Install
openclaw skills install bookforge-existing-platform-leverageLeverage existing platforms with large user bases (App Stores, browser extensions, social networks, super-platforms) for startup customer acquisition via parasitic growth patterns. Use whenever a founder is planning to distribute via app stores, building browser extensions, targeting Facebook or Twitter as a channel, launching on a new platform Day-1, exploiting an unsatisfied need on a larger platform, or mapping platform gap opportunities. Activates on phrases like 'App Store strategy', 'Chrome extension', 'browser extension', 'Facebook platform', 'Apple ecosystem', 'existing platforms', 'distribution platform', 'Product Hunt launch', 'Airbnb Craigslist', 'YouTube MySpace', 'Zynga Facebook', 'parasitic growth'.
openclaw skills install bookforge-existing-platform-leverageThe startup could grow by leveraging an existing platform with a large user base. Use this skill when:
Common platforms to leverage: iOS/Android App Stores, Chrome/Firefox Web Stores, Facebook/Twitter APIs, Slack app directory, Shopify/WordPress plugins, VS Code extensions, Product Hunt.
Target audience: who you want to reach → Check prompt for: customer profile, demographics → If missing, ask: "Who are your target customers, and which platforms do they already spend time on?"
Product form factor: can your product live on another platform, or does it require its own app/site → Check prompt for: product type, technical form factor → If missing, ask: "What form does your product take? Mobile app, web app, browser extension, Slack bot, etc?"
SUFFICIENT: target audience + product form factor + candidate platforms known
PROCEED WITH DEFAULTS: audience known, infer platform candidates
MUST ASK: audience is completely unknown
Use TodoWrite:
ACTION: List every platform with substantial presence of your target audience. Include:
Write to platform-map.md with estimated audience presence per platform.
WHY: Founders default to "the App Store" and miss the 10 other platforms their customers use. A developer-tool company targets VS Code Marketplace, not the Apple App Store. A productivity tool for remote teams targets Slack App Directory. Mapping reveals the best-fit platforms, not just the biggest ones.
ACTION: For each promising platform, identify what the platform's users need that the platform itself doesn't provide well. These gaps are the parasitic growth opportunities.
Classic examples:
The pattern: find what users of the big platform are struggling with, and provide the solution.
WHY: Platforms can't fix every user need — their priorities are constrained. Gaps are persistent. A startup that solves a real gap becomes the default solution for that gap and rides the platform's growth.
IF no clear gap exists → the platform isn't the right channel.
ACTION: Build the smallest product that bridges platform users to your solution. The bridge should:
Airbnb's "Post to Craigslist" feature: one button that cross-posted Airbnb listings to Craigslist. Users didn't need to leave Craigslist to discover Airbnb. This drove tens of thousands of Craigslist users to Airbnb.
WHY: A full standalone product requires users to switch platforms and learn new interfaces. A bridge meets users where they are. Bridges have higher conversion because they reduce context-switching cost.
ACTION: When a new platform launches, being on Day-1 produces:
Evernote's strategy: launched on every new platform on Day-1 (iPhone, iPad, Android, Kindle Fire). Phil Libin: "We really killed ourselves to always be in all of the App Store launches on day one."
Prepare:
WHY: Platform launch days are high-attention moments. Being in the launch-day lineup produces outsized awareness for minimal cost. Missing the window means competing with hundreds of late-arriving apps. Evernote's Day-1 strategy made the company a household name on iOS specifically because they were first.
IF no new platform is launching soon → focus on Step 3's bridge strategy on existing platforms.
ACTION: Platform leverage is powerful but risky. Platforms change rules, APIs, and access policies. Mitigate:
Cautionary tale: Zynga's Facebook dependency. When Facebook changed its platform policies and algorithm, Zynga's growth cratered. Similar issues for companies dependent on Google's SEO algorithm, Twitter's API, Facebook's News Feed.
Airbnb's Craigslist dependency: eventually Craigslist blocked the "Post to Craigslist" feature. Airbnb had by then built its own brand and growth, but the dependency was always a risk.
WHY: Platform dependency creates tail risk. The platform giveth and the platform taketh away. Mitigation isn't paranoia — it's the standard practice of any company with substantial platform exposure.
Four markdown files:
platform-map.md — Platforms where target audience spends timeplatform-gaps.md — Unsatisfied needs per platformbridge-solution.md — Minimal solution design bridging platform to productplatform-dependency-plan.md — Dependency risk mitigation planFind gaps, don't build parallel platforms. Leverage works because the platform's users are already there. Don't try to replicate the platform. WHY: Replicating a platform competes with it; filling a gap complements it. Gaps are welcomed; replicas are blocked.
Meet users where they are. The best bridge requires no platform switching. Airbnb posted listings to Craigslist; users discovered Airbnb inside Craigslist. WHY: Every required context switch loses users. The bridge should work in the platform's native environment.
Day-1 matters disproportionately. New platform launches are rare marketing moments. Being first produces outsized results. WHY: Launch-day attention is finite and concentrated. Day-100 attention is diffused. Same app, radically different outcomes by timing.
Platform dependency has tail risk. The platform can cut you off. Plan for it. WHY: Platforms change rules without warning. Companies with one-platform dependency are betting their existence on that platform's continued goodwill.
Parasitic is not pejorative. Using an existing platform's user base is a legitimate strategy. PayPal, YouTube, and Airbnb all did it. WHY: "Parasitic" describes the mechanics, not ethics. All three became beloved products despite starting parasitically.
Scenario: Developer tool for VS Code
Trigger: "We built a code quality tool for JavaScript developers. How do we get users?"
Process: (1) Platform map: VS Code Marketplace is where JavaScript devs live. Secondary: GitHub Marketplace, Chrome Web Store (for dev tools extensions). (2) Platform gaps: VS Code doesn't have integrated AI code quality checking — gap. (3) Bridge solution: VS Code extension that installs with one click, runs in the background, shows issues inline. (4) Day-1 strategy: watch for VS Code's next major release and be ready to integrate with new APIs. (5) Dependency risk: build a parallel web version and capture emails.
Output: Platform-native strategy with VS Code Marketplace as primary channel.
Scenario: Consumer app exploring Product Hunt
Trigger: "We're launching a new consumer app next month. Should we launch on Product Hunt?"
Process: (1) Yes, Product Hunt is an aggregator for early-adopter consumer audiences. (2) Gap: not a traditional gap, but Product Hunt is where new products get discovered. (3) Bridge: simple launch with demo video, founder story, 24-hour engagement. (4) Day-1 strategy: coordinate launch with Hacker News submission, Reddit (if appropriate subreddit), and Twitter thread. (5) Dependency: Product Hunt alone is not sustainable — use it as a launch moment, not an ongoing channel.
Output: Multi-platform launch plan with Product Hunt as the focal day-1 event.
Scenario: Chrome extension opportunity
Trigger: "Our web research tool could work as a Chrome extension. Worth the effort?"
Process: (1) Platform map: Chrome Web Store has 3B+ users, strong discovery for productivity tools. (2) Gap: Chrome's default search and bookmarking don't help with research workflows — clear gap. (3) Bridge: extension that works inline in the browser without requiring a separate app. One-click install, zero onboarding. (4) Day-1: not a new platform but consider launching via Hacker News and r/productivity as the first 48 hours. (5) Dependency: Chrome Web Store has removed extensions before (policy changes). Build a web app fallback and capture emails.
Output: Chrome extension as primary channel, web fallback for dependency mitigation.
This skill is licensed under CC-BY-SA-4.0. Source: BookForge — Traction: A Startup Guide to Getting Customers by Gabriel Weinberg and Justin Mares.
Install related skills from ClawhHub:
clawhub install bookforge-bullseye-channel-selection — Select Existing Platforms via Bullseyeclawhub install bookforge-viral-growth-loop-design — Embedded virality overlaps with platform leverageclawhub install bookforge-engineering-as-marketing — Tools on platforms are a parallel patternOr install the full book set from GitHub: bookforge-skills