During the pre-launch, your content shouldn't mention the product. Instead, focus entirely on building belief in your unique methodology. If customers buy into your *process* as the solution, they will be ready to buy the product that delivers it.
To prime an audience, your pre-launch content must build three beliefs. They must trust you as the expert, believe your unique method is the solution, and, crucially, believe in their own capability to get results using it.
Shift your pre-launch focus from simple warm-up activities to ensuring your audience is ready to solve their problem and believes you are the one to help them. This 'recipe for readiness' makes the final sale feel effortless.
A critical mistake in content creation for sales is leading with a product pitch. Instead, content should share insights that highlight a customer's problem, sparking a conversation. This strategy positions the salesperson as a trusted advisor who guides the buyer to the solution, rather than just a vendor pushing a product.
Only showing the final, polished product makes others feel inadequate and behind. More importantly, it prevents you from building an engaged audience by not sharing the journey. Sharing mistakes, pivots, and behind-the-scenes struggles gives others permission to start messy and builds their curiosity for your eventual launch.
Effective messaging avoids product pitches and instead creates "perceptual curiosity" by sharing an insight that contradicts a buyer's beliefs about their own process. This makes them re-evaluate their "good enough" solution and discover its hidden costs, creating organic demand for a new way.
A common content marketing mistake is giving away tactical "how-to" steps, leaving nothing to sell. Instead, educate your audience on the conceptual "what" and "why" (declarative knowledge). This builds trust and demonstrates expertise, creating demand for the step-by-step implementation (procedural knowledge), which is your paid product.
Overtly plugging your product triggers defensiveness. Instead, create high-value "edu-sales" content that subtly mentions your tool as one part of a solution, or even has no call-to-action at all. This builds trust and makes people actively seek out what you're selling.
Structure your pre-launch content around four key pillars: Personality (builds trust), Authority (establishes expertise), Credibility (provides proof with testimonials), and Empathy (shows you understand the customer's struggle). This well-rounded approach builds deep trust before you sell.
Early outreach often fails by pitching an unproven value proposition. Instead, founders should use "Founder Magic"—leveraging their unique background, story, or mission to make themselves so interesting that prospects agree to a meeting out of sheer curiosity. The outreach should be product-agnostic and focus on being compelling as a person.
A common marketing mistake is being product-centric. Instead of selling a pre-packaged product, first identify the customer's primary business challenge. Then, frame and adapt your offering as the specific solution to that problem, ensuring immediate relevance and value.