Here's a few useful landing pages tools.
http://populr.me - has free domain mapping etc... at first glance, it seems to do everything this page site does.
Yeah I noticed there's a lot of free versions, I just don't like their business model. Although trying to buck the trend when there's already free versions out there might be impossible, we'll see.
It will offer more, maybe the page wasn't very clear. Primarily, the landing pages will have that much content on, as oppose to the minimal launchrock page. I don't think there's enough information on the launchrock version. I was planning on helping with the content, as well as guiding them through it with the UI.
I met the founder of a successful service that builds landing pages for people and he said that startups aren't actually very good for them as they fairly quickly either go under or get a real site.
Most of their business is for things like real estate, people running seminars, more small scale types of business than the kinds of sites you typically associated with landing pages.
The high price is really just a test - that failed. I'll try again with a much lower price or maybe just a free version (although I don't like that idea at all, it's still worth testing).
This could serve as a really nice method of securing consulting engagements without the typical formalities of prospecting consulting engagements. I think $99/mo and especially free fall way short of things like "copywriter help" (there are many better ways of phrasing this), and you could essentially sell a retainer-until-you-launch product where you do nothing but help startups launch and setup experiments to net more email opt-ins/presales (all the while charging significantly more.)
Yes this is really what sparked the idea, I still get asked all the time to help setup a little one-pager (launchrock just isn't enough information) but I can't justify the time to do, hence a hosted option. Expanding that to just helping them get off the ground is a nice idea. Thanks.
I don't want to be "that guy", but I was immediately turned off by the grammatically incorrect comma in the call-to-action. There should be no comma after "Say hello".
Hilarious, I made a similar website in 2 hours yesterday - http://confirmidea.com.
I'm experimenting with this idea.. running a google experiment with two different screenshots. Why not? 2 hours for fun. If enough people said yes, create a basic service and charge $5 an A/B Test. Free for one page was my idea. $99 is ridiculous.
I don't understand. I spent over 5 minutes on that site. I read everything on the page, and I still have no idea what it's supposed to do. It generates a page for me? I have to put in my email address to do that? Why?
What differentiates this service from either a) just throwing up a Wordpress or SquareSpace site or b) using a service like Launch Rock? Having to pay $99/month just to have your logo displayed seems pretty steep.
It's the same, but only takes 5 minutes to setup. It provides more space than launchrock for content and explanations of your product/service. And it only costs what most people charge per hour/2 hours. I figured they would only need it for 1 month, hence the larger price - but I'm beginning to see that gets people's backs up.
Based on your feedback I think I need to expand and include these differences as part of the landing page. This would also be a useful exercise for people using it - to compare themselves to the competition.
> We charge the equivalent of 2 hours from a professional developer.
I would say 1 hour, i.e. $99/hr, is a more accurate statement. This would also help make the product appear more affordable, and as a better investment.
Really? okay, thanks. I figured 1 or 2 hours of time as a cost would be fair, but it doesn't seem to go down well. I had also planned on them not using it for more than 1 month. So I guess I'll half it until people stop considering it a joke :)
I'm not only criticising their price. I'm writing off this whole thing as a 'joke', because honestly, that is what it looks like. Have you looked at the source code? You should take a look at this[1]. If you say "well, that's not so bad - they don't know how to make two classes with different background colours, but who cares about that? Bootstrap is totally justified", you'll love this little gem[2]. That's right, they're including 265 kilobytes of javascript (and violating jQuery's MIT license in the process, but I'll let that slide) for a form validator.
If you want my honest advice: do not go near this thing. It was built by developers who are either playing a very dark joke on HN or do not have a clue about web development.
The 99$/month price tag is what makes me think it is a joke. I have asked a friend of mine who does freelance web development from time to time and "about a hundred bucks" is what he'd charge for developing a single page built with Bootstrap.
First off, trying to use their inclusion of Bootstrap as a negative comes off as elitist nonsense. Second, the file you are discussing is actually 131KB uncompressed and 43KB when gzipped. No issues there.
This sounds to me like a serious case of "I hate this because someone else is making money off of it instead of me".
That's strange - I took another look at the JavaScript and it is indeed 131KB when uncompressed. I could have sworn it was 265KB last night.
Anyway, including Bootstrap to use two containers with different background colours is a lack of professionalism. Why can't you make it yourself? I'd argue that it would take an experienced web developer approximately the same time to do it without Bootstrap.
I don't really hate it because he's making money off of it, it's just that it feels like a ripoff to me. For $99/month [1] you can get a new website, specifically designed for you by a web developer, every month.
[1] it looks like he has realised $99/month is a joke.
I'm deadly serious. The 2 points you consider evidence of me "not having a clue" are including Bootstrap and jQuery? Are you serious?
It's the first iteration - I've included the entire bootstrap lib for speed and ease whilst developing a UI and the entire jquery lib because it just ships with rails. As for the MIT license stripping, that is a weird one, because I'm simply using the jquery-rails gem, no tampering on my part. I'll look into why it strips that out.
Maybe you don't get the "1st iteration" idea, but to me it should look like shit. I just want feedback ASAP. And guess what, it worked. Thanks for yours.
Maybe I don't get the "first iteration" idea, but it should not look like shit. Maybe that's just me, but if I'm making a website to attract users I'd rather make it, you know, attractive.
>I just want feedback ASAP. And guess what, it worked. Thanks for yours.
Here's a few useful landing pages tools. http://populr.me - has free domain mapping etc... at first glance, it seems to do everything this page site does.
http://strikingly.com -pretty sweet. http://jetstrap.com http://smore.com
Cool tool though.