Goal: learn marketing well enough to take an app from "built" to "paying users", with ~5 focused hours/week next to a full-time job.
The five layers
Work top to bottom. A failure at a higher layer cannot be fixed at a lower one — no channel fixes a product nobody urgently wants.
Meta-rule: treat marketing like debugging. Hypothesis → smallest experiment → measure → keep or kill. Most experiments fail; that's the process working.
12-week plan
Weeks 1–2: Foundations + positioning
Week 3: Pick ONE app
Week 4: Instrument the funnel
Weeks 5–10: One-channel sprint (6 weeks)
Weeks 11–12: Conversion pass + verdict
Resource shortlist
Books (in order):
- The Mom Test — Fitzpatrick (validation / user conversations)
- Obviously Awesome — Dunford (positioning)
- Traction — Weinberg & Mares (channel selection; Bullseye framework chapters, skim the rest)
- Hooked — Eyal (retention loops, when you get there)
- The SaaS Playbook — Rob Walling (if/when you do B2B SaaS)
Ongoing (pick 2, unsubscribe from the rest): Sub Club podcast (RevenueCat — the single best resource for consumer subscription apps) · MicroConf YouTube / Startups for the Rest of Us (bootstrapped SaaS) · Lenny's Podcast (growth) · Indie Hackers + the X "app growth" scene (e.g. Thomas Petit, Phil Carter).
Tools to know exist: RevenueCat (subscription infra + benchmarks), Superwall/Adapty (paywall A/B tests), AppFigures/Astro (ASO keywords), Apple Search Ads, PostHog/Plausible (web analytics).
Weekly log
30 minutes at the end of each week. Numbers first, then one thing learned, one thing to change.
Positioning worksheet — AI meal planner (iOS)
Wedge examples (illustrative — pick from real user conversations, not this list):
- GLP-1 (Ozempic/Wegovy) users needing high protein at low volume — huge, growing, underserved, urgent
- Families with picky kids — plan one dinner everyone eats
- A specific country: integrate local grocery chains' actual products and prices — generic US-centric planners can't compete locally
- Medical diets: diabetes, PCOS, IBS/low-FODMAP — urgent, searched-for, willing to pay
- Budget-first: "feed a family of 4 for under X/week", driven by this week's supermarket offers
Worksheet — this IS the marketing work
Channel notes for this category
- ASO first. Meal planning is search-driven — people type their problem into the App Store. Keyword-target the wedge ("glp-1 meal plan", "picky eater dinner"), not "meal planner" (unwinnable). Tools: AppFigures/Astro.
- Short-form video is the proven growth channel: "what I eat in a day", grocery hauls, before/after, "I let AI plan my week" — demoable and native to TikTok/Reels/Shorts.
- Web-to-app quiz funnel (the Noom/BetterMe playbook) once there's paid budget: quiz → personalized plan preview → paywall → install. Converts far better than cold traffic to the App Store.
- Apple Search Ads on wedge + competitor keywords — cheap to test at $10–20/day once the store page converts.
Funnel benchmarks (rough; sanity-check against RevenueCat's current report)
| Step | Decent |
|---|---|
| Store page view → install | ~25–35% |
| Install → trial start (hard paywall in onboarding) | ~5–10% |
| Trial → paid | ~30–40% |
If your numbers are wildly below these, the problem is positioning/onboarding/paywall — not traffic volume.
Positioning worksheet — live interview assistant (desktop)
Structural realities to design around:
- Churn is built in. People stop paying the moment they get a job. That's fine — price for it (high monthly, per-interview credits, or a "job search season pass"). Don't chase long LTV that can't exist; capture value fast and make leavers into referrers — "got the job" is the best possible word of mouth.
- A positioning fork you must consciously choose:
- "Real-time answer feed" (the cheating frame): maximally viral, controversy does the marketing for you (Cluely's playbook) — but invites platform risk, employer backlash, and works best with a personal brand fronting it.
- "Practice & coaching copilot" (the prep frame): mock interviews, feedback, company-specific prep, live nudges framed as coaching. Broader market, safer, SEO-friendly — but less inherently viral.
- Middle paths exist (live structure prompts rather than answers; post-interview debriefs). Pick deliberately; every channel and copy decision flows from this.
Worksheet
Channel notes for this category
- Short-form video demos. The product is inherently demoable and provocative — a screen recording of it working during a mock call is a scroll-stopper. This category grew almost entirely on TikTok/X/Shorts. 3–5 clips/week, hooks first.
- SEO long-tail fits the prep frame: "amazon behavioral interview questions", "tell me about yourself software engineer", per-company/per-role prep guides. Compounding, high-intent. 2 articles/week for 6 months builds a real asset.
- Reddit/Discord job-seeker communities (r/cscareerquestions, r/jobs, bootcamp Discords): only works as genuine helpfulness with an occasional mention; blatant promo gets nuked.
- Affiliates: mock-interview and career-coach YouTubers/TikTokers, rev-share. Their audience is exactly the buying moment.
- Timing: demand spikes with hiring seasons (Sept–Nov, Jan–Mar) and layoff news cycles. Plan pushes around them.
Why this app might be the one to focus on: versus the meal planner — dramatically higher willingness to pay, more urgent pain, less crowded (still early), clearer channels, and desktop distribution means no App Store review gatekeeping (relevant for the edgier positioning). The case against: built-in churn and the ethical/brand fork. Score both honestly in week 3.