{"id":"2065385672991752210","url":"https://x.com/marclou/status/2065385672991752210","text":"","author":{"name":"Marc Lou","username":"marclou","avatarUrl":"https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/2059062507923472384/n3Zl7nhZ_200x200.jpg"},"createdAt":"Fri Jun 12 10:48:12 +0000 2026","engagement":{"replies":157,"retweets":237,"likes":3221,"views":643065},"article":{"title":"32 Principles of a Viral Product","previewText":"1. A viral product does not have a free plan\nFree users are leeches. They increase support, server costs, and make you build features your paying customers don’t want.\nLess than 3% of free users ever","coverImageUrl":"https://pbs.twimg.com/media/HKQLdAwbEAAzfft.jpg","content":"1. A viral product does not have a free plan\n\nFree users are leeches. They increase support, server costs, and make you build features your paying customers don’t want.\n\nLess than 3% of free users ever convert. Remove your free plan.\n\n2. A viral product has three colors\n\nEvery color fights for attention. The more colors you add, the less people notice what matters.\n\nBlack text. White background. One color for the Buy button.\n\n3. A viral product uses numbers instead of adjectives\n\n“Fast” is forgettable. “Save 4 hours every week” isn’t.\n\n4. A viral product ends with a footer people want to share\n\n97% of visitors won't buy, but they might share. People remember what they see last.\n\nFinish strong.\n\n5. A viral product treats the OG image as a YouTube thumbnail\n\n“If they don’t click, they don’t watch”. Your OG image is often seen more than your actual website.\n\nDesign it like a YouTube thumbnail.\n\n6. A viral product reveals one idea per screen\n\nDon’t try to say everything at once. One screen should communicate one idea and nothing else.\n\nOne screen. One message. Just like the Instagram feed.\n\n7. A viral product has a headline a fifth grader can understand\n\nComplexity kills curiosity. Use simple words. Your mum should get it.\n\n8. A viral product has a hard paywall\n\nSignups don’t pay the bills. If nobody is willing to pull out their credit card, you don’t have validation.\n\nAsk for payment before asking for data.\n\n9. A viral product has copy only you could write\n\nIf a competitor could copy-paste your landing page onto their website, your copy is too generic.\n\nWrite from experience.\n\n10. A viral product shows the product before it explains it\n\nA demo communicates more than paragraphs of text.\n\nShow. Don't tell.\n\n11. A viral product does one thing\n\nThe more things you do, the less people remember. People don't remember Swiss Army knives. They remember the tool that solved their problem.\n\nBe known for one thing.\n\n12. A viral product uses Popcorn Pricing\n\nYour visitors came to buy a product, not study a spreadsheet. Every pricing tier you add creates another decision and another reason to leave.\n\nKeep it to three choices: Good. Better. Best.\n\n13. A viral product rides a wave\n\nBuild around trends, technologies, and problems people are already discussing.\n\nThe wave does half the marketing for you.\n\n14. A viral product steals its best copy from customers\n\nCustomers already describe your product better than you do.\n\nWrite like your customers talk.\n\n15. A viral product has a founder people can see and hear\n\nPeople buy from people. A screen recording from the founder beats a corporate promo video or a wall of features.\n\nShow your face.\n\n16. A viral product makes pricing impossible to miss\n\nThe pricing section is one of the first places visitors look. They use it to understand the product, not just the price.\n\nPut “Pricing” in the header.\n\n17. A viral product has a headline people remember the next day\n\nWrite five headlines. Show them to friends. Wait 24 hours and ask which one they remember.\n\nKeep the one that sticks.\n\n18. A viral product has an emotional headline\n\nPeople don't remember features. They remember feelings. Your headline should make people laugh, say wow, or think what the fuck is this.\n\nWrite for humans.\n\n19. A viral product does something people have never seen before\n\nNobody shares another clone. Surprise people.\n\n20. A viral product can be sold from the hero section alone\n\n80% of visitors won’t scroll past the hero. If they don’t understand the product and want it within a few seconds, you’ve already lost.\n\nFix the hero first.\n\n21. A viral product shows empathy before it sells\n\nBefore people trust your solution, they need to believe you understand their problem.\n\nDescribe the problem better than they can.\n\n22. A viral product has one call to action\n\nEvery extra button creates hesitation. When people have multiple paths, many choose none.\n\nGive people one next step. Just one.\n\n23. A viral product has a name people remember\n\nUse words people already know. Avoid wordplay, made-up words, and names that require explanation.\n\n24. A viral product sells a human desire, not a feature\n\nPeople buy more money, more time, better health, more status, or less pain. Features are just vehicles to get there.\n\nSell the outcome, not the feature.\n\n25. A viral product lets people try the product before buying it\n\nDon’t hide your best features behind a paywall. Put them on the landing page.\n\nLet people play before they pay.\n\n26. A viral product does not use weak words\n\n“most”, “many”, “rarely” weaken your message because nobody knows what they mean. Strong copy makes clear claims that people can picture, remember, and challenge.\n\nMake statements, not estimates.\n\n27. A viral product does not have a subscription\n\nPeople already pay for enough subscriptions. Don't add another monthly charge unless you can’t ship without it.\n\nOne-time payments are 10x easier to sell.\n\n28. A viral product has a call to action that says what happens next\n\n\"Get Started\" means nothing. \"Analyze My Website\" tells people exactly what they're about to do.\n\nRemove uncertainty.\n\n29. A viral product does not launch without testimonials\n\nA landing page without testimonials is asking strangers to trust you blindly. Get a few users, friends, or beta testers first and collect their feedback.\n\nCollect proof before traffic.\n\n30. A viral product can be described in under 10 words\n\nIf you can't explain your product in one sentence, your users won't either.\n\n31. A viral product compares itself to competitors\n\nPeople don’t care what your product does. They care why they should switch.\n\nShow a simple comparison table with the features your customers care about. Make the decision obvious.\n\n32. A viral product is more expensive than its competitors\n\nNobody talks about the second cheapest option.\n\nCharge more.\n\nThis is what I’ve learned from 5 years of building [35 startups in public](https://marclou.com/), watching hundreds of launches make $0, and a few reach millions of people.\n\nThese are not rules. They’re patterns. Use them as a compass, not a checklist.\n\nAnd if you’ve found a 33rd principle, I’d love to hear it."},"adhxContext":{"savedByCount":1,"publicTags":[],"previewUrl":"https://adhx.com/marclou/status/2065385672991752210"}}