Playbook· 7 min read· Sourced from r/SaaS · r/Entrepreneur · r/startups · r/smallbusiness

How to Get First 1000 SaaS Users and Early Traction: Insights from r/SaaS

By Tomáš Cina, CEO — aggregated from real Reddit discussions, verified by direct quotes.

AI-assisted research, human-edited by Tomáš Cina.

TL;DR

The common advice to "build in public" and submit to every launch directory misses the reality that distribution is a comprehension problem, not a traffic problem. Founders who treat the first 100 users as a manual consulting project—rather than a marketing campaign—consistently outperform those relying on automated launch lists. The fix is not better copy; it is treating the first 100 users like a high-touch implementation phase: identify 50–100 people with the exact problem, reach out 1:1 to offer a manual setup, and iterate based on their direct feedback before scaling.

By Tomáš Cina, CEO at Discury · AI-assisted research, human-edited

Editor's Take — Tomáš Cina, CEO at Discury

What strikes me reading these threads is how often founders conflate "launching" with "traction." I've watched this pattern repeat in conversations with SaaS operators across the threads we've indexed at Discury — a founder ships a product, submits to a dozen directories, and concludes "no one wants this" when the real issue is that the value proposition is buried under generic marketing noise. Traction isn't a byproduct of visibility; it’s the result of solving a specific, painful problem for a single, narrow persona.

The second trap is the "marketing channel" obsession. Reddit threads are full of questions about whether to use TikTok or LinkedIn, but the signal we see in the extracted facts is that the first 50 users almost never come from a platform. They come from direct, human-to-human interaction. When a founder stops pitching and starts helping, the "distribution problem" usually vanishes because they have finally found someone who actually cares about the solution.

If I were starting a B2B outbound motion today, I'd spend the first two weeks finding 50 people complaining about the specific problem my tool solves. I would DM them not to pitch, but to offer a 20-minute setup call. The founders in this sample often invert this, trying to mass-market a product that hasn't been validated by a single paying human. The manual grind is the filter that separates viable ideas from feature-bloated experiments.

Why Launch Directories Fail to Get First 1000 SaaS Users

The common advice to submit to every directory—Product Hunt, Betalist, and Microlaunch—often results in a "launch spike" that disappears within 48 hours. One founder in a recent r/SaaS thread on launch strategies noted that despite listing on a dozen directories, the active user count remained at zero. This happens because directory traffic is composed of other founders looking for tools to launch, not end-users looking to solve a workflow headache.

One operator in an r/startups thread about getting users reported that after submitting to Product Hunt, they received zero meaningful feedback and zero active users. The disconnect lies in the user's comprehension: if a visitor lands on a site and cannot immediately grasp the value proposition, they leave. Distribution is not the bottleneck; the bottleneck is the failure to communicate the "before and after" of the product's value in a way that resonates with a specific persona.

The Manual Consulting Strategy to Get First 50 Users

Getting the first 50 users requires shifting from a "launch" mindset to a "consulting" mindset. Founders who succeed in this stage stop treating the product as a commodity and start treating it as a solution they implement alongside the user. One founder in a discussion on early traction described the "hand-holding" pivot: instead of posting links, they picked one narrow persona, found 20 individuals, and offered to jump on a call to set up the tool for their exact workflow.

This high-touch approach is how founders move from zero to their first real users. As one r/SaaS founder noted, the first 100 users are a manual grind. Founders should pick a painfully specific niche, find 50–100 people manually via LinkedIn or niche forums, and DM them 1:1 about their specific problem. The goal is not to get a click; it is to get a conversation that validates whether the product actually solves the pain point.

"I went through this with my own tiny SaaS and the big shift was stopping “launching” and starting “hand-holding.” I stopped posting links and instead picked one super narrow persona." — u/Dismal-Horror-4231, r/SaaS thread

How to Get First 1000 Users in Niche Communities

Niche communities are the most effective source of early users, provided the founder avoids self-promotion. One founder in an r/startups thread on travel tools shared how they found 3–4 hyper-specific subreddits—such as r/JapanTravel or r/SoloTravel—and shared a raw, vulnerable post about why they built their tool. This approach brought 50+ users within 48 hours because the founder was already part of the conversation where the problem was being discussed.

The strategy here is to join communities where people are already complaining about the problem. As one r/Entrepreneur commenter explained, language subreddits often delete tool mentions, but expat and remote worker groups are more receptive if the founder posts about the problem first. When the founder eventually shares the tool, it feels like a helpful resource rather than a spammy advertisement.

"We found 3–4 hyper-specific subreddits (not r/travel, but things like r/JapanTravel, r/SoloTravel, etc.) and shared a raw “hey, we built this because planning Tokyo trips sucked, would love real feedback.”" — u/Ambitious_Car_7118, r/startups thread

Why Paid Ads Fail to Get First 1000 SaaS Users

Paid advertising is rarely effective for a SaaS product in the zero-to-one stage. One founder in an r/SaaS thread reported that for their product, AiTextools, paid ads did not work early on because there was no existing trust and no conversion history. Without a proven landing page and a clear understanding of the user's pain, paid ads simply accelerate the burn rate without providing the qualitative feedback loop necessary for product-market fit.

Early users are not a traffic problem; they are a validation problem. Investing in PPC ads only works once organic sales have already demonstrated that the product has a market. In the early stage, the focus should remain on 1:1 outreach and direct feedback, as paid channels cannot fix a product that users do not yet understand.

"For AiTextools, paid ads didn't work early; no trust, no conversions. Generic cold DMs were also a waste. What actually helped us get our first 100 users was being active in niche communities." — u/Conscious-Text6482, r/SaaS thread

How to Get First 1000 Users via Cold Outreach List Quality

Cold outreach often fails not because the channel is dead, but because the list quality is poor. One founder in an r/SaaS thread reported successfully acquiring early users by manually sourcing prospects on Apollo and writing personalized emails. The key insight here is that the list quality—the degree to which the recipient actually suffers from the problem—far outweighs the copy itself. Founders who blast generic templates to thousands of people see immediate drop-offs because the recipients do not recognize their own pain in the message.

When founders use automation tools to mass-email unverified lists, they risk having their emails flagged as spam. One r/SaaS founder emphasized that cold email only works if every single line proves the sender understands the recipient's workflow. This requires a manual research phase that the cited founders skip in favor of "scaling" too early.

"I just found 100 people who fit my ICP on Apollo, wrote 3 emails that didn’t suck, and sent them. Got my first 8 paying users that way. The trick is your list > your copy." — u/Adorable-Reindeer280, r/SaaS thread

Audit Your Early Traction Strategy in Two Hours

The first 100 users are not a marketing challenge; they are a validation challenge. If you are struggling to get traction, pause all "launch" activities and follow this audit.

1. Identify the Pain — 30 Minutes

Find 50 people who are already complaining about your problem. Use search tools in niche subreddits or Discord groups to find users asking questions related to your domain. If you cannot find these people, your problem may not be painful enough to warrant a SaaS solution.

2. The Implementation Offer — 60 Minutes

Reach out to 20 people directly. Do not send a link. Use this template:

"Hey [Name], I saw your post about [Problem]. I’m building a tool to solve exactly that and I'm looking for someone to help me refine it. I’d love to jump on a 20-minute call, set it up for your workflow, and let you use it for free. You don't have to buy anything—I just want to know if it actually works for you."

3. The Feedback Loop — 30 Minutes

If they say yes, record the call. Watch them use the product. Every "I don't get it" is a sign that you need to simplify your messaging before you try to scale.

Where these threads come from

This analysis draws on 10 r/SaaS, r/startups, and r/Entrepreneur threads. This analysis was compiled with Discury, which aggregates discussion threads across SaaS-adjacent subreddits to surface common founder patterns.

discury.io

About the author

Tomáš Cina

CEO at Discury · Prague, Czechia

Founder and CEO at Discury.io and MirandaMedia Group; co-founder of Margly.io and Advanty.io. Operates at the intersection of digital marketing, sales strategy, and technology — with a bias toward ideas that become measurable business outcomes.

Tomáš Cina on LinkedIn →

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