How do I build a waitlist before I launch?
Build a pre-launch waitlist by giving people a specific reason to sign up now and a reason to bring others — not just a "notify me" box. Put up a one-screen landing page that names who it is for and the one problem it solves, drive a small amount of the right traffic to it — build-in-public posts, relevant communities, a launch-day teaser — and turn each signup into a referrer with position-based or reward-based referrals. A waitlist only matters if it converts on launch day, so collect emails you can actually reach and warm the list with a few honest updates before you open the doors. Aim for engaged signups from your real audience, not a big vanity number.
Why most waitlists fizzle
Most waitlists fail quietly. A founder drops a "coming soon" page with an email box, collects a few hundred addresses over months, and then launch day converts a trickle — because a list of strangers who clicked once owes you nothing. Signing up for a waitlist is the lowest-commitment action on the internet; by the time you launch, most have forgotten they did it. The number in your waitlist tool is not momentum. What converts is a list of the right people who remember why they signed up and who heard from you between now and launch.
The waitlists that pay off treat every signup as a potential referrer, not a row in a spreadsheet — which is why it helps to think of a waitlist as an early growth loop, where each person you add can bring the next. Honestly, a waitlist is not always the right move: for AgentCeres we chose a card-less free trial over a gated waitlist, because the faster path to real feedback was letting people in rather than making them wait. A waitlist earns its keep when you genuinely cannot onboard everyone yet — a hard launch date, limited capacity, or an invite-only rollout — not as a default because it feels like the done thing.
What actually grows a pre-launch waitlist
Growing a waitlist is the same work as any early-stage traction, just pointed at an email box instead of a signup: a clear promise, a little of the right traffic, and a reason to share. Ranked roughly by effort against payoff:
| Tactic | Effort | Why it earns signups |
|---|---|---|
| A one-screen landing page with a clear promise | Low | Names who it is for and the one problem it solves, so the right people opt in and the wrong ones bounce — the foundation everything else points at. |
| Build-in-public updates | Medium | Sharing the journey turns each post into a soft invitation to follow along; see build in public. |
| Referral or position bump | Medium | Let a signup move up the list by referring others, so the list compounds instead of growing one email at a time; see referral program. |
| Showing up in the right communities | High | A handful of genuinely helpful comments where your buyers already gather beats a broad blast — the same discipline as getting your first 100 users. |
Turning the list into launch momentum
Collecting emails is the easy half; converting them on launch day is where waitlists are won or lost. Two things decide it: whether the list still remembers you, and whether launch day gives them a reason to act now.
- Warm the list before launch Send a few honest updates — a build-in-public note, a sneak peek, a firm date — so you are not a stranger on launch day. See how to build in public without an audience.
- Give launch day a reason to act Early-bird pricing, a founding-user perk, or a limited number of spots turns "someday" into "today" the moment you open the doors.
- Stack the waitlist into a launch moment A warm list is fuel for a Product Hunt launch or a coordinated launch push — the list and the moment amplify each other.
- Fit it into the bigger plan A waitlist is one early tactic inside your go-to-market strategy, not a substitute for one.
FAQ
- How many people should a pre-launch waitlist have?
- There is no magic number, and chasing one is a trap. A thousand engaged signups from your exact target audience are worth more than ten thousand randoms who will never convert. Focus on the quality and warmth of the list — do these people match your ideal customer profile, and will they remember you at launch — rather than the headline count.
- Do I even need a waitlist, or should I just launch?
- If you can onboard users today and your product is ready enough to learn from, launching often beats waiting — real usage teaches you more than a list of intentions. A waitlist makes sense when you truly cannot let everyone in yet: limited capacity, a hard launch date, or an invite-only rollout. When in doubt, prefer shipping to a small group over collecting emails you cannot yet serve.
- What should my waitlist landing page say?
- One screen, one promise. Name who it is for, the single problem you solve, and what they get by joining early — then one field for the email. Skip the feature list and the long manifesto; at this stage you are testing whether the promise resonates, which is the same question a landing page that converts has to answer.
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