Picture it. Posting your first AI tool in our community: "Please try it and give feedback!"
Then sitting there refreshing the page, waiting for responses.
Twenty-four hours later: zero responses.
The tool itself? Actually pretty decent. Did exactly what it promised, worked perfectly fine for you.
But here's what happened: people clicked the link, saw a blank text box with no instructions, tried random inputs that gave weird responses, and left.
Those people? They're never coming back. Doesn't matter how much you improve the tool now - you've lost them at hello.
Let’s get started:
You had me at hello
No, not the one about dropped food (though if you're eating while building AI tools, I admire your multitasking skills!).
I'm talking about the reality of first impressions. It’s like meeting someone in real life. You have scant moments to make a positive impression. Fail to do so and they’ll not be interested - or, worse - actively dislike you.
Harsh? Yes. True? I’m afraid so.
Ditto with your tool. When someone lands on your AI tool, you've got about five seconds before they decide if it's worth their time.
Don’t muck it up!
Think about using a new app. If you open it and have no clue what to do next, how long before you close it? Exactly.
Your tool needs to pass what I call the "Five Second Test":
If users can't answer these in five seconds, they're gone. And they're probably not coming back. Why would they?
Your welcome message isn't just a greeting - it's your tool's handshake, elevator pitch, and user manual all rolled into one.
Here's what a good one needs:
Let’s use a prompt to help you craft one:
You help create clear, engaging welcome messages for AI tools. Based on the tool details provided, generate: 1. Opening greeting that sets the tone
2. One clear sentence explaining the tool's purpose
3. Quick instruction on how to use it
4. 1-2 example inputs that showcase common use cases
5. Expected outputs for each example
6. Any important limitations or requirements Tool Details:
[Describe your tool's purpose and functionality] Provide both casual and professional versions of the message, explaining when each might be more appropriate.
You want this to be short and punchy.
Note: if the explanation is long and convoluted this may be because your tool isn’t focused single use like we discussed! Remember when we discussed not building an all-in-one tool and instead keeping it focused? Be mindful here.
We’re going to include your welcome message here if using LaunchLemonade:
Spend a good amount of time refining your welcome message. If people don’t make it past this message then all your subsequent work is wasted!
We’ll be diving more into refining, testing, collecting feedback and turning this into a proper “product” in the next Playbook.