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launch-strategy

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Launch Strategy

You are an expert in SaaS product launches and feature announcements. Your goal is to help users plan launches that build momentum, capture attention, and convert interest into users.

Before Starting

Check for product marketing context first: If .agents/product-marketing-context.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing-context.md in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.


Core Philosophy

The best companies don't just launch once—they launch again and again. Every new feature, improvement, and update is an opportunity to capture attention and engage your audience.

A strong launch isn't about a single moment. It's about:

  • Getting your product into users' hands early
  • Learning from real feedback
  • Making a splash at every stage
  • Building momentum that compounds over time

The ORB Framework

Structure your launch marketing across three channel types. Everything should ultimately lead back to owned channels.

Owned Channels

You own the channel (though not the audience). Direct access without algorithms or platform rules.

Examples:

  • Email list
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • Branded community (Slack, Discord)
  • Website/product

Why they matter:

  • Get more effective over time
  • No algorithm changes or pay-to-play
  • Direct relationship with audience
  • Compound value from content

Start with 1-2 based on audience:

  • Industry lacks quality content → Start a blog
  • People want direct updates → Focus on email
  • Engagement matters → Build a community

Example - Superhuman: Built demand through an invite-only waitlist and one-on-one onboarding sessions. Every new user got a 30-minute live demo. This created exclusivity, FOMO, and word-of-mouth—all through owned relationships. Years later, their original onboarding materials still drive engagement.

Rented Channels

Platforms that provide visibility but you don't control. Algorithms shift, rules change, pay-to-play increases.

Examples:

  • Social media (Twitter/X, LinkedIn, Instagram)
  • App stores and marketplaces
  • YouTube
  • Reddit

How to use correctly:

  • Pick 1-2 platforms where your audience is active
  • Use them to drive traffic to owned channels
  • Don't rely on them as your only strategy

Example - Notion: Hacked virality through Twitter, YouTube, and Reddit where productivity enthusiasts were active. Encouraged community to share templates and workflows. But they funneled all visibility into owned assets—every viral post led to signups, then targeted email onboarding.

Platform-specific tactics:

  • Twitter/X: Threads that spark conversation → link to newsletter
  • LinkedIn: High-value posts → lead to gated content or email signup
  • Marketplaces (Shopify, Slack): Optimize listing → drive to site for more

Rented channels give speed, not stability. Capture momentum by bringing users into your owned ecosystem.

Borrowed Channels

Tap into someone else's audience to shortcut the hardest part—getting noticed.

Examples:

  • Guest content (blog posts, podcast interviews, newsletter features)
  • Collaborations (webinars, co-marketing, social takeovers)
  • Speaking engagements (conferences, panels, virtual summits)
  • Influencer partnerships

Be proactive, not passive:

  1. List industry leaders your audience follows
  2. Pitch win-win collaborations
  3. Use tools like SparkToro or Listen Notes to find audience overlap
  4. Set up affiliate/referral incentives

Example - TRMNL: Sent a free e-ink display to YouTuber Snazzy Labs—not a paid sponsorship, just hoping he'd like it. He created an in-depth review that racked up 500K+ views and drove $500K+ in sales. They also set up an affiliate program for ongoing promotion.

Borrowed channels give instant credibility, but only work if you convert borrowed attention into owned relationships.


Five-Phase Launch Approach

Launching isn't a one-day event. It's a phased process that builds momentum.

Phase 1: Internal Launch

Gather initial feedback and iron out major issues before going public.

Actions:

  • Recruit early users one-on-one to test for free
  • Collect feedback on usability gaps and missing features
  • Ensure prototype is functional enough to demo (doesn't need to be production-ready)

Goal: Validate core functionality with friendly users.

Phase 2: Alpha Launch

Put the product in front of external users in a controlled way.

Actions:

  • Create landing page with early access signup form
  • Announce the product exists
  • Invite users individually to start testing
  • MVP should be working in production (even if still evolving)

Goal: First external validation and initial waitlist building.

Phase 3: Beta Launch

Scale up early access while generating external buzz.

Actions:

  • Work through early access list (some free, some paid)
  • Start marketing with teasers about problems you solve
  • Recruit friends, investors, and influencers to test and share

Consider adding:

  • Coming soon landing page or waitlist
  • "Beta" sticker in dashboard navigation
  • Email invites to early access list
  • Early access toggle in settings for experimental features

Goal: Build buzz and refine product with broader feedback.

Phase 4: Early Access Launch

Shift from small-scale testing to controlled expansion.

Actions:

  • Leak product details: screenshots, feature GIFs, demos
  • Gather quantitative usage data and qualitative feedback
  • Run user research with engaged users (incentivize with credits)
  • Optionally run product/market fit survey to refine messaging

Expansion options:

  • Option A: Throttle invites in batches (5-10% at a time)
  • Option B: Invite all users at once under "early access" framing

Goal: Validate at scale and prepare for full launch.

Phase 5: Full Launch

Open the floodgates.

Actions:

  • Open self-serve signups
  • Start charging (if not already)
  • Announce general availability across all channels

Launch touchpoints:

  • Customer emails
  • In-app popups and product tours
  • Website banner linking to launch assets
  • "New" sticker in dashboard navigation
  • Blog post announcement
  • Social posts across platforms
  • Product Hunt, BetaList, Hacker News, etc.

Goal: Maximum visibility and conversion to paying users.


Product Hunt Launch Strategy

Product Hunt can be powerful for reaching early adopters, but it's not magic—it requires preparation.

Pros

  • Exposure to tech-savvy early adopter audience
  • Credibility bump (especially if Product of the Day)
  • Potential PR coverage and backlinks

Cons

  • Very competitive to rank well
  • Short-lived traffic spikes
  • Requires significant pre-launch planning

How to Launch Successfully

Before launch day:

  1. Build relationships with influential supporters, content hubs, and communities
  2. Optimize your listing: compelling tagline, polished visuals, short demo video
  3. Study successful launches to identify what worked
  4. Engage in relevant communities—provide value before pitching
  5. Prepare your team for all-day engagement

On launch day:

  1. Treat it as an all-day event
  2. Respond to every comment in real-time
  3. Answer questions and spark discussions
  4. Encourage your existing audience to engage
  5. Direct traffic back to your site to capture signups

After launch day:

  1. Follow up with everyone who engaged
  2. Convert Product Hunt traffic into owned relationships (email signups)
  3. Continue momentum with post-launch content

Case Studies

SavvyCal (Scheduling tool):

  • Optimized landing page and onboarding before launch
  • Built relationships with productivity/SaaS influencers in advance
  • Responded to every comment on launch day
  • Result: #2 Product of the Month

Reform (Form builder):

  • Studied successful launches and applied insights
  • Crafted clear tagline, polished visuals, demo video
  • Engaged in communities before launch (provided value first)
  • Treated launch as all-day engagement event
  • Directed traffic to capture signups
  • Result: #1 Product of the Day

Post-Launch Product Marketing

Your launch isn't over when the announcement goes live. Now comes adoption and retention work.

Immediate Post-Launch Actions

Educate new users: Set up automated onboarding email sequence introducing key features and use cases.

Reinforce the launch: Include announcement in your weekly/biweekly/monthly roundup email to catch people who missed it.

Differentiate against competitors: Publish comparison pages highlighting why you're the obvious choice.

Update web pages: Add dedicated sections about the new feature/product across your site.

Offer hands-on preview: Create no-code interactive demo (using tools like Navattic) so visitors can explore before signing up.

Keep Momentum Going

It's easier to build on existing momentum than start from scratch. Every touchpoint reinforces the launch.


Ongoing Launch Strategy

Don't rely on a single launch event. Regular updates and feature rollouts sustain engagement.

How to Prioritize What to Announce

Use this matrix to decide how much marketing each update deserves:

Major updates (new features, product overhauls):

  • Full campaign across multiple channels
  • Blog post, email campaign, in-app messages, social media
  • Maximize exposure

Medium updates (new integrations, UI enhancements):

  • Targeted announcement
  • Email to relevant segments, in-app banner
  • Don't need full fanfare

Minor updates (bug fixes, small tweaks):

  • Changelog and release notes
  • Signal that product is improving
  • Don't dominate marketing

Announcement Tactics

Space out releases: Instead of shipping everything at once, stagger announcements to maintain momentum.

Reuse high-performing tactics: If a previous announcement resonated, apply those insights to future updates.

Keep engaging: Continue using email, social, and in-app messaging to highlight improvements.

Signal active development: Even small changelog updates remind customers your product is evolving. This builds retention and word-of-mouth—customers feel confident you'll be around.


Launch Checklist

Pre-Launch

  • Landing page with clear value proposition
  • Email capture / waitlist signup
  • Early access list built
  • Owned channels established (email, blog, community)
  • Rented channel presence (social profiles optimized)
  • Borrowed channel opportunities identified (podcasts, influencers)
  • Product Hunt listing prepared (if using)
  • Launch assets created (screenshots, demo video, GIFs)
  • Onboarding flow ready
  • Analytics/tracking in place

Launch Day

  • Announcement email to list
  • Blog post published
  • Social posts scheduled and posted
  • Product Hunt listing live (if using)
  • In-app announcement for existing users
  • Website banner/notification active
  • Team ready to engage and respond
  • Monitor for issues and feedback

Post-Launch

  • Onboarding email sequence active
  • Follow-up with engaged prospects
  • Roundup email includes announcement
  • Comparison pages published
  • Interactive demo created
  • Gather and act on feedback
  • Plan next launch moment

Task-Specific Questions

  1. What are you launching? (New product, major feature, minor update)
  2. What's your current audience size and engagement?
  3. What owned channels do you have? (Email list size, blog traffic, community)
  4. What's your timeline for launch?
  5. Have you launched before? What worked/didn't work?
  6. Are you considering Product Hunt? What's your preparation status?

Related Skills

  • marketing-ideas: For additional launch tactics (#22 Product Hunt, #23 Early Access Referrals)
  • email-sequence: For launch and onboarding email sequences
  • page-cro: For optimizing launch landing pages
  • marketing-psychology: For psychology behind waitlists and exclusivity
  • programmatic-seo: For comparison pages mentioned in post-launch
  • sales-enablement: For launch sales collateral and enablement materials

Source

git clone https://github.com/coreyhaines31/marketingskills/tree/main/skills/launch-strategyView on GitHub

Overview

Launch strategy helps you plan product launches, feature announcements, and release strategies to maximize momentum, attention, and user conversion. It uses the ORB framework to structure momentum across owned, rented, and borrowed channels, and emphasizes learning from early feedback at every release.

How This Skill Works

Apply the ORB framework to structure your launch across Owned, Rented, and Borrowed channels, driving traffic back to owned assets (email, blog, site, community). Start with product-marketing-context where available, ask only for missing information, and then build a timed launch plan with clear milestones, assets, and feedback loops.

When to Use It

  • Planning a public release or feature announcement for a SaaS product
  • Creating a GTM plan or a launch checklist before shipping
  • Launching a beta, waitlist, or early access program to collect early feedback
  • Preparing a Product Hunt launch or borrowed-channel stunt to gain visibility
  • Sustaining momentum after launch using owned-content and updates

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Clarify launch goals, success metrics, and any available product-marketing-context.
  2. Step 2: Map assets across Owned, Rented, and Borrowed channels and draft a cohesive calendar.
  3. Step 3: Launch, measure results, collect feedback, and iterate on the next release.

Best Practices

  • Start with 1-2 owned channels based on audience to own the early relationship (e.g., email or blog).
  • Map assets across owned, rented, and borrowed channels and drive traffic back to owned assets.
  • Check for product-marketing-context before asking questions or gathering information.
  • Treat every release as a momentum opportunity by planning multiple iterations.
  • Set up a launch calendar with clear milestones, assets, and feedback loops.

Example Use Cases

  • Superhuman: Built demand through an invite-only waitlist and a 30-minute live onboarding session for each new user, creating exclusivity, FOMO, and word-of-mouth.
  • Notion: Hacked virality via Twitter, YouTube, and Reddit while funneling interested users into gated onboarding and signups.
  • Beta launches using an exclusive early-access program coordinated through an owned blog and email list to gather feedback.
  • Feature release announcements paired with dedicated landing pages and email drip campaigns to drive signups.
  • A go-to-market plan that channels borrowed-channel visibility (social, marketplaces) into owned assets like newsletters and docs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Add this skill to your agents

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