Clubhouseâs curve has a lot to teach to foundersâââespecially those just starting. What difference did it make & how can it help your startup succeed?
I love building products & Iâm currently building one, so itâs natural Iâll consider what I can take from Clubhouse after a year of beta launch. Though my observation isnât around the future of it what made the app get the hype & then suddenly slow down.
And, why not?
Its founders are successful in what they build, and they did create something that every other platform wants to have. Look at Twitter; they created a look-a-like of Clubhouse called Twitter Space.
But itâs not just TwitterâââFacebook, LinkedIn, Discord, Spotify, and Slack all are working on it.
So, how it became the next big thing?
1. Keeping things simple
The one thing I like about Clubhouse is how simple it has kept its brandingâââeven after a year-long beta launch, very simple design, emoji logo, no landing page or fancy website, or not much social media presence.
All their focus was on building the product.
We tend to go for perfectionism before even getting a single userâââname, font, landing page, blog, social media, etc. and consider the product as the second. Instead, we need to work on getting the product out as soon as possible. Get users, build a community & then work on architecture.
Takeaway
- Start with what you have.
- Donât go for perfectionism.
- First focus on building product & users, then the rest of the things.
2. Build community & connections
Build connections & community over timeâââthatâs what the founders of Clubhouse did, which became the plus point of its success, through having a community prior.
The Clubhouse founders were able to take leverage of their connections with VCs & startup founders which helped them get the buzz.
You can build connections & community in any form: writing newsletters, articles, being active & making meaningful connections on Twitter, etc. If you have 10 people who would be happy to support your workâââyouâre building your connections & community. Itâs doesnât need to be only the top tier people.
3. Marketing, but not marketing
Seriously, have you seen any ads or promotions for Clubhouse?
No, because they did the basic things. This is how they got more than 10 Million users.
- Niche down to the target user & only gave access to them first.âââThey niche down by targeting founders & VC first, which helped them build a great community and help them get into their circle.
- Their target users helped them spread word of mouth.âââThe quickest way to spread like fire.
- They ship features fast, which helped them stay in the eye.âââYou need to ship features fast, which you can easily take advantage of being in the early stage, especially when youâre the only one (or few more people) working on building the product. You can ship 2â3 features on a regular basis, get feedback, make changes immediately & continue this process.
- Call out to influencers.âââClubhouse founders took advantage of their connections. You would listen to people you admire & look up to, and itâs easy to attract their users. Hence, get their audience.
4. The hype was a disadvantage!
The hype & growth Clubhouse experienced (I believe) was a big disadvantage. This is not what they were ready for (you can see they donât know what to do & how to keep up with the competitors & building users).
See through this scenario đđ»
You got an idea & work on a few features to test on the beta list. They are enjoying it. Then you get the popular celebrities & the worldâs greatest thinkers onboardâââsuch as Elon musk (in sense), Kevin Hart, Tiffany Haddish, Oprah, etc. Now, youâve got thousands of downloads overnight.
But you actually donât know what to do with the app, how to make it better, how to keep up with the user retention, how to get creators, etc.
You created the FOMO by making everyone feel exclusiveâââan easy way to have a one-on-one unscripted conversation with popular people & listen to them.
When you were still testing (on iOS & only accept new users through the invite basis), you build up competitors. You really have no idea on how to keep up with the unexpected growth, hype & then suddenly userâs not using your app.
Takeaway
- Have a vision of how youâll grow your product.
- Extensive hype doesnât always result in product success.
- Know how to keep your users engaged with your app.
- If you get a huge success, know how to keep a hold on it.
5. Competitors
If youâve built something that everyoneâs using, youâre also building competitors.
âAll failed companies are the same: they failed to escape competition.â â Peter Thiel
You cannot run away from competitors, but you can still be better than them. You just need to figure out how to make a difference from your clones.
Since the mid-2020, Clubhouse has been the talking point of the tech market. There were talks that Twitter was buying it, but then Twitter quickly started publicly working on the same feature.
Which was a bad thing for Clubhouse because Twitter was also testing on Andriod & CH was only available on iOS.
But look how things turn around for Snapchat. Sometimes the idea doesnât matter, but the execution does. Also, itâs not who came up with the idea first but who kept growing with it.
6. Retention & user engagement
The biggest downfall of Clubhouse is its content & not very engaging users. They find it difficult to keep up with the user retention rates, and the most popular people arenât able to help them too.
Bad chat rooms are causing more damage to the platform than good rooms providing value.
They are trying to improve retention, but somehow itâs not working for them. With features like scheduling, Q&A tools, and monetization content, they still lack curation.
As a founder, one of your most important tasks is to retain & keep your users engaged with your product. This is where Clubhouse didnât focus. They build up the hype, got millions of users but couldnât keep them on their app.
Takeaway
- Monitor the content
- Keep your users engaged with your product
- Look for what users want
Finally,
If the app is seeing less growth than the previous months doesnât mean itâs the end. Though the FOMO somehow seems to be gone, Clubhouse is here to stay.
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