Marketing at an early stage startup isn't an easy feat: your budget is often limited and your task is to get people to know about you in a very, very, crowded space. It involves a lot of testing channels and, at times, scrappy work. There are two important things to keep in mind when it comes to inbound user acquisition at an early stage:
1. Your sole focus should be to identify your MQL, identify where they're looking for you and finally, ensure you're present where they're looking.
2. You should refrain from thinking of putting processes in place for all your actions and start with things that don't scale—this is a tough one but it's the best way to identify what works and what doesn't.
At Slite, one of the first things we've tried and that's proven to answer both of the points above is engaging with future potential users on Quora.
To give you some numbers, we get on average 250 weekly new visitors from Quora and out of those, 12% sign up to Slite. These numbers are extremely steady and prove that Quora is worth your time: thanks to lots of time spent on the platform, we get a steady amount of leads coming in every week.
In three months, I've racked up 26.6K answer views and 800 answer upvotes in total. Here, I'll share how to use Quora in a smart way to attract qualified leads to your product in the long term, why it could be worth it for you to spend time testing it as a user acquisition channel and our main takeaways so far.
The first thing you should do is follow topics that are in your field, gather the appropriate links, sort them according to the number of views and date the question was asked in a spreadsheet or Airtable (this is the template we use). For us, Slite answers many different needs: knowledge collaboration, content collaboration, remote team collaboration...there are a lot of ways in which we can help teams with our tool: I spent a lot of time gathering topics and sorting questions according to those.
Quora, like most places on the internet, is a crowded space. Chances are your competitors are also engaging with users there. Fear not, if you spot competitors engaging with leads on Quora, it's actually a pretty good sign that it's a strategy to invest in: people are asking about solutions and you've got the best, it's time to enter the conversation. Check out where they've been answering questions, how people have reacted to them and pitch in there!
Now that you've got a long list of questions you've gathered, now it's time to answer them. This takes time so schedule an hour or two weekly in your calendar dedicated to Quora answering.
Use a template according to each category and readapt it according to the way the question's been asked. While you should be straightforward when questions are as direct as "What is a good knowledge sharing tool?", you should take time to give valuable insights when the question is more geared towards "Why is knowledge sharing important?". This is the difference between providing an actual helpful answer versus spamming your brand in Quora users' faces.
Every single time I answer a question, I know that the first goal is user acquisition but I also know it'll work because I'm convinced presenting them my product is the answer to their question.
All of this takes time! As with all the different marketing techniques you should be testing, track track track the results. This means adding a UTM link with the relevant source (Quora) and campaign (knowledgesharing1, for example). Use this to make your life easier. Add a column "Links" to your spreadsheet, Airtable, whateverfloatsyourboat, and add a specific link with a specific UTM to each of the questions you're answering. This is a tedious and not so fun part but it's so worth it cause then, you'll be able to track how much of your website traffic comes from Quora and which specific Quora question brings in most MQLs in Google Analytics.
Some things I've found make a difference are to
So far, we noticed that Quora can be totally inconsistent: some questions might get you a ton of views while another might be a huge waste of your time and bring you near to zero views. But it's not always predictable so you have to spread out your efforts!
The great thing is that when an answer does work, it works on the long run and regularly. When you notice those: go and make your answer even better as to maximize your chances of convincing Quora users to click on your website link.
Most of all, out of our acquisition channels, Quora is the one that brings some of the users with the greatest lifetime value.
Finally, it's an interesting way to assess what people are most looking for: at Slite, our product offers lots of use cases from writing collaboration to knowledge management. We've noticed that the Quora answers that brought us most leads so far come from people looking for newer, easier and modern ways of sharing knowledge—that shows us that there's need that was bigger than we initially thought.
Laure Albouy is Slite's first marketing hire and in charge of Product Marketing. Her role? Making sure our users get the most out of Slite —including guides, product announcements, market research and more. Laure lives in Paris and is a pasta afficionada.