Imed Radhouani

What's the worst advice you've ever gotten about marketing your product?

I'll go first.

Someone told me: "Just be consistent. Post every day. The algorithm rewards consistency."

So I did.

For six months, I posted every single day. Sometimes at 7am. Sometimes at 10pm. Weekends included. I wrote about our product, our features, our roadmap. I followed all the "best practices" — hook in the first line, three takeaways, call to action at the end.

I got maybe 30 likes per post. A few comments from friends. Zero customers.

One day I got tired. I posted something messy. No structure. Just a story about a deal we lost because ChatGPT had wrong info about our SOC2 status. It was raw. It was specific. It had nothing to do with "consistency."

That post got 40,000 views. Seven people DM'd me asking to try the product. One of them became our biggest customer.

The "consistency" advice was safe. It was easy to follow. It didn't work.

The thing that worked was saying something real. Something uncomfortable. Something that proved I actually knew what I was talking about because I'd lived it.

What's the worst advice you've followed?

Imed Radhouani
Founder & CTO – Rankfender

801 views

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Indu Thangamuthu

🙌 Have been there - worked with the great minds of ChatGPT and posted daily, on the mentioned time in the mentioned platofrms, following the best practices... only to find that impressions were good. Results... I will leave it to your great minds of imagination😂

The worst marketing advice I got was from a "C-level" non-marketing person based on his C-level experience : "Let's finish developing the full product first and then initiate marketing works." 😏

Imed Radhouani

@indu_thangamuthu Oh man that one hurts. "Finish the product first then market it." By the time you're done, you've built something nobody asked for and have zero idea who actually wants it.

Btw the "impressions were good" part is the trap. You start feeling like you're doing something right because the numbers go up. But then nothing else moves. It's like running on a treadmill. You're moving but you're not going anywhere.

What did you end up doing instead of waiting?

Indu Thangamuthu

@imed_radhouani Seeing that 3 -4 digit impressions always feel like Oscar-nomination moment.😂
And the mind starts writing speech already - " I'm damn good in this. I'm in the right path." 😏 (perks of marketing mind seeing 4 digits in impressions)

And in response to your question :

Well I believe in 1 principle : Always let people own their decisions and let it teach.👻 🤪

Imed Radhouani

@indu_thangamuthu Haha the Oscar speech moment is real. I saw 40k views once and was already planning my keynote. Then the next post got 400 and the speech got deleted.

The "let people own their decisions" thing is hard. You want to help. You want to tell them what works. But you're right. People have to learn it themselves. Most advice just bounces off until you've felt the pain.

nerdkick

"just be consistent" is dangerous because it sounds so reasonable.

i posted daily across 5 platforms for 2 weeks. most of it: under 20 views. the one that resonated was raw GA numbers — no structure, just honest data about what was actually happening.

worst advice i personally got: "don't show anything until it's polished." cost me weeks of community building i could have been doing instead.

Imed Radhouani

@nerdkick11 That second one hurts to read because I did the same thing. Spent months polishing before showing anything. By the time I launched, I'd missed so many early conversations with people who could have helped shape it.

The "don't show until it's polished" advice comes from a good place — don't ship broken stuff. But it gets interpreted as "hide until perfect." And perfect never comes.

Raw GA numbers with no structure working better than polished posts is the data point more people need to see. People trust mess when it's honest. They ignore polish when it's empty.

nerdkick

@imed_radhouani appreciate that, Imed. "people trust mess when it's honest"

— that's basically the thesis behind this whole launch.

just went live on product hunt today:

https://www.producthunt.com/posts/ideadose

you said you'd check it out — would love your take.

Imed Radhouani
nerdkick

@imed_radhouani appreciate it Imed, means a lot 🙏

Maria Anosova 🔥

I think the fact that you posted every day, including this post, played a role here. On its own, it wouldn't have gotten 40,000 views.

Imed Radhouani

@maria_anosova You're probably right. The daily posts created a baseline. People got used to seeing the name. Then when something real showed up, they didn't scroll past.

But the thing is, those daily posts were mostly forgettable. 30 likes. Friends commenting. Nothing moving. The consistent output didn't make the messy post work. It just meant there was someone there to see it when it finally landed.

It's like watering a plantt every day. Doesn't mean anything until one day it flowers. But you still have to water it...

Maria Anosova 🔥

@imed_radhouani Life is often like that—you take small, routine steps every day, and at some point, they lead you somewhere (whether it’s 40,000 views or winning a race).

Imed Radhouani

@maria_anosova Yeah exactly. You don't see the routine steps. You just see the spike and think it's magic. But the spike doesn't happen without the months of quiet posting that came before it.

The hardest part is keeping the routine when nothing is happening. When you're posting to 30 people and wondering if it matters. You just have to trust that something will eventually land.

Stoyan Minchev

The worst thing I did was to ask AI what to do. I am a developer and the marketing is like a black-box with magic inside.

I am working on an elderly monitoring app, and the AI suggested to go in multiple caregivers groups in facebook, reddit, everywhere and start posting messages about the product. Even though my aim is not really the promotion, but to try to really help people, all the AI did was a big disaster. My messages were blocked, I was banned. Then it suggested to go on other, more developer related pages, but, again no results.

What really got me annoyed is that it suggested that I need to start helping caregivers with problems and to pretend that I am not doing a 'promotion', just to mention somewhere that there is a good product, like it is part of the honest conversation. Pure evil!

As it was written in an article I read: the AI amplifies. It amplifies the success, of people who know what are doing. It amplifies the failure of people who don't know what are doing ;)

Imed Radhouani

@stoyan_minchev Oh man, that's brutal. The "pretend you're helping" suggestion is exactly the kind of thing that makes people hate AI marketing advice. It's not just bad advice. It's actively harmful. Gets you banned. Wastes your time. Makes you feel like a spammer when you're actually trying to build something that helps people.

The "AI amplifies" line is spot on. If you already know what you're doing, AI makes you faster. If you don't, it just helps you fail faster and harder. There's no shortcut for understanding where your people actually hang out and how to talk to them like a human.

The elderly monitoring app sounds like something that genuinely matters. Caregivers are exhausted and skeptical of anything that feels like a sales pitch. AI doesn't understand that. It just sees "caregivers + groups + post = traffic." It doesn't see the trust that takes months to earn.

What ended up working for you? Did you figure out a way to reach them that didn't feel like promotion?

Stoyan Minchev

@imed_radhouani As I wrote a did a lot of mistakes. I am still in early access state, waiting the application to pass closed testing and subsequent approval. Looks like I started with the campaign to make people aware of the existence of such application too early. I see that there is no magic trick and I need to go the whole path. I will start with a few post in places where there are more fellow developers, rather than caregivers. hoping at some of them might be interested, because they need it, or because there are intrigued by the 11 layers of securities that prevents the android-based OS to kill the application (Android based OS are aggressive, trying to save some battery). I hope that I will get a few people from Reddit (r/SideProject, for example). I hope I will get a few people from here as well. One by one. Each one I will try to find personally and ask for feedback. I truly believe that personal attention, if possible, is really important. People like to be listened and feel that somebody is interested on their opinion (like you do right now ;) ). Having a few feedbacks, and happy people, I will extend the target groups and start searching professional caregivers, or Lively, or some other in that area and try to do a B2B2C model. Of course, trying to be flexible all the time. :)

Something like that :)

Imed Radhouani

@stoyan_minchev Yeah I did the same thing. Started posting way too early. Felt like shouting into a void. The one by one approach is the only thing that actually worked. Slow as hell but you learn what to say and who actually cares.

The 11 layers of security thing is your hook. That's the kind of detail devs stop scrolling for. Not "we help caregivers" but "here's why Android doesn't kill our app." Real problem. They've felt it.

Reddit side project is a good start. Just don't drop a link and run. Hang out in the comments. Answer stuff. Be useful. The post that works is the one where you're still there a week later helping someone else.

You've got the right mindset. Slow, personal, flexible. Keep going.

What's the most useful thing you've learned from the early convos?

Mateusz Młynarski

I tried your advice and told my story of how the app was created. There were a lot of changes, written in human language without AI, and still very little. Creating the app was the easiest thing 😅

Imed Radhouani

@mateusz_mlynarski Man I feel this. Creating the app is the easy part. Getting people to care about it is the hard part. You can build something solid, tell the story honestly, do everything right, and still end up talking to yourself.

The "written in human language without AI" thing is interesting. We think the problem is the tone. But sometimes it's just that nobody knows they need it yet. Or they don't trust you enough to try it. The trust thing takes time. No shortcut.

We're building RASE v1.0 right now, Rankfender App Store Engine. It's a whole engine that tracks how apps show up in AI answers and store search, do keywords research and Keywords intelligence... Would love for you to test it when it's ready. People who've built and shipped get what we're trying to do.
Hang in there. The app that sits quiet today might be the one people discover next month.

What's the app called? I'll go check it out.

Mateusz Młynarski

@imed_radhouani Thanks man, really appreciate that, you nailed it.

It’s definitely more about trust and timing than just building something.

My app is called Travel Rules, it’s basically an AI travel assistant that helps you plan trips, check rules, and not forget important stuff while traveling.

Still early, but improving it every day.

RASE sounds interesting too, especially the AI visibility part, that’s exactly where things are going. Would love to test it when it’s ready.

Adrian Cisneros

I feel as though this has to do in part with people's willingness to hear someone out when they can tell that it is coming from a genuine place or side of things. A lot of the rehearsed and often repeated mumbo jumbo that we convince ourselves is a good idea to follow through with holds little substance in the end. I honestly can't imagine reading some of the almost lifeless scripts that I've considered using as a strategy for getting my product out there.