How do you make a program you've developed popular online and get lots of people writing reviews and talking about it?
Can you list a few important sites (or communites) to register your software?
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How do you make a program you've developed popular online and get lots of people writing reviews and talking about it? Can you list a few important sites (or communites) to register your software?
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closed as not a real question by Shog9, Steven A. Lowe, Yuval A, Daniel A. White, SilentGhost May 3 at 12:23 |
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Wow, that was a lot of usless information. (^_^) Okay, now for my two cents worth (and if you think it's worth it, check this as helpful. Before I start with my points I'd like to say that your application needs to have a compelling story, a value add, a niche and that it fulfills a function that is necessary. If you have just an application that is like all of the others (like your competition) with no value add, ease of use, great user experience, etc... then it will be very hard for you to be heard above the noise. First, you need to find what sites are talking about your competition. Once that is known approach them and see if they would do a review. Second, if you have not already, contact a PR company and do a press release, be sure to focus on the applications target audience. Third, send out samples or request to have your application reviewed by the same people who are reviewing the competitions applications. I find that when developing applications if I can ping reviewers in the technology section of some of the popular print and online magazines and the review is published you'll get great exposure. Fourth, once you get the ball - run with it. Consider the feature list and upgrade path and try to time it with events that are near your applications market space. When updating (significantly) contact all of the same people who you contacted before and ping them again with why the new version deserves some notoriety or at least a review. Fifth, once you do start getting press, use it to push it into the hands of others to review and talk about. If you can work the right angle and have a good story you can create a snowball effect and have some great press in a short amount of time. Lastly, you'll need to have media available for people to see what it is that you are offering. If you have not already set up a channel on YouTube or one of the many other video hosting sites. Post at least one video of the application featuring some of the highlights. If you want to maximize your exposure and you have a significant feature list consider making multipule videos with two or three features with better coverage. But remember people have short attention spans and want to know as much as they can about something in the shortest amount of time. I hope this helps. Ping me if you need any more suggestions. Good luck! |
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Make a virus. |
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Make it good. If that's too hard, make it good for one specific type of user. Don't ask your friends what they think of it. Design by committee will get you the best product you can build that appeals to everyone. Let's say you are building a video sharing site. You can't possibly build something as good as Youtube. You don't have the resources. But if you ask people what you should build, they'll say, "well, I really want to be able to comment on videos, and upload them easily" and so on. And in the end, you'll have a crappy youtube knockoff, that no one will use, because it isn't as good as Youtube. On the other hand, if you find a gimmick, find that one particular user who isn't well catered to already, you might have something. In this case, maybe you could make a video sharing site specifically targeting hosting videos from video games. So if someone posts a video of their raid on the Halls of the Eternal Shadow, maybe you can add a capability to show on a map where they are located. That's the sort of gimmick that will make at least one person come back to your site, and recommend it to others. Also, offer to "find their friends who are already using our service" and spam their address book as part of the signup process. |
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If you already have the software done, advertize it in the comunities that it will be used, and make it availble for free. If you don't have the software done, you can look for things that are really helpfull and don't exist or get something that is usufull, already exists but improve it in ways ever imagined. Then do the first part. If it is usefull and free, it will make the way up by it self. good luck |
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First and foremost, by not being useless. After that, by not being buggy. Actually, on the other end of the spectrum, by being ridiculously buggy (e.g. making people's computers catch on fire), you'll certainly be written about online. |
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Call it On a serious note, try and find the relevant community online that will benefit from your software, and try posting in a forum or purchasing some advertising space. |
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Make it solve a real problem and open source it so tons of users can use and extend it. |
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I also hang out with marketing people, and one of the most insightful things I've learned from them is this: Do something valuable to serve a community. Everything else will follow from that. The guy who developed the original zip algorithm, and also the guy who developed mp3 both found a lot of popularity (and a good bit of cash.) Find an existing community, probably an area you are passionate about, and build something to solve a real problem for that community. Even Facebook was started that way in the beginning. What sites or forums to get involved in will obviously depend on who your product is serving. |
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2 things:
your program won't be famous if one of the condition above doesn't fulfill. |
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Publish on Code Project is also a good idea. |
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You must back it by a huge amount of money, like MS does. Spend it mostly for advertising. In such case the quality of a program won't matter. |
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Short answer: LEARN BY JOEL SPOLSKY! Long answer: He is doing great job in advertising his software. I have never seen the products of FogCreek software, but I already want to use them.
The bottom line is hat you really need to have established some wide user base, and then it is all relatively easy to make whatever you do to be 'famous'. Build a name and a reputation. P.S. Of course there are programs which became famous by just being the ideal tool for their domain, but I guess you figured out your software needs to have that quality either way. One thing is for sure, whatever you do, it must be great! |
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make it free and submitted to download engines! |
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