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?

ps1: Not sure? Open this week’s PH leaderboard and see which launch makes you stop and click first, and why

ps2: This thread just got featured in today’s Product Hunt newsletter under "Click logic, revealed."!! 👀

ps3: Update as of Mar 15 (thanks for the 121 upvotes and 73 replies!)

  • A quick summary of the click logic shared in the thread:

    • Instant clarity (name + tagline) — 52%

    • Recognizable / relevant problem — 26%

    • Visual hook (thumbnail / screenshot) — 13%

    • Social proof (upvotes / engagement) — 9%

  • Interesting twist:
    Several people said they actually skip launches starting with “AI…” unless the use case is extremely clear.

  • Takeaway:
    Most clicks happen in 2 sec when the product is instantly clear and obviously relevant.

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Chris Payne

I've been lurking for a while, contemplating if this is the best path for me (it is by the way). And I'd say if it solved a problem I have or know my organizations have had. I am also drawn to AI augmented tools that make me better.

CY

@chris_payne_emba So basically: real problem → AI makes you better → click.

Chris Payne
@lightfield I think of it as deeper than that. Busy executives are pulled in so many directions. Told they have to do X, Y & Z to make their employees happy. But no one ever taught them or gave them an operating system to succeed. AI can augment many of their issues to free up time.
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.

Woody Song

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?

Woody Song

@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?

Hans Desjarlais

@lightfield Yes, it does. I see you guys did well on your launch, congrats. But IMO your tagline could've been clearer.

Olia Nemirovski

The thumbnail. If the visual looks like someone actually cared about design, I assume the same about the product.

CY

@olia_nemirovski So basically:

well-designed thumbnail → assume product quality → click.

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

Olia Nemirovski

@lightfield Revising my own answer. It's the tagline first. If the keywords match something I'm actively thinking about, I'm in. Then I check the comment count to see if anyone else found it worth engaging with.

Sansstuti Aggarwal

For me it’s simple: instant clarity

If I understand the product and the problem it solves in ~2 seconds from the name + tagline, I’ll click.

If I have to decode it, I usually skip.

Clear > clever on Product Hunt.

Yogi Velagapudi

Great thread! I just launched PostPilot today (my first ever PH launch) and learned this lesson the hard way.

Currently sitting at #51 with 1 upvote. Here's what I think I got wrong:

1. Tagline clarity - 'AI writes your social posts. You approve. It posts.' - too generic? Should have been more specific like 'Get 30 LinkedIn posts written for you every month'

2. No social proof - zero followers, no hunter, no team. People scan for trust signals and I had none.

3. Timing - launched at 7am UK = midnight California. By the time the US wakes up, you're buried.

The irony? The product actually works great. But on PH, the launch matters more than the product.

If anyone wants to check it out and give honest feedback: https://www.producthunt.com/post...

Lesson learned: build the audience BEFORE the product next time.

Product Inventor

For me it usually comes down to two things pretty quickly: clarity and relevance.

If the headline immediately tells me what problem the product solves and who it’s for, I’ll usually click. A lot of launches sound interesting but still leave you guessing what the actual use case is.

The other thing is whether it feels like the maker understands the problem deeply. Sometimes you can tell from the description that it came from real experience rather than just building something because the technology was available.