Hi There, in this article I wanted to share with you my experience of launching a new side project - LaravelCollections.com. I will go through what the site is about, the reasons behind it, how I promoted it and the lessons learned. Let’s get going. You should know that this is the first side project that has more than one regular user (that 1 being me of course).

What is Laravel Collections?

The site tagline reads - “Every Laravel Developers Goto Resource”. I know, this is ambitious, but how else are you going to get the attention of the Laravel community.

To put it simply, the site houses hundreds of links to Laravel resources (articles, tutorials, video, etc) organized into useful categories. Pretty simple, ah. If you are a Laravel developer looking for, let say TDD tutorial, you should be able to find great tutorials from the community, here.

The reason behind the site?

This is mostly a ‘scratch your own itch’ kind of project, let me explain. I used to bookmark every tutorial, guide, video on Laravel when I got started learning the PHP framework. After a point, the list grew past my organizing abilities. So I needed a way to tag each link and search them with ease. This is the primary reason.

My other reason is. About a month or so back, I decided to share all these links I have collected over the last 2 years. So I created a Telegram Channel (Laravel Links) and a bot to share a link every 12 hours. This Telegram channel had a greater reception with developers than I thought. After about a week, I started receiving feedback from the channel subscribers that it was hard to look for old posts and one subscriber asked me if all these links could be listed on a website. That’s when the light bulb went off.

Validating the idea

Even before I needed validation, I knew this idea had some potential. But to be sure, I purchased the domain, set up a basic landing page and wrote why I am making this site developed. The landing page also included an email signup form, this way if someone signed up, I could know that they were interested in seeing this site. I posted about the landing page on Reddit, Twitter and Facebook groups to drive traffic.

Sure enough, about 5% of the traffic signed up. I assume that the signup rate was high because I only informed about this on developer communities. After about a week, I had 25+ signups. It was more than enough to validate my idea and realize that there was a need for a resource such as this.

 


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How was the launch?

I started work on the actual site, once I started receiving email signups on the landing page. Since the site was pretty basic in terms of complexity, I have no trouble building a working site over a weekend. I was quite happy with how it turned out, so on Monday (Dec 18, 2018), I decided to make it public.

Few hours after making the site public, I announced about it on Twitter. This tweet kind of exploded relative to my other tweets, that barely have a few impressions at best. You should be told about my Twitter stats, I had 6 followers and one of which was a bot (according to Twitter). I would like to think that I used the right hashtag. This tweet alone drove tens of visitor on the first day.

The next day, I decided to promote the site in all possible places. I had prepared a huge list of sites where I thought I could talk about LaravelCollections.com. This worked, big time. One of those sites were Laravel News, they have a huge following of Laravel Developer and they posted about my site on their twitter and facebook page. It was nuts after this point, their shares brought in hundreds of visitors and tens of email signups.

Overall I think the launch went far beyond my expectations. I feel more confided about the site, now that I know, fellow Laravel Developers are interested in my site and are willing to see the site grow.

Lessons learned

I learned quite a few lessons getting the site to this point. Some of them might sound cliche but they are not any less true.

  • Validating an idea helps you find out if there’s a crowd for what you are building. When you know that there’s an audience, you feel that much more confident about work on it.
  • Put up a landing page it barely takes about an hours work.
  • Focus initially on promoting at places you know where your target audience hangs out. I think promoting elsewhere is just a waste of time.
  • Have some way for the user to provide feedback.
  • Google Analytics is not just for viewing visitor count, if you use it right, it can help you understand your users’ behaviors nd you can optimize your site accordingly.
  • Reply to email and messages, this may seem simple and obvious but my users have given me ideas, I could not have thought of, at the expenses of a few minutes replying to their message.
  • There’s always someone saying “What’s the point?”, try convincing them, that’s the biggest lesson I learned.

Signing off

I want to dedicate more time for the site from my usual freelance work day. I have a list of features in mind that I want to work on. It will be great to see how the Laravel Community uses the site in the long term. I will write to you in a month’s time, updating on what’s going with LaravelCollections.com.

That’s all for now, have a good one.

You can know more about me and my work at Simplest Web.