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GrowthKit

246 members • Free

31 contributions to GrowthKit
Feedback 👇
What do you (actually) want from this community? Templates? Strategy teardowns? Growth hack ideas? Interviews? Something else? Tell me what you need — I’m listening. Comments below...👇
1 like • Apr 24
Just great, hands-on advice and experience, community, and encouragement.
WIN WEDNESDAY 🎉
What’s one tiny win you've had this week? Even a small post, new sub, or finished something on your todo list. Drop it here so we can celebrate you! 🎉
1 like • Apr 17
@Doug Dennison if you're keen, I'd love to see some early mockups. I've heard about Figma so much, but barely used it. I mostly just use pencil and paper, and then start building mockups in a local development environment. That said, I don't know how my UI/UX design skills compare.
3 likes • Apr 17
I've finished building a new app, a bit of a monster in its complexity if I'm honest. It's for an upcoming PHP tutorial that I'm writing for Twilio (my employer). And, thanks to some great feedback from @Doug Dennison, @Robert B, and @David Martin I've set up an EmailOctopus account, migrated my list and set up three automations. I just need to do some tests sends, integrate it with SendOwl (my ecommerce integration) and update the site code to use EmailOctopus instead of Mailchimp. Then, it's time to close the Mailchimp account.
What’s your “default move” when you get stuck?
When you get stuck… what’s your default move? You know the moment: → You’ve got a deadline. → Or you need to hit publish. → Or make a decision. But your brain just… freezes. What do you actually do next? → Tweak your offer? → Write more content? → Scroll other people’s strategies? → Avoid everything entirely? → Cry into the void (relatable)? Vote below 👇 Let’s see what your “panic autopilot” looks like.
Poll
3 members have voted
1 like • Apr 16
More than likely, I'll find myself stealing in some way, seeking external justification or validation. However, I'm getting better at being like @David Martin and making a decision and moving forward, despite my reservations.
I'm looking for an alternative to Mailchimp
Hey all 👋🏼 I'm looking for an alternative as I feel that for the little I do, Mailchimp is too costly and has more features than I need. I send an email to a small list once a week (trying to be regular). All I think I need is simple list segmentation, automation, and mail merge/tags. Any suggestions? Matt
1 like • Apr 15
@Doug Dennison shall do. Actually, so far so good with EmailOctopus. I like the simplicity of the UI.
0 likes • Apr 15
After taking a bit of a look at the pricing options for Kit, it doesn't seem so clear cut to me. Of the available options the Free plan (free for up to 1,000 subscribers) and the Creator plans seem to be most applicable. I'm guessing, with some effort, I could get over 1000 subscribers quickly enough. Leading me to the Creator plan. But, the next subscriber level is 3,000, which is USD 41.00 a month which is more than I'm currently paying for MailChimp. I appreciate this might come across as penny pinching on my part. My rationale for keeping this in mind is that I've blown money on countless things over the years, with the hope that I'd eventually earn from them, but never did. So, I'm trying to be critical and grow/pay as it makes sense to do so. So, given that and the simpler UI and flexibility of Email Octopus, I'm migrating there. Thanks again folks for the assist.
I have a question about lead magnets
I don't quite know how to describe the challenge I think I'm facing, so I hope that what I write here makes sense. I have a site that teaches web application development, and a paid book. People who buy the book are automatically signed up to my mailing list and segmented based on the book purchase. I email that segment of the list whenever I write something that relates to that segment and the main content on the blog. I also have a free book around a slightly different aspect of web development (containerisation and deployment). The topic's closely related to the first; actually, it's an essential part of the first. The same thing applies when people download the free book. They're signed up to my mailing list, but in a different segment than for the paid book. As with the other segment, I email them, occasionally, when I write about that particular topic. One of my core reasons for not sharing my regular blog post content with both segments is based on my understanding of the GDPR when I wrote up the free book; I lived in Germany at the time, but now live in Australia. I thought that if I asked someone to sign up for one thing, that I could really only email them about that topic, and not talk about something else. Secondly, the free book applies to any software development language, whereas my main blog covers just two languages, though mainly just one. So, I'm not sure if I'd be emailing people about a language that they never use. So, to my question. Am I wrong in taking this approach? Should I just email both segments when I post new content on the blog, as the topics are part of the same broad topic? I hope that this makes sense. I'm really trying to make a go of this.
0 likes • Apr 14
@Robert B I used double opt in there and currently still do. Not sure if I should change that though.
1-10 of 31
Matthew Setter
3
7points to level up
@matthew-setter-2060
I'm Matthew, an experienced software developer (PHP and Go), and a technical trainer and teacher.

Active 213d ago
Joined Nov 16, 2024