Does "developer marketing" even work?
Anna Starodub
8 replies
Hey everyone,
I’d like to ask you about your experience of marketing in development companies. I’m working as marketer in software development company and comparing to "classic" marketing, it feels like playing a whole different game.
Tight-knit communities, niche audiences, and Facebook algorithms throwing tantrums (seriously, finding the right devs?!)
So, I'm curious... have you struggled with marketing in your dev company? What felt impossible, and what unexpected hacks did you pull off? And how have you overcome it?
Replies
DataTable.dev
We haven't tried social media marketing but search engine marketing on Google worked quite a while until we started wasting money on large irrelevant audience. Since we're in India, lot of folks don't even know what they're clicking on. They'd just get a colorful ad with some phone numbers, and then start calling us with no purpose.
So, we switched to search ads. However, the main problem is keywords like "software companies in hyderabad" or "IT companies in hyderabad" that are used by both customers and job seekers.
Now we're just stuck in hundreds of CPC's wasted just because someone wanted to call a software company to look for a job. If we aren't careful, we'd even lose that one qualified customer among those hundreds of job seekers.
However, through word of mouth and local advertisements on Google My Business, we were able to attract a few customers, which has been sufficient for our survival.
Lancepilot
Hey anna, continuous marketing and sales are the core components to scale any business. However, different marketing tactics should be practices since the target audience are available in different channels. For dev companies, most target b2b as they are more likely looking for a development solution. So i would say outreaching could be a better choice for dev companies. You can choose cold emailing as your main marketing channel and Whatsapp outreaching software ( which i'm working on and will be launching in 2 months). Hope this make sense to you. ( : 👊
@istiakahmad Good but I fear cold e-mails, I'm from a development company and I always overlook e-mails from other companies who want to sell their software or other services. And due to their unwelcome nature, they may, get blacklisted or worse, added to spam filters. How would you counter this?
Lancepilot
@syed_riyaz_uddin Well, i would say you should get it done by a cold emailing expert because cold emailing itself has a learning curve and many best practices has to be followed. Normally people get 2-5% conversion ration from a campaign. Secondly, have you ever thought about whatsapp outreaching? ( i'm building a software around it and will be launching in 2 months) Lets keep in touch ( :
> You can choose cold emailing as your main marketing channel
@istiakahmad respectfully disagree.
I've spent the last years working in dev-first companies, experimenting with what works and what doesn't work when marketing to developers.
cold outreach doesn't work. developers hate spam and they might be the most spammed audience.
as dev marketers, we have to learn how to market to developers in better ways.
Lancepilot
@fmerian Executing cold email campaigns is an art that demands authenticity over spammy tactics. Success ratios naturally vary across industries, but if conversions are happening, why not embrace cold emailing as a potent marketing channel?
Genuine cold emailing requires meticulous preparation, involving the creation of an ideal client avatar, lead generation, clean list, crafting authentic email copies, strategic follow-ups, and utilizing the right tools. The more finesse applied to each phase, the greater the results.
In essence, the simplicity lies in effectiveness. If a genuine approach to cold emailing is yielding positive outcomes, it becomes a no-brainer to integrate and leverage its power for continued success.
- - developer markepear - strategies and tactics by @kuba_czakon;
- - every developer - stories by @adamd to nail technical content;
- - awesome-developer-marketing - hand-picked by @ronak_ganatra1.
also, you may enjoy reading these blog posts for more insights:- - a guide to developer marketing by @nickparsons (Clerk);
- - dev tool marketing for early-stage startups by @piemets (PostHog).
FWIW I maintain this collection of marketing, growth, and UX ideas from dev tools like Stripe, Linear, Vercel, and more. hope it helps! enjoy!