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How many times have you not met your release date, and why?

Feb
23

We were gonna release today, but decided not to for a variety of reasons. Working with other companies, we’ve seen this variability (and flexibility) on a regular basis. But we’re new at this… and wondering how many of your release dates have slipped? By how much? And how do you handle it?

  • OOoooh, I've had a "PR for Startups" post bouncing around in my head for a while now. I must write it!

    IMO, marketing/PR is an accelerant. A great product can triumph with nearly no marketing (Google, DropBox). Great sales/marketing or great PR is like a multiplier (that, if your product is amazing enough, you may not NEED). Apple is a great example-- killer products that people love to talk about-- but they pour on the gasoline with great marketing.

    The product is your foundation (X). Awareness generation efforts/features are your accelerant (y). Your success is X * y. My personal opinion is that if you aren't seeing some growth/success/conversation with ZERO outbound efforts, your product and story aren't compelling enough and outbound efforts are pretty wasteful.

    Regarding launching... There's launching and there's Launching. You should launch (little l) now (note: launching might just mean sending around fake screenshots). Have a trusted circle of people who you launch to. When they say, "holy shit, you are on to something".... THEN, you Launch!
  • I tend not to make release dates...
  • Being a developer myself, I know the phenomenon of getting buried so deep in a product vision, you think it's never quite done enough to show people.

    It really helps to have a PR or Mktg person involved, and in your case, a PR person would not only provide their typical services but a unique vector into your potential user base through their peers/colleagues in PR. Work those friends lists and word-of-mouth connections! You already have lots of attention, take advantage of it and ship! :)
  • As an utter and complete PR/Mktg/SEO newb, I really need to take more of my friends in those fields out for beers. ;) It's actually rather depressing looking back and seeing some of the obvious opportunities I've left hanging.
  • We're new at it as well and would love to hear more stories about it. We originally had a plan of Nov09 for a release, but we're (currently) on pace for a late March deploy. We know the mantra of webapps is to get *something* out there and build from that based on user feedback, but our major holdup we think is the "waterfall" approach to the project. Our devs want to build it ALL out as we've envisioned and then make changes to that instead of piece by piece release where you get feedback along the way. Being new to the party, we're not sure the best method either. Interested to hear more...
  • I'm personally a fan of small incremental releases. But most of that is simply a direct result of a history of only having small increments of time in which to release new features.

    Being an independent developer the past couple years, if I tried to wait until a product was "completed" to get it out the door, it still wouldn't be.

    I feel there's a certain point where you have to realize something is never going to be feature complete, and that's especially true with web apps. The great benefit of web apps is that you can incrementally add new features for your users without a great deal of pain and overhead. That should definitely be taken advantage of.
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