Emmanuella Ugochukwu

Build an audience first, or launch and grow later?

This is probably one of the most debated topics in the startup world: Should you build an audience before you launch, or is it better to launch first and grow your audience afterward? I’ve seen both approaches work, but each comes with its own set of challenges and rewards. - Building an audience first means you're creating buzz, validating your idea, and nurturing a community of early adopters who are invested in your success. But it takes time, patience, and a lot of effort to keep the momentum going before you even have a product to show. - Launching first lets you hit the ground running, gather real-world feedback, and iterate quickly. But without an existing audience, you might struggle to get those initial users and traction. So, indulge me: Which approach did you take —or are you considering taking (those who haven't launched yet)? - Did you build an audience before launching your product, or did you launch and then focus on growth? - What worked (or didn't work) for you? - If you could go back, would you do it differently? Share your story with us so we can all learn from each other. There's someone here who could benefit from your experience. ----- P.S: If you're a growth-stage founder struggling with churn or stagnant customer acquisition (usually because of poor positioning and messaging), I'd love to help. I specialize in crafting impactful marketing strategies tailored specifically to your product so you can start seeing the results you deserve. Connect with me on LinkedIn today. Can't wait to hear from you!

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Paola Santiago

I'm build an audience first too. I think the market has changed and there's more allowance for free marketing when it comes to building and engaging potential users in your platform via social media like TikTok. I think I put it somewhere where there's a Matcha store that hasn't opened up but has had over 100k followers. Meaning the have 100k+ potential clients immediately.

Kay Kwak
Launching soon!

@psproductperson Exactly. The number of platforms available for free marketing has grown significantly. TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube are all excellent for attracting an organic audience.

Paola Santiago

@kay_arkain  Yes! There's so many platforms out there to attract organic and save your ad money. Or at least experiment organic ways to grow your audience so you can actually pay for ads that you know will work. And the fun part too is if you're good enough with it, you can even get another source of revenue.

Emmanuella Ugochukwu
@psproductperson Exactly! I’m familiar with the Matcha store that focused on building an audience first. Platforms like TikTok and even Pinterest are awesome traffic sources to create a solid following of eager folks ready for your first prototype drop.
Paola Santiago

@nuellaugochi I totally forgot about Pinterest! It's quite underrated, isn't it?
From your experience though, do you find that there's a formula to put your videos out there in these platforms? Because personally, I know that I'm still experimenting to increase my viewing time and engagement

Vishal

Such a great discussion! I’ve seen both approaches work, but it really depends on the product and market.

Building an audience first is ideal if you're creating something new and need validation. But launching first and iterating fast can work better for products where early user feedback drives growth.

For us, we focused on building momentum early—we’re launching Helix on Feb 17th! Would love your thoughts—just visit my page and click ‘Try Helix for FREE’!

Emmanuella Ugochukwu
@vishal_rayarao Hi Vishal! Thanks for sharing your insights. I'll give Helix a try and provide feedback soon. Goodluck with your upcoming launch!
Emmanuella Ugochukwu
@vishal_rayarao Product Feedback: Hey Vishal, I just checked out Helix, and I have to say—it’s a really impressive concept! However, I ran into a hiccup. I tried generating a rough prompt for free, but the button seems unclickable. Not sure if it’s a backend issue, but it’s not generating anything for me. Thought I’d flag it so you’re aware.
Vishal

@nuellaugochi Thank you, looking into it immediately

Business Marketing with Nika

Build the audience first because if your are totally unknown and not trustworthy for some newbie people, there will be lack of trust into your product as well.

Emmanuella Ugochukwu
@busmark_w_nika I completely agree with you! Building an audience first makes a lot of sense because people tend to purchase from those they trust and recognize. An audience-first approach can definitely provide a more secure foundation compared to launching as an unknown entity.
Elena Tsemirava

I’m all for growing the audience first. You can have many launches, but your audience will usually stay more or less the same.

Emmanuella Ugochukwu
@elenat I'm also on team build an audience first. People buy from people they like, especially when they've been part of the journey. Thanks for sharing!
Kay Kwak
Launching soon!

I strongly agree that building an audience first is the way to go. But this audience shouldn’t just be passive viewers—they should be authentic, engaged supporters who believe in the journey.

These people will be part of the product’s evolution, focusing not on its flaws but on helping it improve. With their continued support, once the product reaches a certain stage, it can generate an even greater network effect.

Emmanuella Ugochukwu
@kay_arkain Absolutely true. Building an audience as a founder means inviting them into your journey. People want to know why you're building your product, what inspired you, and even the raw and unfiltered behind-the-scenes moments. Storytelling is your weapon. It's what gets them emotionally invested in your product long before they open their wallets.
Puja from Draftly.so

Building an audience first vs. launching and growing later—both paths have their trade-offs.

For us, we started by building a community first around LinkedIn growth, which helped shape our product and gave us a group of engaged early adopters when we launched. Having that initial support made all the difference.

That said, I’ve seen products launch first and iterate quickly based on real-world user feedback, which can work well too.

Emmanuella Ugochukwu
@puja_duseja Thanks for sharing your experience Puja! If I were to pick one I'd go with building an audience first too. I'm glad it worked out really well for your launch.
Natalia Eiriz

I’ve experienced both approaches and found that building an audience before launching really helped create excitement and early validation. It’s a lot of upfront work, but the payoff comes when you have a loyal group of early adopters. That said, launching first gave me faster feedback and the chance to iterate quickly. Having an MVP, something to iterate on from the start is crucial for real-world feedback. Balancing both is key!

Emmanuella Ugochukwu
@natalia_eiriz I totally agree! Each approach definitely has its own pros and cons. The key is to test, experiment, and learn from past product launches in your niche to see what worked for others. Then, apply those insights and stick with the strategy that proves to be the most effective for you.
Hussein
Launching soon!

Great question! I think both strategies can work, but it really depends on the type of product and audience.

For Graphify, I decided to launch first and build the audience along the way. The reason? My main goal was to get real user feedback as early as possible, rather than spending months growing an audience without knowing if the product truly resonated.

That said, I can see the value in building an audience first, especially for consumer-facing products where community and pre-launch buzz can make a big difference.

Curious—what do you think is the biggest mistake founders make when building an audience pre-launch? Is it not engaging enough, or focusing too much on numbers instead of actual relationships? Would love to hear your take! 🚀

Tania Bell / Product Delights

@hussein_r the biggest mistake is not building an audience at all which results in an empty room when you launch.


talk about what you're working on from the start

Hussein
Launching soon!

@taniabell That’s a great point, Tania! Definitely realizing now how important it is to build in public early instead of waiting until launch day.

Curious—what’s been the most effective way for you to grow an audience while building? Do you focus more on sharing progress, engaging with communities, or something else?

Dineshan
Launching soon!

Building audience first is vital, anyone who don't get it will understand after the launch.

Abesh Thakur

This makes me think - obviously growing an audience sounds like the most logical idea, but is this equally scalable/possible for every category of product? Would love to read and learn how people in enterprise SaaS industries for example, have found success in growing a community and what parts of that playbook would be useful to starting to build a relevant community in PH.

Tania Bell / Product Delights

@abesh_thakur simply post on socials about what you're working on. choose a couple of platform max, be careful to select the platform where your potential buyers are likely to hang on the most and get posting. you won't regret it

Hazel Mathew

Launched first, no audience just hustle. Cold outreach save me.

Emmanuella Ugochukwu
@hazel_mathew Hi Hazel, thanks for sharing your experience. If you could go back would you have done things differently? What was it like acquiring your first 100 users via cold outreach?
Tasos Valtinos

Very interesting post @nuellaugochi !

I think building an audience is important, if there is noone to use what you build there is no point.

However, I dont think it needs to be a binary decision. i.e one or the other.

You should build your audience, and your product at the same time. The thing is that regarding building your product, you have more control over. aka if you dont build it it wont be built lol..

However, with audience it does not depend on you 100%, it depends on the platforms you use and if you manage to get your content right. Therefore, while testing things out in terms of what your audience likes, you should definitely not ditch the product side of things.

Because platforms like instagram, linkedin, x or whatever, to grow and build an audience requires a lot of energy an attention, and i dont think any entrepreneur should put all their effort to making those platforms richer.

Because you working on building an audience, guarantees that the platforms get richer, it does not guarantee that you will successfully create an engaging community.


That's my take.

Keep hustling!

(very interesting post, nice!)


T

Drew Gallagher

It depends on the product and resources available. If you have the time and budget, building product awareness early can make the initial launch and future releases generate a large buzz faster. Building a group of people who like and trust your product idea and brand early will create a loyal fanbase that can advocate for you, saving money and time to work on the product instead of an initial marketing boost. These marketing efforts should be ongoing to keep momentum and will pay dividends if the product evolves or you want to launch a new product. Every product will have users but a brand can have multiple products worth of users. Brand is the ultimate goal


That all being said, you could be the best marketer on the planet and build the biggest audience and still fail without delivering a product.


Doing an even split will allow you to develop both which is the best scenario. Focus on the thing you struggle with most to grow it the fastest. Or outsource the work for either to focus on what you do best!

Hadar Sharvit
Launching soon!

As always - the truth is somewhere in the middle. would probably advice to launch a simple MVP and build an audience around it. Its always a question on how much feedback we need to receive before making this MVP and actual end2end product, but every journey is different!