Ask HN: How do I market to consumers as a solo dev about to go to uni?

2 Alex-Programs 2 6/16/2025, 1:08:13 PM
Hi!

I've spent my gap year making a language learning tool[0]. It's been somewhat successful, but I really don't have a sustainable marketing strategy (e.g. SEO or ads) - it's all from me sharing it, making blog posts, etc. I'm going to uni in ~2.5 months, and I'd like to be able to keep it growing, even as most of my attention goes towards my studies.

My users are really happy with it, the conversion rate is good, and there's been a surprising amount of word of mouth from them already, but it's just not quite enough.

I've had some limited success from Reddit text ads, but their algorithm is determined to optimise for cost per click, rather than conversions, and it's only getting worse over time. Text in general is a lot easier for me to work with.

X ads don't work at all. Nor do Google or Reddit banner ads, or Adwords.

SEO is an expensive labyrinth. I've made some progress there, paying for some backlinks and having a high quality blog, but not enough to rank for the keywords that matter. I do have some capital (single-digit thousands of £), and I'd be willing to use it, but only if I know it'll actually give me a good return.

I made an affiliate program with generous payouts (my entire profit margin and then some - 50% of all revenue for 6 months), aaand nobody's used it. I suppose I need to treat that as an entire separate marketing task.

I made the world's best machine translator (https://nuenki.app/translator), and that's cool and has got me some users, but again, doesn't scale.

Maybe it's the landing page? People are much more likely to convert if I give them even a one or two sentence summary of it beforehand, so maybe it isn't explaining it well enough.

Anyway, yeah, I'm not really sure where to go from here! I'd appreciate any advice.

[0] https://nuenki.app

Comments (2)

PaulHoule · 5m ago
My first impression is that this is tough because Google Translate is free and many people think that is good enough.

Now I find myself using Google Translate because there is some text in French or Chinese that I want to read. There is another market for someone who has some text in English (say) and they want text in French or Chinese to put on their web page or fill out a government required form or something that has higher quality requirements in terms of being correct, good prose, etc. That person is either doing the work themselves, paying a translator, or not doing it because they can't afford it. I think that is the person you're trying to find.

I don't think you want to tell that person how it works (finding the best commercial LLM for the task) because if I think it is just sending the work out to some particular LLM couldn't they just use it themselves and cut you out?

codingdave · 8m ago
> My users are really happy with it, the conversion rate is good, and there's been a surprising amount of word of mouth from them already,

If all that is true, you already have hit the dreams of startup marketers. People post ads on various sites trying to get enough people that their users start word-of-mouth organic growth. What you need to continue growth is to focus even more on your current customers. If you burn your energy on sales, you risk ignoring them, and that organic growth might stop. So talk to your users more, focus on their experience, and make them so happy that they keep talking. Build the features they tell you are needed to make things even better. Ask them where they think other people would be responsive to marketing, and focus your efforts wherever they say.