I use engineering as a form of marketing to promote my business. It utilizes free tools to help bring in leads and or clients. Let’s learn what it entails and how you can implement it.
This involves a company creating tools for its customers. These free tools show your company's ability, giving customers a satisfying interaction. Your brand grows in popularity, setting you up as a market leader in your field.
Companies offer clients free tools like pricing calculators, widgets, apps, and much more. Take these cases as examples.
Microsoft introduced a free What Dog tool to market Bing's Visual Search. It helped them showcase their image search feature and drive users to their search engine.
DuckDuckGo launched DontTrack.us. It’s an illustrated guide that shows how Google tracks its users. It garnered press attention, driving the unknown search engine's brand awareness.
Wix used a free business name generator to attract potential clients. This raised their brand awareness to many upstart business people.
Shutterfly built a free wedding hashtag generator. This tool was suited for betrothed couples likely to buy Shutterfly's other products for their wedding.
Hubspot released a free website grader. Businesses can see how effectively their websites perform and what aspects need improving. Hubspot markets its services by offering a free trial to anyone looking to improve their website.
Our team launched ElegantDoc, a free document generator that rivals all others with a payment subscription. The simplicity and customizability of this tool showcase the true prowess in building software solutions for real-world problems.
Read: First Employee - Solopreneur to Entrepreneur
We also built a free online tools website, Toolbun.com, providing IT specialists with easy-to-use solutions for small and big tasks.
People of all generations turn to the Internet to find solutions to their problems. The internet is heavily populated with companies vying for customers. Engineering as marketing is no easy feat and it expects you to develop a useful product out of thin air, akin to pulling a rabbit out of a hat. Taking on this challenge has several advantages, such as:
Businesses can email-gate the free tools they provide to their prospective customers. The addresses collected constitute leads that can be followed up through email marketing to generate sales.
Free tools can help improve a company's search engine optimization efforts. This is because blogs, articles, and other high-authority sites contain links to these products. These backlinks ultimately drive traffic to the company's site, effectively increasing its visibility.
Businesses' free tools can help showcase their creativity as solutions providers. By showing the quality of their products, such businesses can create a reputation for themselves as being better than their competitors.
Read: Make it easy to do the right thing: A Team-Lead Initiative
A free product can be a great way to create a presence. Such a product can help them attract potential customers and foster a positive relationship. These customers become paying clientele, growing the company's market base.
Businesses provide free tools to raise customer satisfaction. This can help improve their client relationships, inspiring customer loyalty.
Engineering as marketing is a highly delicate art. It is not enough to do it. You have to do it right. You risk getting a negative return on your investment of time and money.
Here are some principles of marketing engineering to keep in mind as you undertake this approach:
Provide a product that has a tangible benefit to your potential customers.
It is hard to provide a solution that caters to multiple demographics. Different people have different needs. Focus on one persona you understand best. That should be your target customer.
The tool can ask for something in return from the customer who utilizes it. This could be contact details or asking them to sign up for a free trial. People are more likely to offer their email addresses than their credit card information. This can help you follow up for future sales.
Read: Feedback with Asynchronous Video: Productivity with Screen Recording!
Your tool should point back to your company, the creator. It should also align with your top offering so clients can purchase your product if they desire increased functionality.
Engineering-as-marketing is a powerful strategy that can help raise brand visibility, generate sales leads, and encourage customer retention. It entails providing your target clientele with a free but valuable product that showcases your technical expertise. This strategy can help your company differentiate itself from the competition and hit your marketing objectives.
Speaking of marketing, we have embarked on a path of public marketing. It's a new experience, and things are going nicely.
If you're interested in what we're doing to get marketing in public work, check out this blog post: Crazy Marketing Strategy Goleko.com
For these and more thoughts, guides, and insights visit my blog at martinbaun.com.
You can find me on YouTube.
Nice post Martin. As an engineer, this has become my primary way of marketing. So far, I've built:
llmcalc.com -> calculate LLM costs
grademyprompt.com -> grades a prompt and provides suggestions based on best practices.
It's far more exciting than writing blog posts! :)
The first one looks very cool - keep it up. I have searched for something similar occasionally. It's a bit tiresome to explore pricing pages of 20+ vendors. :D
Yes, agreed! Glad you found it valuable
Thanks for that Ryan, I'll give it a swirl :)
This is actually good, i didn't think about some of these.
Haha, thanks Roco! Hope they help :)
Interesting insights! It's a clever move to demonstrate knowledge and give prospective clients something of worth.
Absolutely! Can't go wrong with that :)
This is very good thing for Marketing..
Glad you think so David! :)
I love you open up this topic! That's the main idea behind my project, FoxyApps - a no-code platform where you can build these helpful free tools to attract new customers. We want to enable this strategy to marketers and non-techies. Let me know if you would like to explore it.
Sure thing Ivan, I'll give it a go :)
Great insights on engineering as marketing! It’s fascinating how companies like Microsoft and Hubspot have used this strategy to drive brand awareness and generate leads. Have you personally tried this strategy, and if so, what kind of results did you see? Additionally, how do you measure the success of these marketing tools?
Hey John! Yes we did actually, we actively did this with Videofeedbackr, and it turned out wonderfully!
We did this exact thing with Orderly, releasing a set of Returns Guides for various retailers like Amazon, Target, Walmart, etc.
www.joinorderly.com/returns/target
Nice! Ahref's free keyword generator is also a great example.
That's another really good one!!
nice info
I appreciate that Umar :)
This is very good thing for Marketing
Can you tell me what kind of marketing we do?
No problem! I share ideas like this every week in my blog if youre interested :)
I think a lot o indiehackers are former developers and they most likely find marketing a bit tedious. But this is the key to actually leverage those skills and become better!
As a developer myself, i understand that deeply, usually I just bury myself behind code!
Who knew, haha :)
"Engineering as marketing" is a smart strategy that uses free tools to showcase a company's capabilities, attract leads, and enhance brand visibility.
Exactly! :)
This blog post is fantastic! The concept of using engineering as a form of marketing is both innovative and practical. I appreciate how you've highlighted various examples, such as Microsoft's What Dog tool and Hubspot's website grader, to illustrate the effectiveness of this strategy.
One question I have is, how do you determine which type of free tool will resonate best with your target audience? Given the wide range of possibilities, from calculators to generators, it seems crucial to choose a tool that not only showcases your company's capabilities but also genuinely adds value for potential customers.
Hey Zafar! Thank you!
With most of these, practice makes perfect. May be tedious, but you might have to try out different tools and see which one fits best. :)
Thank You lots, Martin! :)
Of course :)