Steve Lamar Profile picture
Jun 15, 2021 14 tweets 7 min read Read on X
It's crazy difficult to build a business from scratch.

There are so many unknowns and a lot of trial and error.

Here are 13 things I've learned as a marketer turned SaaS founder.

(with highlights from folks of Twitter I've learned from along the way)
1. Be patient. Be really patient.

It took 18 months to get my first paying client and another 18 months to quit my job*.

@alexwestco highlights how we're not alone in this journey.


*I quit to focus, not because I was making gobs of money.
2. Don't quit your job without a financial plan.

I'm nowhere near the salary I was making with a salaried job.

Supplementing with contract work has helped me close the gap.

@theandreboso sums the quitting thing up nicely:
3. You're not too old to start.

I'm 45 (42 when I started).

I appreciate every experience I had until this point and how it got me to where I am now. You never know when the right time will be.

@jenalyson put this quite eloquently:
4. Build it. They won't come (without effort).

I was naïve to think clients would come quicker and with less effort.

We're working on building organically and advice from @randfish on building a flywheel has been really helpful:
5. Trust but verify.

Don't rush to work with someone because you're excited to get going.

I got screwed out of $2K by a developer because I was eager to get started & ignored warning signs.

(Silver lining - I soon found great developers I've been working with for 3 years.)
6. Use 3rd party tools as much as possible.

You don't need (and shouldn't try) to build everything.

Use 3rd party tools for things like payment processing, online chat, and onboarding sequencing.

It's less risky and keeps you focused on the core of your product.
7. Be careful with feedback.

There's always more to change, stay focused on the right things.

@yongfook
8. Pricing a product is a lot of guesswork.

It's difficult to know what to charge before having traction.

Too low and you have to raise prices later, too high and nobody buys.

@PierreDeWulf has thoughts:
9. Competition comes in many forms.

Existing process/status quota is one of the hardest competitors to overcome. People are resistant to change.

@aprildunford outlines it brilliantly:
10. Trust your team.

I've had a hard time letting go of control when I've been so close to every decision for so long.

Get out of the way and let your team do what their good at.
11. Don't overbuild.

It's easy to keep building. Add a feature, change a design, tweak a work flow.

It's difficult to know what will have a real impact. Talk to users and validate your ideas.

And as @samanthalcc mentions - don't solve for symptoms.
12. Spend more time marketing & distribution.

It seems obvious, but reality hits hard when you focus more on building than marketing.

@TheCoolestCool always throws out gems on content and distribution. I'm working to get to his level🙌

13. Keep mental health in check.

I've felt many more ups & downs then when I was employed with more obsessing over every detail of my day.

Take REAL time off.

@AdriSheares wrote a great article on entrepreneurs and mental health that really resonates.

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More from @StevejLamar

Sep 10, 2021
I struggle coming up with content ideas.

So, I bought @mdeziel's book The Content Fuel Framework and it's packed with ideas to get you thinking.

Here are some of the content focuses she lays out to help inspire your content creation (with tweet examples)...
1/ Basics

Focus at a high level to help folks who are getting started.

This content lays the foundation for deeper subject matter.

@thecoolestcool is wonderful at this, providing helpful tips on writing and distribution. I've learned a lot from Ross.

2/ People

Focus on interesting people. Telling the story of individuals and how they found success.

@TrungTPhan does this extremely well.

This gem about Messi is a prime example.
Read 9 tweets
Jun 16, 2021
Marketers are great at gathering data.

But data is pointless without context, insights and action.

Answering 3 basic questions as you create reports makes them more insightful:

1. What?
2. So what?
3. Now what?

Here's how I use them:
The 'What?' is the data.

It answers basic questions like:
- How much traffic came to the site?
- What channels drove the most revenue?
- How much did we spend and did it drive leads?
- How is revenue trending to last year?
But how do you make the 'What?' even more useful?

Simplify the data.
- Make it visual
- Use charts over tables
- Only include metrics that matter

Make it hyper relevant.
- Show trends
- Include benchmarks
- Compare to past timeframes
Read 7 tweets
Mar 30, 2021
I used to be a website analyst.

I helped ecomm teams improve site performance
by looking at their data.

I spent a lot of time in Google Analytics and found most sites didn't have GA set up properly.

Here are the most common issues I found 👇
Incorrect Channel Grouping

This is a big one and found on almost every site.

Most often traffic would fall into 'other' when the channel groups keeping the correct channel from getting credit for the traffic.

It most commonly happens with social and display traffic. Screenshot of Google Analyt...
Checkout Behavior Not Tracking All Steps

Checkout Behavior report shows where users are falling out of the checkout flow. This can help identify areas to optimize in checkout.

But, most sites are missing steps of checkout, making it difficult to find opportunities. Screenshot of Google Analyt...
Read 7 tweets
Nov 21, 2020
People keep asking me how I went from 143 followers to 150 in just 6 months.

Let me tell you it has been a journey.

A thread 👇
Back in my early days of Twitter (July 2020) I used to wonder how I could get more followers. Now I have the formula that is driving my new followers crazy.
First, let me explain how I went from 143 to 147.

Bots.

These 4 were bots.
Read 8 tweets

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