Inspiring page about your journey. HelloHailey looks great. But I am still left wondering-- in one sentence, what is the product? It's great that you list the benefits of the product. What is the product itself though? I am left wondering, "Is this product a map of colleagues where it shows their headshot/avatar along with a message?" -- i.e. is the product/service actually the map at the bottom of the HelloHailey website?
Thanks!
I've started this whole journey with a problem-first mindset.
In the first 2 articles, I chose a problem and a niche:
As a remote product or engineering leader in tech, it's hard for my team to develop personal connections with teammates distributed across time zones.
Over the next 2 weeks I'll set my product vision and share specific requirements for an MVP. I'll scope an MVP that I can build in a month or less.
The landing page today is vague - I was hoping the problem and potential outcomes would resonate with potential users, with the goal of collecting and qualifying early waitlist sign-ups.
So far I've had 50-60+ signups, but hard to say how serious they are.
https://reddit.com/r/entrepreneur
https://reddit.com/r/personalfinance (people who retire early and share their product/service idea)
I know there are tons of readers out there with more SaaS sales experience than me (which is none...).
See any major flaws with my strategy? I'd love to hear your thoughts.
The fewer options you provide for subscription, the better. You want your B2B customers to have a simple yes/no decision process.
I'm leaning towards having a permanent free tier with a low seat limit.
On billing, I'll definitely have an annual subscription option. From interviews I found that, in some cases, team leads will have to file expense reports and doing it monthly would be too tedious.
I'll have to think through offering quarterly and semi-annual plans. My gut feel is that it'd be too much complexity to have 3-4 options.
This is why the important thing is getting an MVP into the hands of users, then iterating.
I will note that there is a danger that sharing the process could interfere with success of the product for various reasons. The big two are "conflict of interest" -- people may be hesitant to sign up knowing in advance you are likely to talk about them -- and that blogging about it may be more rewarding (in terms of positive attention and feel good experiences) than actually making the product, which could end up being counterproductive (if you let it).
I've looked your landing page over and I will suggest that good guidelines for how to socialize well with co-workers will be a critical part of making this work.
I was a homemaker for a lot of years and not understanding social norms for the corporate world was an uncomfortable experience for me when I had a corporate job. I have about six years of college and yadda, but I just have different life experience from the norm so it's been personally challenging for me to parse certain things.
So I think you will need to help people with that piece of it because a space of this sort can potentially go sideways. If this were my product, I would be gathering together good articles about how to do business socializing well, what are the pitfalls you most need to avoid, what are some best practices, etc.
I would also put together whatever articles I could find about the importance of making social connections and building trust to business success. That will be the value position: That your work force will be more effective if they can connect socially and sort out things people need to sort out that can impede effective communication, etc, at times at work.