
I Built a Side Project and Nobody Came. Here's What I Learned About the Cold Start Problem.
You know that feeling when you ship something you're proud of, share the link, and... crickets? I built a web app. Took months. Custom Django backend, Docker deployment, the works. Launched it. Told my friends. Posted it on Twitter. Day one: 4 visitors. Two were me on different devices. Here's the thing nobody tells you when you're learning to code: building the product is the easy part. Getting people to actually use it is a completely different skill set. The "build it and they will come" lie Every tutorial ends at deployment. "Congratulations, your app is live!" Great. Now what? I had a working product, a clean UI, and zero users. I'd spent all my time on code and none on distribution. Classic developer mistake. What actually moves the needle After a lot of trial and error, here's what I found works — and none of it involves paid ads. 1. Write about what you built, not what it does Nobody cares about your feature list. They care about the problems you solved, the mistakes you made,
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