Welcome,
Good to be back with you all! This week we have a guest post by the brilliant George Vasiliadis Head of Growth of ViralLoops. The post was originally posted on his medium where you can check it out!
đ€Donât forget, for February if you refer 10 people to First 1000, you will get $50 Amazon gift card!đ€
Grab your $50 if you refer 10 friends in February (11 days to go!)
Now to the fun stuff! How Robinhood got 1 million people to sign up for their waitlist before ever launching a product
Itâs a tale as old as time.
No, not that one.
You get an idea for a revolutionary product or service.đĄ
You launch the next big thing on your website. đ»
You invite your family, friends â perhaps even your LinkedIn network â to download your app or buy from your store.
Despite your efforts, your launch ends up being less âbig thingâ and more small potatoes.
đ
Commission-free stock-trading app Robinhood managed to rewrite this classic narrative with an enviable and explosive go-to-market.
In the year prior to launch, Robinhood built a waiting list amounting to nearlyâŠoneâŠmillionâŠ
âŠusers.
Thatâs one million users before the company even existed.
Sound nuts?-Iâd say so.
Gaining one million potential users during prelaunch is perhaps a lofty target for a small startup. But you can certainly expand your prelaunch reach â and your waiting list â by imitating some of Robinhoodâs techniques.
Just like Robinhood stole from the richđ°đ° and gave to the poor đ«đ°, weâre stealing/borrowing from Robinhood and giving to you.
Compel Immediate Action
FOMO; Fear Of Missing Out.
Itâs a powerful force.
So powerful, in fact, that simply making potential customers feellike they might be missing out on something can often move them to action.
56 % of surveyed adults admit that FOMO impacts their media usagehabits, for example, compelling them to look at social media again and again.
Marketers can harness FOMO by creating an impression of exclusivity through the use wait lists, limited supply, and time limits.
And thatâs exactly what Robinhood did.
As a part of their pre-launch strategy, the Robinhood team invited potential app lovers to gain invitation-only, early access to its private beta.
Instead of inviting potential Robinhood users to join a mailing list, the company appealed to its interested fansâ desire to be the first to benefit from what Robinhood had to offer.
And this offer was so enticing, that it got the attention of Hacker News, which was âEvery engineerâs dream in the Valley,â according to co-founder Vlad Tenev.
Keep the Process Simple
So how did Robinhood draw in the first eager-to-gain-early-access few?
Robinhood kept the sign-up process short, sweet, and simple.
When a person arrived on the early-access landing page, only one task stood between them and the chance to be the first to use the Robinhood app: entering their email address.
Letâs face it: people arenât that great at paying attention â not for long periods of time, anyway.
In fact, our attention spans are only about 8 seconds. đ€ Thatâs shorter than the attention span of a goldfish.
The brainpower behind building Robinhoodâs waiting list knew this fact and designed a sign-up page so straightforward that it could be completed before any person đ (or fish, for that matter đ) could lose interest.
The page was simple to use. Not full of jargon or length copy, just one powerful hook â âRobinhood $0 commission stock trading. Stop paying up to $10 per trade.â
Giving users only one option; To opt-in.
Get People to Share and Re-engage
Gaining access was simple.
And like many other pre-launches, the first few sign-ups were acquired from family, friends, and as a result of press mentions.
But how did Robinhood turn those first few to thousands, hundreds of thousands and then nearly a million?
Gamification.
People. Love. Playing. Games. đź đČ đ± âœ
Especially when those games are tied to rewards they actually want.
Robinhood created a referral-based viral loop that looked something like this:
When users signed up for Robinhood, they were put on the waiting list. The higher on a personâs position on the list, the earlier the Robinhood fan received access to the beta.
After entering an email address, the âthank you pageâ allowed individuals see is their position on the waiting list.
Conveniently located under their waiting list placement? A reward-based invitation to share Robinhoodâs exclusive offer with others in just one click. The more a person shared, the higher waiting-list position. The higher the position, the sooner one would gain access to Robinhood. And who doesnât want to jump ahead in the queue?
And thatâs what led to exponential growth.
Bonus: Embrace What Makes You Different
All of these tips and tricks got Robinhood part of the way. But people flocked to Robinhood because they saw something different. Meaningful. Useful.
Robinhood wanted to makes things easier for people.
And people love easy.
When describing the function of Robinhood, co-founder Vladimir Tenev said they built it aiming to â[make] trading as frictionless as possible.â
In the end, the app team built their waiting list using a similar tactic. By providing a frictionless portal for customer sign-up and giving potential customers lots of reasons to become actual customers, Robinhood moved beyond a humdrum launch and accomplished something truly spectacular.
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This last piece on Experiential Websites was just đ€Żđ€Ż
See you next week đ,
Ali Abouelatta