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  • A post mortem on YourStack

    Ryan Hoover
    9 replies
    In 2019 we built a new project called YourStack. Product Hunt is primarily about what’s new, a firehose of the latest tech launches. YourStack was all about the products you use and love. Our goal was to expand beyond tech, to help people discover and buy products recommended by people respect and trust. But it failed. Occasionally I’m asked why, so I wrote a post mortem. The TL;DR: 1. Product discovery isn’t a daily or even weekly activity. This made it incredibly difficult to build a habit and drive meaningful engagement. The Product Hunt flywheel 2. It was too broad. We should have narrowed focus to build the best experience for a particular type of person and use case. 3. We should have built mobile-first. Building for the web has many advantages but mobile is where consumers live. 4. We overbuilt. I’ll take responsibility for this. I got too clever and should have pushed the team to launch something simple, faster. 5. I burned out. This deserves its own essay. :) Here's an expanded version of the story on our learnings and opportunity in product discovery space. For those of you that signed up for YourStack, would love to hear your take in the comments. :)

    Replies

    CY Zhou
    Thanks for sharing this, Ryan. It's always insightful to see the reflections and learnings from YourStack's journey.
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    Patrick Sauerwein
    Thank you very much for sharing, very interesting to read. Could you elaborate a little bit more about point 1 and product discovery? Specifically, what issues did you encounter, and what were your expectations in hindsight? Additionally, what job needed to be done, and what was the desired outcome?
    Ryan Hoover
    @virtual_patrick haha, all good. :) Re: product discovery not being a habit: How often do you buy or use new products (excluding repeat purchases like groceries)? Probably not often. That's a challenge for anyone trying to build recurring engagement, especially when the entire system or flywheel depends on it.
    Ryan Hoover
    @virtual_patrick first can you please confirm you're not an LLM? ;) (no offense!)
    Patrick Sauerwein
    @rrhoover No, I’m human and just interested to learn more about your experiences and thoughts. 🙈🤷‍♂️ And I have no intentions to feed any LLM with that. It’s my nickname, maybe I need to change it due to your feedback.
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    Marc H. Guirand
    @rrhoover - thanks for sharing! We'll keep these things in mind as we slowly develop the Derisk portfolio.
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    James Francis
    Great writeup @rrhoover, love the transparency. I've just launched a Beta version of a similar tool in the product discovery world - a simple way to share your SaaS stack with others (https://hapstack.com/stacks). It's not our main product (SaaS management is), just intended to be a free tool since I see so much activity in this space. So I suppose there's less pressure to drive the daily discovery traffic you mentioned, though I'll still want to see strong engagement in order to keep investing in it. I've been thinking about how to incentivize founders to share their stack on a new platform vs. Twitter, LinkedIn, etc. Two ideas I've had so far are: 1. Allowing them to use their own affiliate links to monetize the traffic to their stacks, which is much trickier to do on social media 2. Promoting high quality stacks across our platforms (and in the 'Discover' section of our tool) to allow founders to grow their own audience. Curious for your thoughts on that topic since you've spent more time than I have on this. Thanks again for sharing!
    Ryan Hoover
    @jfrancis hey, James! Re: #1: This only works if you can drive a ton of traffic for them (you can do some napkin math to estimate what's required to hit a tipping point of value). And even then, unclear to me if anyone at the copy is motivated to make a little money through affiliates. Re: #2: Unclear to me what the audience on Hapstack would be for. This has a similar dilemma as the above – it's hard to motivate people before there's significant traffic. Ultimately, what founders really want is traffic, adoption, and revenue. I would only focus on things that achieve that.
    James Francis
    @rrhoover That makes sense, thanks for the reply. For #2, I more meant growing their audience on their own platforms outside of Hapstack. Ideally we'd help them gain exposure by featuring their stacks, etc and making it clear where to go follow them. Either way, it's certainly a marketplace challenge, and I think the key will be convincing early adopter founders to jump onboard before there's traffic.