Do you use Quora? If yes, how it helped you with your product?
Alexandre Contador
8 replies
Considering all stages from research to distribution.
Replies
Ritesh Jha@actually_ritesh
Well, I don't trust Quora anymore; it used to be great. But now, many companies are marketing their tools and services there. They create multiple accounts, start a conversation, and answer it, promoting their product. The best alternative platform I found was Reddit. Well, it's not biased, and you get relevant answers.
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@actually_ritesh good one ! Which sub reddits?
@alexdigitalmkt Actually there are many, like Technews, Google updates, SEO hacks, ChatGPT cheetsheet. Just name it, you'll get some really cool communities.
I used to find Quora helpful for product research and getting user feedback, but lately it seems overrun with biased promotional content rather than authentic user opinions and experiences. Reddit can be a good alternative if you find the right niche subreddits for your product category. I've also gotten valuable insights by directly engaging with users and customers through user interviews, surveys, and forums on my own site. It takes more effort but you get higher quality feedback.
Quora has been useful for learning from experts and getting different perspectives that have guided our product develpment
I used to rely on Quora for product research, but I agree it's become too biased and spammy. Reddit is definitely a better source for authentic opinions and experiences these days. I also find niche forums and online communities focused on my product space to be really helpful for getting targeted feedback and insights directly from potential users. It takes more effort to engage there, but the signal to noise ratio is much higher compared to Quora currently.