Distribution for indie apps: channels that actually matter
Getting users isn’t only ads — it’s choosing channels, running cheap experiments, and sequencing launch so your product has a shot at real traction.
You can ship the best web or mobile app in your niche and still hear crickets. Distribution is how you turn a build into an audience — and for indies, it’s rarely “just run Facebook ads” or “just post on Twitter.”
This post is a practical lens for choosing where to spend energy when you don’t have a growth team.
Distribution starts before the launch post
If the first time you think about distribution is release day, you’re late. Early signals — landing pages, waitlists, manual outreach, community participation — tell you whether anyone wants what you’re building before you polish version twelve.
That doesn’t mean spamming. It means talking to real humans who might care: a subreddit, a Slack, a local meetup, a niche newsletter, or twenty cold emails to people with the problem you solve.
Channels are experiments, not identities
Treat each channel as a cheap test:
| Question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Who already gathers where your users are? | Go to demand, don’t invent it. |
| What’s the smallest action that proves interest? | Signup, reply, booking, install — pick one. |
| What will you try for a week? | Time-box; kill or double down. |
“SEO,” “content,” and “partnerships” are not strategies until you define one concrete move for each.
When growth is the bottleneck, not code
Sometimes the blocker isn’t features — it’s clarity, positioning, or follow-through. You might need:
- A sharper one-liner and landing page.
- A launch sequence (beta → niche → broader) instead of a single big bang.
- Help prioritizing two or three experiments instead of chasing ten tactics.
That’s still product work — just at the boundary between what you built and who it’s for.
How I help
I work with builders on web and mobile products and the path to users and traction — not only implementation. If distribution is where you’re stuck, we can use a session to pressure-test your channel ideas, tighten messaging, or plan what to try next. See pricing and formats, then say hello.
Takeaways
- Distribution is iterative — treat channels as experiments with clear success signals.
- Early conversations beat perfect launches.
- Indie growth rewards focus: fewer channels, done consistently, measured honestly.