Product Launch Kit
A comprehensive guide and toolkit for successfully launching your product, including marketing strategies, content creation, and community engagement.
Category
ProductTags
productlaunchmarketing

How to use this prompt
Copy the prompt above and paste it into your favorite AI assistant (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, etc.). You can customize it based on your specific needs.
1. One Core Narrative (everything fans out from this)
Prompt: Product Core Statement
You are a product marketing strategist for developer tools.
Product name:
One-line description:
Personal Story behind it:
- why did i made it:
- lessons learned:
- Include at least one mistake, tradeoff, or wrong assumption:
- One thing that worked better than expected:
- Stack used:
Write:
1. A brutally clear one-sentence value proposition
2. A short โwhy this existsโ paragraph (3โ4 lines, human tone, no buzzwords)
This output feeds everything else: blog post, Product Hunt, README, LinkedIn, Reddit.
2. GitHub README (this is marketing too)
Prompt: GitHub README Generator
You are optimizing a GitHub README for developer adoption.
Generate:
- Short intro paragraph
- An image logo
- โWhy this existsโ section
- Installation section (placeholder-friendly)
- Example usage section (pseudo-code allowed)
- Clear links section (Docs, Website, Blog)
- Tech used
- Insperation
- A Contributing section. โIssues and PRs welcomeโ
- A License section. MIT
- Screenshots
Audience: experienced developers with limited time.
2. Product Page Copy (youโll write it, this guides you)
[[ProductWriter]]
3. Blog Post (launch blog, not a tutorial)
[[blogWriter]]
3.1A DEV.to
You are an experienced software developer writing on dev.to.
Write a dev.to post about a product you just shipped, but do NOT write a launch announcement.
The headline:
Generate 10 dev.to-style headlines for a post about building and shipping a developer product.
Rules:
- No hype words
- No โI built Xโ announcements
- Focus on learning, mistakes, or tradeoffs
- Sound like something a senior dev would click
The Post content should
- Focus on 1โ2 concrete lessons learned while building the product
- Include at least one mistake, tradeoff, or wrong assumption
- Briefly describe what the product does only for context
- Avoid marketing language entirely
- End with a reflective takeaway, not a CTA
Tags:
main language,#indiehackers or #opensource (if true), One process tag (#learning, #productdev, #devlife)
Tone:
Same as Blog post
Hacker News
Not a marketing post. A discussion starter. Where: Show HN
Prompt: Hacker News Post
Write a Show HN post for a developer tool.
Rules:
- Straightforward title
- One-paragraph explanation of the problem
- What the tool does
- One technical decision worth discussing
- No hype, no emojis, no marketing tone
5. Reddit Post (no pitch, or youโll be eaten alive)
Reddit hates marketing. Reddit loves stories and lessons learned.
Prompt: Reddit Launch Post
You are posting on Reddit as an indie developer.
Write a post that:
- Starts with a personal problem you faced
- Explains what you built to solve it
- Shares 1โ2 lessons learned while building it
- Casually links to the product at the end
Tone:
Curious, humble, non-promotional.
No emojis. No hype.
6. LinkedIn Post (professional but human)
Prompt: LinkedIn Launch Post
Write a LinkedIn post announcing a new product.
Structure:
- Short hook about a common industry frustration
- What you decided to build
- Who it helps
- What you learned building it
- One clean link at the end
Tone:
Professional, reflective, confident but not salesy.
Whitespace matters. Short lines breathe better on LinkedIn.
7. Product Hunt (the final boss)
Prompt: Product Hunt Listing
You are preparing a Product Hunt launch.
Generate:
- Tagline (60 characters max)
- Short description (2โ3 sentences)
- 3 key features
- โWho itโs forโ section
- Maker comment (friendly, grateful, concise)
Tone:
Clear, helpful, confident.
Audience: developers and founders.
Reply to comments quickly on launch day. Momentum is a social phenomenon.
8. Launch Day Order (simple, repeatable)
Use this every time:
- Publish product page + GitHub README
- Publish blog post
- Product Hunt launch
- LinkedIn post
- Reddit post (after some traction exists)


