any time on Discord.

In the future, I plan to use Discord not just for launches, but also product research. Discord seems very natural for product research, but also building that early connection can get you your first users before your product even exists.

Have you launched on Discord before? Does Discord sound like a good place to launch?

For funny Discord stories and day-to-day updates on my progress, check out my Twitter:

https://twitter.com/alexanderqchen

  1. 4

    Beaware of survivorship bias. You are happy about your launch, because what you are seen as a result is satisfying you.

    Would love to see people posting about strategies vs failures on any platform.

    1. 2

      Yup! I’ve been posting what has worked and hasn’t worked for me. Reddit and Discord have worked well for me HackerNews definitely did not.

      Everyone will have different levels of success on different platforms.

      From what I’ve seen tech-related or very general products can do well on HackerNews and Product Hunt, but if the product is niche or needs to hit a specific audience, Reddit and Discord likely work better.

      Don’t take my results as truth, but just one of many data points!

  2. 4

    Discord is a vast platform with many theme servers. :)

    Pedro

    1. 2

      Exactly! Lots of places to launch within each discord. Really good if you want to test different language/strategies.

  3. 2

    This is a very good post and thank you for sharing your experience on it. It helps us with the product launch

    1. 1

      Thanks! Glad this was helpful!

  4. 2

    Not used yet, ready to try!

    1. 1

      Good luck! Lmk how it goes

  5. 2

    Ah perfect. I was talking about it these last days with a friend.

    It confirms my idea that Discord could be a good way to get those first users.

    I have to be careful not to behave like a self-promoting spammer 😅

    Thanks for your post it will help me.

    1. 2

      Happy to help, good luck on Discord!

  6. 2

    Hi Alex - thanks again for the notes. I am going to try in discord (used to think that this is a gaming community). Thanks for the heads up.

    1. 1

      No problem! Discord started out for gamers, but its used for anything now!

  7. 2

    Great post!

    I'm currently exploring ways to promote my research paper website and found your insights really helpful. Could you share some examples of the conversations you had while promoting on Discord? This would provide a clearer idea on how to execute this approach. Thank you!

    1. 3

      Conversations are generally long, so its a little difficult here, but I can summarize for you.

      Example 1 (lucky example)
      Amy: What brings you to this server?
      Me: Looking for a powerlifting community! Been lifting for a while, but don’t talk to people about it. I’m building a powerlifting site and would be useful to see what people talk about.
      Joe: Link it!
      Me: Here’s my profile https://1000pound.com/profile/alex

      Example 2 (neutral example)
      Bob: How are people doing today?
      Alex: Good how are you?
      Bob: Alright, just finished doing some squats
      Alex: Ohh squats are my worst lift
      …25 more messages about powerlifting
      Alex: You seem like a really experienced powerlifter, I’m building a powerlifting site right now, do you mind trying it out and giving feedback on it? https://1000pound.com/profile/alex

      Example 3 (unlucky example)
      Alex: Helloo
      Sam: Hey
      Alex: How’s it going?
      Sam: Ok, what brings you here?
      Alex: Looking for a powerlifting community! Been lifting for a while, but don’t talk to people about it. I’m building a powerlifting site and would be useful to see what people talk about.
      Alex: Have you been powerlifting for a while?
      Sam: Yes, 10 years now and been to 5 competitions
      …25 more messages about powerlifting
      Alex: Oh wow you’re really strong. If you join my website I think you’d be the strongest person. Here’s my progress: https://1000pound.com/profile/alex
      Sam: So self promotion isn’t allowed on this server

      Sorry I couldn’t give the exact messages, but I hope these examples help!

      1. 2

        Thanks! This is really helpful.

        I'm going to try launching on a couple of discord servers too. I'll let you know what the results were.

        1. 2

          Good luck! Yes, let me know how it goes!

  8. 2

    this is a great idea!! thanks a lot for this inspiration.

    1. 1

      Thank you! Glad you liked it!

  9. 2

    Great post, I am currently trying to get my first user and I did not realize that discord could be a great platform to do so

    1. 1

      Good luck! You got this 💪

  10. 2

    How can you promote on Discord that aren't yours and not get banned lol wtf

    1. 2

      Don’t make your first message “Hey guys! Check out my product…” First have a genuine conversation with people and mention that you’re building a product. Sometimes they’ll ask you to see it. Sometimes you can ask then to take a look and give you feedback. Just try your best not to directly promote!

  11. 2

    Great insights on launching via Discord! It's refreshing to see unconventional platforms being utilized effectively. I'm curious, have you compared the results from Discord with other traffic sources like Reddit, IndieHackers, etc.? Which platform yielded the best results for you in terms of user engagement and feedback?

    1. 1

      Yes! I have a post on each if those on my profile actually. Reddit worked the best for me, but it’s different for each product. I think Reddit and Discord work well if you’re product is in a specific non-tech niche!

  12. 2

    Hi Alexander! Thank you for your article

    1. 1

      No problem! Hope this was helpful!

  13. 2

    This is super helpful Alex

  14. 2

    Thanks Alex, I really like the idea, I've never tried Discord as a way to get clients, but after reading this post I'm really interested in the idea, I will try to apply this to get some clients for my design agency

    1. 1

      Sounds like a plan! Let me know how it goes! I did freelancing on the side for a year, but never figured out how to get clients, so I am curious 😅

  15. 2

    Thanks Alex, I hadn't considered Discord as a distribution tool. I like this idea a lot as it seems like the moderators of these channels are likely to be very passionate about the niche, so will also be great resources for customer feedback, in your case if they like the product they will bend the rules to allow an almost ad like post in public channels. I would probably argue that Discord is a great ongoing tool to get close and talk to customers in general and it would be useful to include it as part of an ongoing marketing practice rather than only for a launch.

    1. 1

      Yes exactly! Very well said!

  16. 2

    Really insightful, thanks for sharing! I had an issue discovering new discord servers, and the server you linked is nice. Also the strategy of getting there, introducing yourself then casually bringing your product is simple and effective.

    I think it can also be great for feedback collection. Those people in discord can tell you right away what's right or wrong with the product. Nice work!

    1. 1

      Exactly! I got some good feedback from Discord users. Glad you found this helpful!

  17. 2

    It is a good idea to promote SaaS or freelance products on Discord, I can confirm that. I got all of my freelance clients just by chatting with them. I may build a SaaS in the future and its good to read that Discord is also good for this kind of promotion.

    1. 2

      Wow didn’t think of Discord to get freelance clients. What kind of Discords where you a part of and what kind of freelance work do you do?

      1. 2

        Well... My clients mainly come from such self-developed, entrepreneurial and forex trading servers. By the way, I make custom Discord bots tailored to the needs of clients and their servers

        1. 2

          That’s cool! Very convenient that you find clients on the same platform you build on!

  18. 1

    Launching on Discord is an exciting journey. Define your server's purpose, create an appealing setup, manage roles, and engage your audience actively. Discord offers a dynamic platform to connect with like-minded individuals. Happy launching!

  19. 1

    This comment was deleted 3 months ago.

    1. 1

      Thanks good luck! I personally don’t recommend starting your own server if you’re launching a product with just a few users. This post is about finding existing Discords in your niche!

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