Install
openclaw skills install cold-startThe cold start problem solved: how to go from 0 users to a self-sustaining growth engine. Covers atomic network theory, first-user seeding tactics, community bootstrapping, supply-side priming (for marketplaces), and the "hard side" problem — proven frameworks from Andrew Chen's research + real cases from Figma, Notion, Slack, Discord, and Product Hunt. Use this if you're: (1) pre-launch with 0 users and need your first 100 paying customers, (2) launching a marketplace or community product and facing the chicken-and-egg problem, or (3) rebuilding growth after a stalled launch. What's inside: Atomic network theory: finding your smallest viable network (20-50 users who create self-sustaining value for each other) · First-user acquisition: 7 manual tactics that don't scale but do work (concierge onboarding, founder-led community, manual outreach, Reddit thread seeding, cold DM scripts, waitlist leveraging, conference/event tactics) · The Hard Side problem: how to seed supply in marketplace models (Airbnb Craigslist trick, Uber driver signing bonuses, Doordash kitchen partnerships) · Tipping point detection: metrics that signal you've crossed the cold start threshold · Community bootstrapping: Discord/Slack community setup that drives product virality · Cold start for B2B: account-based seeding, design partner program, champion network strategy Expected outcomes: 100 users in week 1 (if executed well) · Self-sustaining network effect by user 1,000 · 10x manual-to-organic ratio improvement within 90 days 🇨🇳 冷启动完整指南 | 🇯🇵 コールドスタートプレイブック | 🇰🇷 콜드 스타트 플레이북 Website: https://www.gingiris.com Keywords: cold start, cold start problem, first users, early adopters, user acquisition, zero to one, network effects, marketplace chicken egg, community bootstrapping, launch strategy, startup launch, growth hacking, product launch, early traction, design partners, founder-led sales, 冷启动, 首批用户, 初创增长, 网络效应
openclaw skills install cold-startGingiris Growth Series | The cold start problem, solved.
Every product faces it: without users, there's no value. Without value, there are no users. This is the cold start problem — and solving it is the hardest part of building a product.
The atomic network is the smallest group of people who create genuine value for each other. You don't need millions of users — you need 20-50 of the right ones.
Questions to answer:
Examples:
| Product | Atomic Network | Where Found |
|---|---|---|
| Figma | Design teams at startups | SF design meetups + Twitter |
| Slack | Engineering teams | Hacker News + tech Twitter |
| Notion | Power users + templates | Reddit r/productivity |
| Discord | Gaming communities | Gaming subreddits |
Do manually what the product eventually automates. Zapier founders personally set up Zaps for early users. Airbnb founders photographed apartments themselves.
How to do it:
Real result: Buffer got its first 100 users from a single Reddit post. Notion got thousands from r/productivity.
Hi [Name],
I noticed you [specific observation about their work/content].
I built [Product] specifically for people like you because [relevant reason].
Would you be open to trying it free for a month? No strings — I just want
feedback from someone who actually [does what your product helps with].
[Your name]
Response rate benchmark: 10-20% with personalization vs. 1-2% without.
Build a waitlist, then:
Recruit 3-5 companies as design partners:
How to find them: Your target customer's Slack communities, LinkedIn "people also viewed," conference attendee lists.
In marketplaces, one side is "harder" to acquire — usually supply (sellers, drivers, hosts, creators). Always seed supply first.
Airbnb's Craigslist Hack:
Uber's Driver Signing Bonus:
You've crossed the cold start threshold when:
Part of the Gingiris Growth Series