How I Built a Waitlist of 300+ for a DevOps SaaS With Zero Ad Spend
I have 300+ people on the Step2Dev waitlist. I spent $0 on advertising.
Here is the exact playbook.
## The Foundation: Be a Real Engineer Talking to Real Engineers
The DevOps community does not respond well to marketing content. They respond to technical content, honest builder stories, and genuine community engagement.
Everything I published was either:
- Technically useful (how to do X in DevOps)
- Honestly personal (what went wrong this week in my build)
- Community-driven (asking questions I genuinely wanted answered)
No promotional content. No "check out my product." No lead magnets.
## Channel 1: LinkedIn (120 signups)
I published 3 posts per week on LinkedIn. Each post followed one of these formats:
- A story about a DevOps mistake or lesson
- A counterintuitive take on common DevOps practices
- A behind-the-scenes look at building Step2Dev
The most effective posts were the most personal ones. The post about my production outage got 40x the reach of any technical post.
## Channel 2: DEV.to (90 signups)
Long-form technical articles. I wrote about real problems I encountered while building: AWS IAM architecture decisions, CI/CD design patterns, the technical decisions behind Step2Dev.
The community on DEV is genuinely interested in seeing products being built. Being transparent about technical decisions built trust.
## Channel 3: Hacker News (60 signups)
I made one Show HN post when I had something worth showing. Not a landing page. The actual product in its early state.
I was clear about what it did and did not do yet. The HN community has high standards and will punish overselling. Honest positioning got me 60 signups from a single post.
## Channel 4: Direct Community Engagement (30 signups)
Commenting on posts in DevOps Reddit threads and community forums. Not promoting the product. Just being a knowledgeable DevOps engineer in conversations.
When my profile links to step2dev.com, curious people find it.
## What Did Not Work
Cold DMs: low conversion, high unsubscribe from follow-up emails.
Generic DevOps tips: too many accounts do this. No differentiation.
Posting frequency over posting quality: the posts I spent the most time on always outperformed the quick posts.
## The Key Principle
Give before you ask. The content that built the waitlist never asked people to sign up. It gave them something useful, genuine, or interesting. The signups were a byproduct of trust.
What content strategies have worked in your niche?
Top comments (2)
This is the exact playbook I've been trying to follow while building my own local-first SaaS. The 'give before you ask' principle is so hard to stick to when you just want to launch, but you're 100% right that developers (especially on HN) will punish overselling.
Out of curiosity, for your LinkedIn posts, did you post from your personal profile or a company page? I've found personal profiles get way more reach but it's hard to balance the brand.
Thanks for the transparency, this is incredibly validating to read!
Yeahh always use personal profile to showcase your app for example you can use #Buildinginpublic that can helps to build trust from begining to users. You can use Company page for describe your products, service anything can be but users will come from personal in starting phase
Best wishes,