Show HN: Retrospective on having my “Show HN” on the front-page
I wanted to share some stats on the results after 3 days. Worth noting was that I submitted it on a Friday morning (at which point I went for a walk and a coffee; eek).
- 24,997 page views. I (embarrassingly) didn’t have GA set up when I first submitted it, so this is probably missing a few hundred page views
- 21 “feedback” emails (half of which were spam). I assume such a high percentage of these were spam because my Feedback form didn’t require email addresses.
- 5 note-worthy emails from people which may result in some sort of collaboration
- 10 mailing list subscriber sign ups. Running through MailChimp, and it’s not emphasized at all (eg. just a link in the footer). Purposefully not email-gating people to download, since I want this to be a very developer-centric site, and it feels a bit unsettling to email-gate other people’s digital content.
- 2,670 icon downloads
- 74 comments. A big caveat to this one: I replied to almost every comment. The thinking is that if someone took the time to comment (even just a “thanks”), I wanted to take the time to reply to them as well.
Also, I purposefully didn’t reply to people who were commenting on their own alternative services. Perhaps a tad uncouth, but I didn’t want to shine a light on a comment that was designed to detract from my submission. I would have made an exception if there was substance to those comments beyond the detraction.
- One founder from a related (and leading) service (Flaticon) jumping into the comments. I really appreciated this. Similar to how Patrick Collison (of Stripe) is often seen replying to comments on Stripe-related posts. This founder submitted thoughtful replies to people’s criticisms, which I thought was quite considerate.
5 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 21.5 ms ] thread- 22 different favicon/icon file requests. I thought this one was funny. There were 22 different unique favicon/icon requests, which I presume speaks to the wide variety of devices and operating systems out there. For example, the standard favicon.ico, but then also so many different variations of files like: apple-touch-icon-57x57.png, apple-touch-icon-114x114.png, touch-icon-iphone.png, apple-touch-icon-72x72-precomposed.png
- 3 different bot scripts kicking in. I noticed a ton of requests within a few hours that were scraping the site
Obviously the context around the submission is key to the stats and descriptions above (eg. time of day, period of week, what other submissions there were, how widely the submission appeals to the HN audience, etc), but I thought it may be useful to read a follow up on what a front-page position led to.
If anyone has any questions on other stats, let me know and I’ll do my best to get them. Thanks for reading, and for the enjoyable (and panicky) Friday & Saturday
The high level stats for mine were that it sent 18k visitors to my site and generated $1815 the first day it was up.
The following day had 5.8k visitors and generated $1100 of sales.
The coolest part was getting connected with interesting people from cool companies. Got connected with a YC founder, a few folks at big engineering companies, and some fellow indie hackers.
It’s kind of nerve wracking posting a Show HN, but the benefits were great for me. Most of the comments were positive. Got some super valuable feedback as well that will help improve the product.
[1] https://www.vim.so
Any plans to make something similar to vim.so but for different platforms?
[1] https://www.slip.so
So I like the idea that a bunch of different people could teach the same material, and you could be the platform to help people discover it.
Off the top of my head, here are some things I'd love help with (sorry if it's too specific haha):
- imagemagick CLI concepts
- Better understanding bash
- Better understanding different types of joins in sql (15 years later, I still can't grock that)