Compared to digital channels, mail is an unsaturated channel that until recently has been generally inaccessible and lacked personalization. Mailjoy is the tool to reach customers or prospects with mail that's relevant and timely to them. Start by customizing any of our free postcard and letter templates.
Mailjoy provides a ton of features to help you create mailing lists from your contacts, design beautiful postcards and letters, track the results, and integrate with other tools you already use. Sending a campaign takes only minutes. Use Mailjoy for a single campaign or make it a part of your marketing toolkit.
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Mailjoy's answer:
Compared to digital channels, mail is an unsaturated channel that until recently has been generally inaccessible and lacked personalization. Mailjoy is the tool to reach customers or prospects with mail that’s relevant and timely to them. Start by customizing any of our free postcard and letter templates.
Mailjoy's answer:
We value our small, scrappy customers just as highly as our larger clients, therefore we are on a mission to bring the best tools to the masses, streamlined in a way that allows anyone to dive in and get started in minutes.
Mailjoy's answer:
When we launched Mailjoy on Product Hunt we received over 700 upvotes and ended up #2 for the day. We were ecstatic, but the real story here is that we actually launched nearly a month earlier without the fanfare of a traditional tech launch.
We had quietly launched Mailjoy a month earlier to a portion of our network through email outreach, Facebook, and Twitter. We had two asks: One was to share with people who might be a good fit for this. The other was to share the website more broadly on social. We ended getting over a dozen shares across different channels which drove 100’s of visitors to the site.
Our first customer came from a share by a friend. By launching early, we found someone who cared enough to take a chance on us right away.
As much as we learned what converted visitors to become customers, we learned what was lacking and caused people not to convert. This helped us reprioritize our roadmap before the Product Hunt launch.
I like to consider a marketing site the showroom that entices people to take a test drive. If the showroom’s offering isn’t appealing, do people really want to go for a test drive? Probably not. We quickly learned what copy we were missing, as well as how potential customers viewed the product based on how we marketed it.
Our code wasn’t perfect and we had bugs. That’s OK. Visitors and users gladly pointed what wasn’t working. P.S — We quickly fixed things.
With a successful launch on Product Hunt behind us, we have more customers, received more feedback, and once again, are reprioritizing our short-term roadmap for things that drive the most growth and solve usability challenges. I fundamentally believe that shipping as soon as possible is the key to maximizing your learnings, and, ultimately, growing faster.
Remember, done is better than perfect.
Mailjoy's answer:
Mailjoy has a ton of features to help you create mailing lists from your contacts, design beautiful direct mail postcards and letter mailers, track the results, and integrate with other tools you already use. Sending a campaign takes only minutes. Use Mailjoy for a single campaign or make it a part of your marketing toolkit.
Additionally, Mailjoy provides recipient-level delivery tracking, conversion tracking, customer attribution, and the ability to get notified the moment a conversion happens - using unique per-mailer URLs and QR codes.
We've made sending direct mail as trackable and smart as email. Never send another direct mail campaign without the ability to track your return on investment again.
Based on our record, Catchafire seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 21 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
You two have to figure out #1. For #2, is it really starting to earn or just keeping busy? For me, I am using my skillset to volunteer for nonprofits. I found catchafire.org, which matches volunteers to non-profits, projects they submit. They are happy to have someone to help, you get to work at a comparatively leisurely pace, win-win. It's what's worked for me. There are other platforms like catchafire. Source: 12 months ago
Catchafire.org is a website where non-profits post volunteer opportunities for people with specialized skills. You could get some real-world experience in a sector that may be relevant to your interests—education, the arts, etc.—and potentially a couple of good references for future employers. Source: about 1 year ago
I recommend doing a volunteer gig at taprootplus.org or catchafire.org. Great learning experience, remote work, and they are very tolerant of mistakes and learning curves. If you do good, have them give you a recommendation on LinkedIn. Source: about 1 year ago
Look for project coordinator or project officer role; nonprofits/ NGOs seem to be opening such roles quite often. Also, check out catchafire.org (volunteering for nonprofits/ NGOs), good luck. Source: about 1 year ago
I am still trying to break into the industry and I have some confidence issues regarding my ability to do the job. I have always been a more hands-on person so until I can get my hands wet it's hard for me to feel comfortable. I even saw someone recommend catchafire.org and I even feel incapable of doing these volunteer jobs. Source: over 1 year ago
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