Onboarding Playbooks
Turning a new signup into an active user — the first-run flows, activation moments, and onboarding tweaks founders credit for lifting conversion and retention.
159 tactics · page 6 of 6
“The way we're trying to solve this problem is we're not going to put friction on the user side, we're putting friction on us. We have to do the work to make sure that we detect bad actors faster, but we cannot make the experience of good actors bad because of these guys”
Take the friction onto yourself, not the user
Existing email providers made Zeno fill out forms and wait two days to send a single email. Resend flipped it — trust users by default, absorb the anti-abuse load internally with a system they call 'RoboCop.' Friction is a tax; the founder decides whether the operator or the customer pays it. Every verification step you add is a tax on the legit indie hacker trying the product on a Friday night.
“I remember the first day I had my first subscriber on my newsletter and I knew I guess I'm gonna do this forever now because this person wants to read my stuff”
Treat the first subscriber as a contract
The first real subscriber is an onboarding moment for the creator as much as for the reader — it converts "I might do this" into "I owe someone this." Design the confirmation step to make that contract explicit: name the cadence, the format, what they get. The psychological weight of that first opt-in is what produces consistency for the next 100 issues.
“when I when I decided everybody's going to be verified in the groups I I made the verification process free right and and I don't remove people from the groups because they badmouth hauling buddies I don't”
Make verification free and non-coercive
Don't charge for the trust-building step that benefits the whole ecosystem. Make verification (ID, insurance, license) free so the supply side has zero friction to onboard, and don't punish users who criticize you publicly. The directory grows faster and feels less like a tollbooth — which is what builds defensible trust over time.
“even people that don't want to be on Hollow bodes that's fine when you when you get verified through the system you get check a little box that says you you don't want to be listening and all that kind of stuff um I totally for that and I'm totally with it”
Decouple verification from public listing
Let companies get verified for community membership and credibility without forcing them onto your directory — give them an opt-out checkbox at verification. Counterintuitive for a marketplace, but it kills the "this is just a lead-gen funnel" objection and dramatically lifts who'll complete onboarding. Many opt in later once they trust the platform.
“across the board we're seeing between an 80 to 85 response rate so completion rate of the surveys for new subscribers when doing that... they make it clear this is not just like market research data... we're getting this information so I can better serve you”
Frame surveys as "to serve you" for 80% completion
Position the post-signup survey as "so I can better serve you" — never as research. Keep questions to one-tap multiple choice, promise 15-20 seconds, and you'll consistently see 80-85% completion across audiences of all sizes. Position trumps every other survey-design lever.
“I prefer one of many... it's more work to fill in a text field than it is to click a button and on top of that if it's like which of the following do you like red green or blue if they choose red it's very easy for you to then say hey if they chose red make the background red”
Force multiple choice — never free text
Multi-choice buttons drive 98-99% click-through to the next question because there's zero cognitive load and the answers are machine-readable for downstream personalization. Free-text input collapses both completion AND your ability to use the data. Use an "Other" with a free-text follow-up only as a release valve, then mine those entries to rephrase existing buttons later.
“at a minimum you should be uncovering two things one of which is why they're currently interested in what you have to offer... and then a who question is so the who for me is what email platform you use and how would you self-assess your experience with it”
Ask one outcome question and one identity question
Keep the post-signup survey to two essentials: one outcome question (what are you trying to achieve?) and one identity/tool question (what's your stack, what's your experience level?). That pairing tells you who's showing up, what content they need, and which product gaps to fill next — without survey fatigue.
“with Indie hackers you know I think that the group self-selects for high initiative... the people that are involved in this tend to be extremely high in initiative they seem to be extremely intelligent and interesting but they're also kind of go getters”
Design the community to self-select for initiative
Don't try to onboard everyone — build brand, tone, and rituals so that only high-initiative people self-select in, and the rest self-select out. The community's identity becomes the filter. This compounds: high-initiative members produce better content, which attracts more high-initiative members, which makes monetization (ads, masterminds) dramatically easier because advertisers know exactly who they're reaching.
“who would be interested in an accountability group where everyone writes and publishes an atomic essay every day for 30 days”
Gate cohort entry with one habit requirement
Don't onboard people into a complex curriculum on day one. Strip the entry requirement to a single observable daily action and let community accountability carry the rest. This is what scaled from a single tweet into 500-1,000 paying students per cohort and ~10K total — one habit, one promise, one measurable streak.