Ask HN: How can I market to young parents?
Hi,
I've been working on Instagrad.com for a couple of months. Instagrad is a social funding platform to accelerate college savings.
We help parents raise funds for college by encouraging friends and family to contribute directly to a child’s established 529 Savings Plan. With Instagrad, a parent can easily create a profile for his or her child, create a campaign to help raise funding (birthday, Christmas, etc.), and then easily transfer the funds to their child’s college savings account (529 account).
What is the best way to reach and market to parents of young children? I'm not looking for "get mommy bloggers to talk about you" or "create a facebook page". I'm looking for specific winning tactics.
8 comments
[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 32.2 ms ] threadOne traditional example of national companies aligning with local schools is the school book fair. Another is the fundraiser by selling crap industry.
The example of a web based service that first came to mind was one allowing parents to fund their child's lunchroom account and the school to draw payments.
Your idea is more in line with the book fair, I think.
A third approach is to develop the product for wealth management companies - that's where the real money is, hmmm. There's also an alignment of your interests and theirs - so long as you offer better value than in house services. Again, this may be better targeted at a local level to agents rather than national companies.
Good luck.
Have you seen succesful campaigns with FB ads?
On FB, CTR is really really important, and you want to get your CTR up at least over .07%. My best campaigns started at .10% CTR and with a lot of refinement and optimization of the audience, I was able to get .20% to .40% CTR with more traffic than my dedicated server could handle for almost a year. Keeping in the FB ecosystem will lower your CPC, but it's doable with external sites too.
Based on the limited info you've provided, either you are not targeting the right demographics, or you have a messaging problem.