Eric Willis

Get Worm - Get exclusive early bird offers from startups

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Sarthak Moghe
A 'worm' hug to @erictwillis and my fellow PH lovers! Here's our little story on what inspired us to create Get Worm! As early adopters ourselves, we always get excited to be a part of something we believe in. But what we found that though there are many avenues to promote startups, not many have made attempts to credit one of the most important factors behind successful startups - their early adopters! Get Worm is our effort to promote early adoption through rewards & recognition. Or in simpler words - Let early bird get the worm! -- With Get Worm, a startup can come up with creative ways to appreciate their early adopters. For example: skipping the waiting list, profile badges, social mentions, stickers, extra discounts and freemium time. We did a massive update to the platform a few days ago, and would love to get feedback from the best community of early adopters here on PH! We also need your help in making Get Worm a place that creates value for both Startups and Early Adopters. -- And if we are promoting "incentivizing early adoption", we must eat our own dog-food! :) So here is something for our Early Adopters: Startups: Please show your love to the Early Adopters community by signing up and submitting a 'worm-campaign'. Just mention "Product Hunt" in the "Note to reviewer" section and we will give you a LIFETIME FREE account! Early Adopters (Users) Sign up and start engaging with startups through comments, follows, votes and of course, Get Worm! The 3 most engaging users every month will get on our early-board with lots of cool perks like exclusive deals, special badges, profile displayed on about us page etc. And the top-bird will get an Apple Watch (or iPad Mini 4).. woohoo! Thanks! @sarthakmoghe, @vinnybhaskar, @adityamoghe, @agami
Aliaksandra Lamachenka
@sarthakmoghe @erictwillis @vinnybhaskar @adityamoghe You guys are awesome! With the help of GetWorm, our unknown social media posting tool @kukupost got its first users (and they continue using KUKU.io!). As a reward, we've sent them postcards and cool stickers. We had a lot of fun and everyone loved it! Thank you so much for such a cool platform, your enthusiasm and love you're helping to spread! :)
Aditya Moghe
Thanks @alexstrvinsky. You are awesome as well. Great to hear that Get Worm was able to help @kukupost get its early bird users. :) And thanks a lot for being a part of our journey too. For those who don't know, @alexstrvinsky has been a part of Get Worm from the very beginning and has provided us a lot of valuable feedback, immense support and inspiration to help us shape the platform. And that makes you more than awesome. :)
Aliaksandra Lamachenka
@adityamoghe @kukupost Thank you so much, Aditya! :)
Dr. Nitin Bajaj, DBA
@sarthakmoghe @erictwillis @vinnybhaskar @adityamoghe - Congrats! Cool concept. Cant seem to signup with Twitter or email. Tried Chrome and Safari
Sarthak Moghe
Thanks! Sorry to hear that you are facing some problem. Can you please try again or else chat with us on the site
Ben Tossell
How beneficial is this to either party though? Being rewarded for being an early user is nice, sure - doesn't make me any more inclined to use the startup. Same for the startup, giving away these rewards are likely costing them (whether or not directly through cash/time) when realistically the users are just in it for the reward and don't actually care about the startup... Do you think this is a sustainable model? Reminds me a bit of Rocketclub where they'd promise shares in early startups and all that jazz... sounded amazing, did really well on PH and there was the financial dream of (imagine I had shares in the next Uber).... honestly have not heard a lot from them for a while, don't even know if they are doing well - I don't know anyone using them, or if they are, they are certainly not shouting it to the world how awesome they are (which is a problem) - and when I look at their website the quality is pretty low. I feel like you could see similar issues. How do you plan to tackle them?
Aliaksandra Lamachenka
@bentossell Ben, can't speak for all startups that were presented on Get Worm, but even though we've sent only postcards and stickers as a reward in July, 60% of people who came to us from Get Worm have been our active users almost 8 months since. Just for statistics :)
Ben Tossell
@alexstrvinsky yeah and I'm sure sometimes stickers are all it takes to please some people... it's crazy to see how kuku people are for stickers in the startup world (see what I did there 🙃) Just not sure this strategy will be replicable across many startups and I have doubts on the quality and longevity
Sarthak Moghe
@bentossell You are right! And hence besides stickers and free beers, we also encourage startups to create a worm out of their own product/service offerings. We think this provides startups a cost effective way of making people to start using their product/service instead of spending on advertising with no guaranteed results. And as PH community would agree, Early Adopters first and foremost are interested in the startup's product or service. So just like kickstarter and indiegogo, worms provide a little incentive and excitement to the process of joining a startup. Finally regarding RocketClub, I believe @erik2048 is doing a great job - I recently saw RocketClub featured on TechCrunch! However, the fundamental model behind RocketClub and Get Worm is quite different. RocketClub promises to offer Stock Appreciation Rights to Startup's adopters in the long run, while we provide that "instant gratification" to the users through little worms! :D @erik2048, feel free to jump in! :-) @alexstrvinsky : Thanks for those stickers, our users loved it (including myself) :)
Ben Tossell
@sarthakmoghe My issue is that early users is always a tough set of users to satisfy.... Early users can be early for a number of reasons: - exposure on a new platform (self-promotion) - to have that username - because they are genuinely interested and many more... I guess you've added "to get t-shirts, stickers, beers etc to this too 😛" Problem with early users is that they can be quick to get involved, give feedback, break the product, give suggestions, tell their friends etc etc but they could be the totally wrong target group. They could get involved for a number of reasons (some outlined above) - and incentivising them to jump on a new product with stickers (or similar) can also contribute to the declining quality of early users. One of the best pieces of startup advice in the early stage is "Talk to your users" but its useless if all they did was come for a free t-shirt and they couldnt give a f*ck about your company. Granted this is not going to be the case all of the time but it will certainly be a factor, I'm sure. Just trying to see the viability and longevity of something like this I know the models between RocketClub and Get Worm are fundamentally different but the process seems familiar to me. No disrespect to anyone... but being mentioned in TechCrunch doesn't mean you are necessarily doing well.
Sarthak Moghe
@bentossell I agree! I suppose there is always that "crossing the chasm" element to a startup's success. And while we may be able to boost their initial growth and increase adoption, user retention and loyalty can only come with a good product and customer service. I still believe that Early adopters get more excited to discover something new, something better over free tshirts. IMHO, both entrepreneurs and early adopters can be characterized as "pioneers" - people who aren't afraid to try. And while we talk about the quality of early users, we should also take into account the quality (and quantity) of startups emerging everyday. So it may happen that a good startup might get a few 'free-loaders', there is a fair possibility that a poorly conceived startup can set its course on track with the feedback from some amazing early users who may have joined for the worm, but then felt invested in it. I remember @alexstrvinsky once told me that one of the EA she got via 'stickers' on Get Worm helped them translate kuku.io in a different language... I think this is the beauty of this relationship! (sorry went a bit poetic there :P) And since we are not (yet) published on TechCrunch, I can't comment on its success. Perhaps @catherineshu would be kind enough to feature us like RocketClub and I can share my findings :D
Eric Willis
Get Worm rewards early adopters for their critical role in helping a startup "start-up". Startups create exclusive early-bird offers (worms) for users to join them.
Sarthak Moghe
@erictwillis Thanks a bunch for hunting us! You're the best :)
Laszlo Levente Mári
I'm an early member from one of the first days of this product and for sure, it has come a long way from a small, insignificant platform to something potentially huge. At first it was just fun, I didn't see much chance for this day to come and this to be hunted but hell, it is amazing nowadays. It delivers valuable and cool early-birds. Thanks @erictwillis for hunting it, it means a lot not just for the team but the whole community behind them.
Sarthak Moghe
@noxowe Thanks a lot for your kind words and being our "early adopter"! Hope you liked the recent major update.
Steve Franco, CEO
Your offerings of "worms" is extraordinary and I find myself just scrolling at tons of new startups/offers I've never heard about. Hunting this!
Vinny Bhaksar
@stevefranco Awesome! Great to hear that you love what Startups have on offer for the Early Adopters.
Aditya Moghe
@stevefranco Thanks. Glad that you're finding it useful. There are many many more worms to come. :)
Neil Cocker
Hey guys! Nice work. We're currently on the front page of PH with "Ramp", too. We make ordering startup t-shirts really easy. We should talk! :-)
Sarthak Moghe
@neilcocker touche' :) ... and congratulations!
Elena Shkarubo
What a great service! We launched our MeetnGreetMe beta some days ago and were wondering how to implement an online reward tool in the shortest time to thank our early adopters (not saying about getting them!) Get Worm is exactly what we need!!! Thank you guys :)
Sarthak Moghe
Thanks @elena_shkarubo! Its always encouraging to see startups like you ready to #lovethyuser
Moshe/Moses Isaacian
If this completely eliminates the need for me to reach out to my favorite startups on Twitter for early adoption, than I'm all for this. Great concept!!
Sarthak Moghe
@mosheimedia Thanks! Our goal is to bring the best offers from the amazing startups all around the world to you. But as you can imagine, it’s a classic chicken & egg situation where startups will get excited to find a growing community of early adopters, while early adopters will be more interested if there are many startups. But with your support, we can make Get Worm to be the most active community of early adopters, and get more startups to offer exciting early bird worms back to you!
Navin Kulkarni
Great work @sarthakmoghe, I happened to read 'Crossing the chasm' recently. I can see how helpful GetWorm can be.
Vinny Bhaksar
@navinkulkarni Thanks. I'll pass the message to @sarthakmoghe. He has dozed off now, being in a different time zone.
Aaron Hanson
Love this concept!
Sam Bauch
I'd love to use this on a project I'm working on, but it's a mobile native app that uses phone number (Digits from Twitter) for registration. As such I wouldn't be able to connect the early adopters who sign up for my worm to my user DB to actually reward them. What's the solution there? Just to email the users and ask for phone number? Any chance you'll add phone number as an Identity data point that you share with startups?
Vinny Bhaksar
@sammybauch We haven't really given a thought on how to make Get Worm work with phone numbers. What you could possibly do is onboard users to your Mailchimp or Campaign Monitor mailing lists directly from Get Worm and then send the early birds an email with a link to download your app. Adding phone number as a data point to Get Worm sounds good on the surface. However, we would need to dig a bit deeper to understand any privacy concerns the early adopters may have with sharing their phone numbers.
Johannes DeMattia
I've been using Get Worm since the very early days, and the development they've gone through has been very incouraging. There are a number of companies and products that I have found there, which I haven't seen elsewhere. I'm hoping they can keep up the good momentum they've built up, and I'm looking forward to seeing where they go from here.
Aditya Moghe
@demattia Thanks for the support and wishes, Johannes.
Akshay Bharwani
Had this kinda idea couple of months ago but never got around it. But I'm really glad to see a simple idea of early adopters transformed into a great platform. Great work! Definitely going to give it a try. :)
Sarthak Moghe
@akshaybharwani Thanks! It means a lot to us!
Dmitry Dudin
I really love your logo, guys! Awesome product
Aditya Moghe
@nedudi Thanks Dmitry. Our little birdie says thanks too! :)
Robert G
I should be able to unsubscribe from all emails :) http://imgur.com/aaV0LDF
Sarthak Moghe
@rgawdzik :) technically, we only have one notification sent as an email, so you uncheck one - you uncheck all! :D
Sarthak Grover
From one 'Sarthak' to another, congrats on the launch =). I'm an early adopter and always curious about trying out new products/services so signed up but all I see are a bunch of offers to sign up (50% off our 'premium plan' kind of offers) Perhaps I had a totally different understanding of this, I was thinking more so like Peach etc where you get to try out a new product in alpha/beta stage but this sounds like a marketing platform more than a user-feedback platform. It's nice to see a whole different variety of products/services nonetheless. Goodluck!
Sarthak Moghe
@sarthakgrover From "Another Sarthak" to "One Sarthak" Thank you!! :D To answer your question, although we don't put a restriction on a startup being alpha/beta, most of the startups on Get Worm are in the early stages of their growth. Now what we thought (with our limited brain capacity) as an early adopter ourselves was "How do we typically try new products, engage with startups and provide feedback?" Some common usage patterns were: As an early adopter I would: 1. Like to discover products based on my interests > [Hence we create a curated worm feed matching your interests (eg tech, food, photography)] 2. If I find the idea interesting, I would tell the startup about it. And if I like it very much, I will tell my friends about it > [So we introduced "Upvotes" and "Social Sharing"] 3. I may have some questions before joining the startup > [So we let users connect with the startup over "Discussions"] 4. I want that "Early Bird Worm"! > [you know what to do here, hint: it's our platform's name :P] 5. I would love to share my feedback with the product to benefit both the startup and my fellow Early Adopter friends > [Come back and write away on "Discussions"] Hope this makes sense!
Yuriy Shikhanovich
Looks cool. Two technical questions - any plans on letting someone hide Worms (mark as read/hide/seen) whatever? Also, and probably more importantly any way to get an RSS feed? I don't see myself signing in daily, but I go through feedly several times a day. The RSS feature could make or break this for me personally, but probably for some others. Hell it doesn't even have to be personalized, just allow us to subscribe by category.
Aditya Moghe
@pyro979 Thanks Yuriy. And as for your questions: 1. A feed shows only those worms which share the same market as your interests. So that is one filter there. But I understand that having the ability to mark certain worms as read/seen and/or hiding them could lead to a better user experience. I'll put this point on the table :) 2. We are currently working on a smart notification system for the emails that we send. Having an RSS feed on top of that will certainly be helpful for our users. We'll look into that as well. Thanks for suggesting these ideas. :)
AkhilSinghT
Love this!
Sarthak Moghe
Thanks a lot for your thoughts @akhilsinght
Kate Barkley
GetWorm is an amazing idea and exactly what our startup has been looking for-- but I'm curious, we've been under review for several days now, how long does review generally take?