CY

What makes you click into a Product Hunt launch?

There are so many launches on Product Hunt every day. How do you decide which ones are worth clicking into?

What’s your #1 filter or shortcut?

Is it:

• the name or tagline
• the thumbnail
• whether it’s relevant to your work
• or just whether it feels instantly clear?

Fun experiment: open this week’s PH leaderboard and see which launch makes you stop and click first, and why?

Wow — this thread just got featured in today’s Product Hunt newsletter under "Click logic, revealed."!! 👀

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CY

Curious follow-up for the makers here 👀

If you’ve launched on PH before — what do you think actually drove the clicks? Was it tagline, thumbnail, gallery video, or something else?

Feel free to drop your launch page too — would be fun to analyze a few together.

Daisuke Ishii 石井 大輔

this is great question - following

Sai Tharun Kakirala

Three things that always get my click:

1. A tagline that tells me the problem, not the solution. "AI for productivity" = meh. "Manage your whole day in WhatsApp" = yes, tell me more.

2. A real demo GIF showing the actual workflow, not a landing page screenshot.

3. A founder comment in the thread that sounds like a human — not a press release. If you're nervous about your launch, say it. It creates connection.

As someone who's launching Hello Aria on April 10th, I've been studying what makes launches click for the past few weeks. The pattern is always the same: specific problem, relatable story, clear outcome.

CY

@sai_tharun_kakirala  So basically: specific problem tagline → real demo GIF → human founder voice → click.

aroido

For me it usually comes down to two things:

1. A very clear tagline that immediately explains the outcome

2. Something that feels like a real tool, not just a demo

Developer tools especially stand out when the product solves a small but very real workflow problem.

CY

@aroido So your click logic is basically:

clear outcome tagline → feels like a real tool (not a demo) → click.

Curious — does that hold if you try it on this week’s leaderboard?

aroido

@lightfield Yeah, I actually tried that mental filter on the leaderboard.

What usually makes me click is when the tagline communicates a very concrete outcome in a few seconds.

Something like “X that helps Y do Z” works much better than abstract positioning.

When the value is immediately clear, I’m much more likely to open the page and explore the product.

Hans Desjarlais

Before I click, I look at the name and tagline then I determine whether it’s relevant or interesting to me. Then I click, even if it may not have a lot of upvotes.

CY

@ismaelyws So your click logic is basically:

name + tagline → check if it’s relevant to you → click.

Curious — does that hold if you try it on this week’s leaderboard?

Anna Moe

Preparing my first launch and this thread is basically free UX research. The pattern I'm seeing: people don't click to learn what a product does, they click when they already suspect it might be for them. Which means the tagline's job isn't to explain, it's to make the right person feel recognized. That's a harder brief than it sounds.

CY

@anna_moe So basically:

tagline makes the right person feel recognized → click.

Kiyo

Tagline clarity, every time. If I can't tell what it does in one line I'm most likely already scrolling past.

After that it's the first gallery image.

CY

@introlo So basically:

clear one-line tagline → strong first gallery image → click.

Olumide

Honest answer — a relatable problem stated in the first line. Signova's whole pitch is: most freelancers skip contracts or overpay lawyers. That one line is what gets the click for us. 👀

CY

@olumide_apesin So basically: relatable problem stated in the first line → click.

Ziga Potocnik

1) The tagline has to answer one question instantly: "is this for me?"

2) Not what it does. Not how it works. Just - do I recognize my problem in those 8 words?


What makes me skip: anything that could describe 50 other products. "AI-powered insights for teams" tells me nothing. "Ask your data anything, get answers in seconds" at least tells me there's a specific interaction being promised.


The AI fatigue point above is real too. If the name or tagline leans on "AI" as the hook, I assume the product is the AI - not that the AI is solving something specific. Big difference.

CY

@zigapotoc So basically:

instantly recognize your problem (not generic “AI”) → click.

Shraddha Bhat

#1 filter: Thumbnail + Tagline combo if it grabs in 2 seconds (problem it solves + visual hook), I click. Founders nailed it there more than anywhere.

Bonus: Check first comment for real user feedback before diving in. Works 90% of the time!

What's your go-to?

CY

@shraddhabhat So your click logic is basically:

thumbnail + tagline → understand the problem in 2 seconds → click.

Curious — does that hold if you try it on this week’s leaderboard?