Five days ago I launched MinervaAI on Product Hunt.
We hit Top 50 organically — no VC network, no big Twitter following, no launch squad. Just built something, wrote about why, and posted it. That felt genuinely good.
Then I waited for signups.
None came.
I've spent the last few days sitting with that, reading everything I could about post-launch distribution, and talking to other founders. Here's what I've worked out:
Product Hunt and directories are awareness, not acquisition.
People browsing PH are in discovery mode. They're not in pain right now. They're not frantically Googling for a solution at 11pm. They'll upvote your thing, maybe bookmark it, and move on with their day.
The people who actually sign up are the ones you find at the moment they're expressing the problem. A Reddit thread where someone's frustrated with Obsidian AI plugins. A Discord message asking "is there something better than Smart Connections?" An IH post from someone who just gave up on MCP setup.
That's the person. And they're out there, today, writing exactly that sentence somewhere.
So that's what I'm doing now.
Not running ads. Not optimising my landing page headline for the 12th time. Just showing up in the communities where my person already is, at the moment they're already asking the question.
It's slow. It's manual. It doesn't feel like "growth." But I think it's the only honest path from zero to first real users for a product like this.
What MinervaAI actually is, for context: it's a markdown knowledge base where AI is genuinely first-class — full vault context, wiki-link awareness, background agents, Google Calendar and Gmail integration, and you bring your own Claude key so there's no token markup. It's built specifically for Obsidian power users who love the philosophy but keep hitting walls with plugin complexity and MCP setup.
If that's you, or you know someone it sounds like — minerva-ai.app
But mainly I'm posting this because I suspect a lot of people here are in the same five-days-post-launch silence, and I wanted to say: I think it's normal, and I think the work is just beginning.
Would love to hear from anyone who's navigated this phase — what actually moved the needle for your first 10 users?
PH top 50 with zero signups is a brutal but common gap — usually means traffic ≠ ICP, or the landing page answers curiosity but not "why act now."
What's your product and who did you expect to sign up from PH vs who actually showed up? Curious if it's a channel problem or a message problem.
This hit me really hard because I lived this almost exactly. Launched Wealtii (a digital asset index fund platform) a few weeks ago and had the same moment of staring at a silent dashboard after 10 months of building solo.
The realization you described is 100% right. Product Hunt is a clapping audience, not a customer base. The claps feel amazing but nobody in discovery mode has a credit card out.
What actually moved the needle for me was embarrassingly simple. I went back to people I had personally spoken to before launch, the ones who had said "wow this sounds cool," and I just followed up with one line. "Hey, it is live. Would love your honest take." Not a pitch. Not a newsletter. A human message to a real person.
Three of my first five users came from that single follow up.
The second thing that worked was going into communities and asking questions, not answering them. I would find threads about investing frustrations and just genuinely participate. No link drops. Just real conversation. People came to my profile, saw what I was building, and converted naturally.
The manual grind you described IS the growth strategy at this stage. It is not a temporary phase before the "real" growth starts. For a lot of us, it IS the real growth for the first hundred users.
Congrats on Top 50 organically by the way. That is a real signal even if signups did not follow. It means the framing works. Now it is just about finding the people who are already in pain.
Good luck with MinervaAI, genuinely cool product. 🚀
This resonates with me too, i launched my beta test few days back. No signups, no users, no testers. Havent tried Product Hunt yet, maybe that would get my app into traction?
This matches my week almost exactly. I'm a few days into launching a dev tool for people migrating off Bubble, and the pattern is identical: generic channels produce views, specific ones produce conversations.
What's actually moved the needle so far: posting in the official Bubble forum (where the pain literally lives) got a pricing question within hours — buying intent, not upvotes. Meanwhile Reddit's spam filter ate my launch post from a low-karma account, and what passed the next day was a link-free post that just told the story. The most surprising one: going back to a 4-month-old thread where people had asked me questions I never answered, and answering them. Two of those replies turned into real conversations, including one with an agency owner.
So +1 to your thesis: one person mid-pain in a niche community beats a thousand discovery-mode browsers. The uncomfortable part is that it doesn't scale — but at 0→10 users, nothing is supposed to scale anyway.
I like your point that product hunt is awareness, not acquisition. Looking back , if you could restart from day one , would you skip product hunt entirely until you already had 10-20 active users ?
The part nobody's pushed back on yet: for a product with real switching cost like yours, "show up where the pain is expressed" might still be too passive. An Obsidian power user has already sunk months into their setup, so what's stopping them isn't hearing about you, it's the risk of moving their whole vault. That's a trust problem more than an awareness one. The move that fits is one level more manual than posting: offer to migrate someone's vault with them on a 20-minute call. Five of those beat fifty upvotes, and you'll learn more from them too.
Two watering holes specific to your person that you didn't list: r/ObsidianMD and the Obsidian Discord, where "is there something better than Smart Connections" gets asked most days. Same interception idea, pre-sorted by niche.
One diagnostic before you write the launch off: of the PH traffic, do you know how many clicked through to the site vs just upvoted? Zero signups from 200 clicks is a landing problem; zero from 5 clicks is the distribution problem
you're describing. Different leaks, different fixes.
I agree with this: I suspect a lot of people here are in the same five-days-post-launch silence, and I wanted to say: I think it's normal, and I think the work is just beginning. I just started recently and I'm even offering the first 3 products for free and no one has contacted me yet.
We got to prepare a while for the PH Launch buddy, there are even strategists for this
This landed for me because I'm in the same silence right now — launched my free tool this morning, got 113 views on the launch post, zero conversions. Same lesson, same day: browsers aren't buyers.
One thing I'd add to your "find them at the moment they're expressing the problem" framing: for some products, that moment isn't a Reddit thread — it's a Google search. My tool solves a deadline/penalty problem, and the person who needs it is typing "missed my LLC filing deadline" at 11pm, exactly like you said. So my version of your strategy is SEO pages that answer that exact search, one per pain point. Same principle — intercept the expressed problem — but the interception point is a search results page instead of a Discord message. Slower to start, but it compounds and doesn't require me to be online at the right moment.
The manual community route you're describing has one trap worth naming since you'll be living in it: answer the person's question completely before the product mention, every time. The threads where I've seen this work, the product link reads like a footnote to genuinely useful help. The moment it reads like the reason you showed up, the thread turns on you.
Also — five days post-PH with Top 50 and no signups doesn't mean the product's wrong. It means PH was the wrong room. You clearly know that now, which puts you ahead of most.
You worked out the right lesson faster than most. Directories are awareness, and demand lives at the moment someone is actively describing the pain. I would only add two things.
First, the hard part of showing up in those threads is being useful without pitching. The instant it reads like an ad you get ignored or removed, so the move is to answer the actual question well and let people click through on their own. Slower, but those are the ones who convert.
Second, do not fully write off the launch. Top 50 with no squad is a real signal, and the page keeps working as a credibility artifact and a link long after launch day. Zero signups on day 5 is a distribution problem, not a product verdict.
The reframe that helped me was to treat launch as the thing that earns you permission to show up in the pain threads, not the thing that is supposed to convert on its own.
The awareness vs acquisition split matches what I see with paid video too. A hook can get someone to stop scrolling, that's awareness. Whether they convert depends on if the hook matched the pain they already had, not the pain you assumed they had. Founders often test one hook and call it done instead of testing angles against each other.
This is a really honest takeaway. Top 50 sounds like a win, but zero signups shows the difference between attention and actual intent.
I’m learning something similar with my own SaaS. People seeing the product is not the same as people needing it right now.
The part that stood out to me is finding users at the exact moment they’re already describing the problem. That feels much stronger than just launching and hoping the right person happens to notice.
Slow and manual probably feels frustrating, but it may be the cleanest way to find the first real users. Especially when the product needs trust before someone changes their workflow.
yes social proof and trust based on that can not be underestimated.
I think the biggest realization here is that Product Hunt answered "Will people notice this exists?"—not "Will people adopt it?"
Your point about meeting people at the moment they're actively describing the problem feels much closer to how early B2B products find their first users. At that stage, solving someone's existing frustration is usually a stronger acquisition channel than trying to create interest from scratch.
Agreed, I think also I feel a little stuck as Obsidian.md has a big fanbase and I have used both platforms extensively. My solution works better (for me) and I no longer use Obsidian. I have made things very easy for people to migrate to Minerva without burning bridges (you can drag and drop your vault) but getting users to dip their toe in the water is my sticking point at the moment. Thank you for your response.
Interesting.
Your reply made me think less about migration itself and more about what happens before someone even decides it's worth trying.
I don't think the sticking point is where most founders instinctively look, and I don't think I can explain the reasoning properly in a thread without oversimplifying it.
If you're interested, what's the best email to reach you on?
hello@minerva-ai.app
Thanks! I’ve just sent it over.
Looking forward to hearing your thoughts whenever you have a chance.
Thanks, I will take a look.