We launched Zo Computer. My thoughts on how to launch a product.
We launched Zo Computer 2 weeks ago, and it was a great success.
Zo is an intelligent cloud computer that helps you turn ideas into reality fast. You can store your files, connect your tools – and then research or build practically anything with AI. Because Zo is a cloud computer, you can access your creations from anywhere.
On launch day, we were trending on X, with over half a million views on my post alone, and got a huge spike in signups. Even 2 weeks later, hundreds of people are signing up every day (and we haven't even started marketing yet).
My favorite moment was this quote tweet from Pieter Levels, someone I've long admired:
https://x.com/levelsio/status/1991324565495247295
Our launch video wasn't fancy. In fact, we started working on the video 3 days before. The timeline:
On Sunday, my cofounder Rob and I walked around lower Manhattan with a DJI Osmo Pocket, reciting lines.
On Tuesday, Rob was busy editing footage and recording a product demo.
At 3am on Wednesday, I recorded some simple background music in Ableton.
At 7am, I woke up after a long nap and rewrote my personal launch post, turning it into a story about my mom.
At 9am, the team got together for a final editing pass across all the posts.
Storytelling is arguably the most important ingredient in a successful launch – but we kept putting it off. We had a lot of ideas brewing in the background, but it wasn't until 2 weeks before launch that we started seriously workshopping the narrative.
We'd workshop copy until late in the evening, agree that we "finally had it" – and then wake up the next morning to scrap it all. I was beginning to feel like I was losing my mind, stuck in a never-ending loop.
We considered so many possibilities for the video. Hiring a professional filmmaker. Contracting with a motion designer. Playing off the original Steve Jobs iPhone announcement. A sizzle reel about the history of computing.
Reflecting on the journey, here's the advice I would've told myself a month ago:
Draft your positioning right now. 1 sentence, 3 sentences, 5 sentences.
Draft the launch post right now. You'll have a lot of things to say. It will take many iterations to realize you don't need to say most of them.
Ignore the siren song of cinematic performative startup launch videos. Zig when they zag.
Keep it personal. "AWS for my mom" was a great hook.
I'm so relieved that our launch – and feature in Cerebral Valley – made it clear that Zo is a new category of product: an intelligent cloud computer.
I've got a lot more to say – about Zo, the future of software, and how to create with AI. Until next time.